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Website Magazines or "eZines"

For those who have eZines or "Website Magazines", one of the best features are the "click through" features, which generates a report that tells us who clicked on a link. Whether it is a Web site or a promotional offering, many professional ezine services have terrific reports that let us know who is interested in our offer.

The best way to maximize this feature is to make a phone call to each subscriber who clicks through to a link. You will be amazed at the responses you will get:

"Wow, that's amazing. I was just on your Web site!" "Wow, what a coincidence! I was just thinking about you." "That's strange. I was just about to call you."

For the subscriber it's almost like a celebrity calling who they had been thinking about.

Sales and earning clients are all about timing. Calling your click-throughs will give you that timing. If your newsletter service does not have that feature, I encourage you to get one that does.

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  • Facebook investors left guessing after Nasdaq glitch -(Reuters) - Individual investors were left in the dark for hours on Friday about whether their buy and sell orders for newly issued Facebook shares had actually been executed, in the latest of a series high-profile exchange glitches in recent years. Massive demand for the social networking giant's initial public offering, which set a trading volume record for U.S. market debuts, led to a 45-minute delay in the start of trading in the stock. But it was what happened after trading started that had some on Wall Street fuming. ...
  • SEC to look at Facebook trade glitches -WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Securities and Exchange Commission will review the Nasdaq trading glitches surrounding the initial public offering of Facebook Inc on Friday, an agency spokesman said. "As is our practice, staff will review the incident with Nasdaq to determine its cause and steps that will be taken to address it," SEC spokesman John Nester said in a statement. (Reporting By Dave Clarke; Editing by Gary Hill)
  • Historic Facebook debut falls short of expectations -

    Handout photo of Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg ringing Nasdaq's opening bell in Menlo ParkSAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The historic initial public offering of Facebook Inc did not go as planned on Friday, as the social networking company's sky-high valuation combined with trading glitches left the stock languishing near its offering price at the market close. Facebook shares, which opened up 11 percent, closed at $38.23 after a nail-biting last half hour of trading when the shares dipped to their $38 IPO price. Most investors had predicted a first-day pop. More than 576 million shares changed hands, setting a trading volume record for U.S. market debuts. ...


  • Facebook IPO averts "odd lot" question -

    People gather outside NASDAQ Marketsite waiting to see Facebook's share prices posted inside on video monitors in New YorkNEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook Inc's modest debut on Friday may have averted a potential headache for the company and regulators, and kept at bay a debate over the role of "odd lots" in the marketplace. Shares of Facebook traded as high as $45, near the price of $50 that would keep many retail investors from placing a typical "round lot" order of 100 shares, because the total cost will be $5,000 - considered a threshold for many investors. By the end of regular trading on Friday, however, the stock closed at $38.23, just 23 cents, or 0.6 percent, above its initial public offering price. ...


  • Scramble for Facebook stock ends in "Face-flop" -NEW YORK (Reuters) - On Monday, 74-year-old Betty Tanguilig told her financial adviser to liquidate a $400,000 account and put all the proceeds into Facebook Inc IPO shares. Her adviser, Alan Haft, agreed to sell only $46,000 of the $400,000 account, one of several the retiree has. But at about 6:00 a.m. EDT Friday, Haft heard from his brokerage firm, E*Trade Financial Corp, that Tanguilig did not get any IPO shares. Tanguilig, a retired mother of eight, was furious. She has been on Facebook for many years and regularly logs in. "I had to have it," she said. ...
  • Nasdaq to resolve early Facebook orders through matching process -(Reuters) - Nasdaq OMX said it intends to reach a resolution for Facebook Inc orders entered from 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. ET through an "offline matching process." Firms that had questions regarding executions would have to submit requests to Nasdaq by 5 p.m. (Reporting By David Gaffen)
  • Facebook investors left guessing after Nasdaq glitch -(Reuters) - Individual investors were left guessing for more than two hours on Friday about whether their buy and sell orders for newly issued Facebook shares had been actually executed. The Nasdaq Stock Market, where Facebook is listed, had problems sending electronic messages back to the brokerages that handle orders from individual, or "retail," investors, according to people with direct knowledge of the situation. Because the electronic acknowledgements didn't come back from the exchange, the brokers were unable to tell their clients that trades had been executed. ...
  • Shorting Facebook on first day: Only for the brave -NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shorting the Facebook IPO on its first day of trading is not for the faint of heart, but some traders are trying. As the hottest initial public offering in recent memory, Facebook has drawn 1990s-style tech-mania interest from mom and pop investors and big institutions alike. That intense appeal means short-sellers are both attracted by the stock's high valuation and wary, at least for now. "I have no interest in shorting a cultural phenomenon," hedge fund manager Jeffrey Matthews of Ram Partners in Greenwich, Connecticut, told Reuters in an email interview. ...
  • If your company was worth $104 billion, what would your Facebook status be? -

    Mark-Zuckerberg-Facebook-pageAfter sucessfully going public with the largest-ever IPO for a tech company in history, Mark Zuckerberg had one problem left to address...what to set as his Facebook status.


  • Yahoo shares climb on report Alibaba deal near -

    The Yahoo! offices are pictured in Santa Monica(Reuters) - Yahoo Inc shares rose as much as 6.7 percent on Friday after a report that it was close to selling part of its valuable stake in the Alibaba Group. Shares of Yahoo climbed as high as $15.87 before easing to $15.64, up 5.2 percent. Yahoo and Alibaba Group, the Chinese Internet group that runs e-commerce site Alibaba.com, are close to an agreement that could happen as soon as Monday, according to a report in All Things D, citing unnamed sources.. Yahoo would sell one-half of its 40 percent stake back to Alibaba. ...


  • Ultra-Orthodox plan huge NYC meeting on Net risks -

    In this April 3, 2012 photo provided by VosIzNeias.com, a group of Ultra Orthodox Jews who believe that the Internet threatens their way of life, check out the facilities at New York's Citi Field, which they ultimately rented for an unprecedented gathering. The upcoming May 20 rally at the Mets' Stadium will address how to use modern technology in a religiously appropriate way. More than 40,000 ultra-Orthodox Jewish men plan to pack Citi Field for the Sunday evening gathering on the dangers of the Internet, and organizers have also rented the nearby Arthur Ashe Stadium for the overflow crowd. (AP Photo/VosIzNeias.com) MANDATORY CREDITUltra-Orthodox Jews who believe that the Internet threatens their way of life have rented the New York Mets' stadium for an unprecedented gathering on how to use modern technology in a religiously appropriate way.


  • Everything You Need to Know About Facebook's IPO -

    Everything You Need to Know About Facebook's IPONow that Facebook's finished its first day on the market, it's time to figure out what it all means. It ended the day at a price of $38.23 per share, almost exactly where it started the morning at $38 per share, does that mean today basically didn't happen? No. As you can see over at our live blog, it was an eventful day, which saw the stock peak at $45 per share, amid tech glitches and a resounding meh from the Internet. What does this mean for Facebook? America? The Internet? Me? You? Let's find out. 


  • Tale of the tape: Google versus Facebook -Facebook is the hottest Internet company to hit the stock market since Google went public in 2004. The Silicon Valley companies, located seven miles apart, also happen to be locked in a bitter battle for Web surfers' allegiance and online advertisers' money. The duel is likely to intensify now that the IPO has given Facebook Inc.'s social network billions of dollars to battle Google Inc.'s dominant search engine.
  • Beyond Facebook: A look at social network history -Facebook may have made social networking a worldwide cultural phenomenon, but it wasn't the first Internet company to connect people online. And it won't be the last. Here's a look at how social networking has evolved. Some companies have come and gone. Some are mere shells of their former selves. And others show promise, even as Facebook dominates the social Web.
  • Yahoo shares climb on report Alibaba deal near -

    The Yahoo! offices are pictured in Santa Monica(Reuters) - Yahoo Inc shares rose as much as 6.7 percent on Friday after a report that it was close to selling part of its valuable stake in the Alibaba Group. Shares of Yahoo climbed as high as $15.87 before easing to $15.64, up 5.2 percent. Yahoo and Alibaba Group, the Chinese Internet group that runs e-commerce site Alibaba.com, are close to an agreement that could happen as soon as Monday, according to a report in All Things D, citing unnamed sources.. Yahoo would sell one-half of its 40 percent stake back to Alibaba. ...


  • The Best Previews to Facebook IPO Day -

    The Best Previews to Facebook IPO DayBefore we watch Facebook be its public self at 11:00 a.m this morning, when its starts trading on the stock market, it's time to get caught up on what this all means. Last night the company priced its stock at $38 per share for a valuation of $104 billion -- the biggest pre-IPO valuation ever, of all time. But what do all those numbers mean for the rest of America? For the Internet? For the economy? For companies? For Facebook? For Facebook employees? For you? So many questions. Luckily, the Internet has been typing about this for days. ...


  • Twitter joins Firefox effort to thwart online tracking -

    Twitter joins Firefox effort to thwart online trackingTwitter on Thursday took a stand for online privacy by backing a Firefox web browsing feature that lets people signal that they don't want their Internet activity tracked.


  • Electric Imp Connects Your Home Devices to the Internet -If you've ever dreamed about connecting your entire home to the Internet -- so that appliances could start by themselves or you could receive text message alerts to maintain housekeeping -- it looks like your dream is ready to become a reality.
  • Reports: HP poised to eliminate up to 30,000 jobs -Hewlett-Packard is poised to eliminate as many as 30,000 jobs to compensate for dwindling demand for personal computers as more people connect to the Internet on smartphones and tablets, according to reports published Thursday.
  • UN, Brazil to host Internet debate on green planet -

    Brazilian Foreign minister Antonio Patriota shows a map as he speaks during a hearing on Rio+20 Summit on May 10The United Nations and the Brazilian government are launching an Internet debate around 10 themes for a green planet to elicit suggestions from experts and the public for next month's Rio+20 summit.


  • Comcast to start charging heavy downloaders extra -Comcast Corp., the country's largest Internet service provider, is going to start charging extra when customers go over a certain monthly data limit.
  • Analysis: Facebook can't take Asian growth for granted -

    Facebook CEO Zuckerberg waits for Japanese PM Noda before a meeting at the latter's official residence in TokyoSINGAPORE (Reuters) - Even as Facebook fever grips investors ahead of the social networking giant's potential $100 billion-plus initial public offering, its breakneck growth in Asia may be slowing as it moves beyond desktop users to those who access the Internet largely or solely from a mobile phone. In March, Facebook revised its own SEC filings to scale back its scope for further growth in India - its third-biggest user base and the largest population it currently has access to - China remains off-limits to Facebook. ...


  • Australia warns of 'bespoke' online child sex abuse -

    Neil Gaughan (C), head of the Australian Federal Police's high-tech crime squad, pictured in Canberra in 2010Australian police warned Thursday that paedophiles were using Internet live-streaming sites to order "bespoke" child sex crimes for real-time viewing, from countries including the Philippines.


  • Income Inequality Apparently Too Touchy a Subject for TED -If you?re plugged into the Internet, chances are you?ve seen a TED talk?the wonky, provocative web videos that have become a sort of nerd franchise. TED.com is where you go to find Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg explaining why the world has too few female leaders, or Twitter cofounder Evan Williams sharing the secret power of listening to users to drive company improvement. The slogan of the nonprofit group behind the site is ?Ideas Worth Spreading.?
  • NY tech fest heralds Silicon Valley of the east -

    A woman takes a picture of Times Square on her cell phoneThe Big Apple may not have California's weather, but tech fans at New York Internet Week say that in every other way the city is on course to become Silicon Valley 2.0.


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