Friday, December 26, 2008

Camels Feet or Mules Feet? Which are best for your business?

I used to wonder why there are camels in the deserts of Africa and the Middle East but not in the deserts of the American South Western Deserts.

Then I saw them in ACTION in Death Valley. The poor beasts.  They had no trouble with water but their feet are designed for long distance travel IN SANDY SOIL.  The surface of Death Valley is sandy in a few places but mostly it is SALT -yes -SALT or gravel called “desert pavement.”

The native animals either travel at night or have hooves and live in higher elevations, like deer and bighorn sheep. The camel has thick pads on the soles of its feet and rocks and salt can irritate them the same way they can irritate the pads on a dog or cat’s feet, after a while.

When I saw these camels they had already traveled hundreds of miles across salty, rocky, and occasionally sandy soil. These animals had good humans taking care of them but even the modern day people were distressed to learn how hard the Death Valley terrain was on the camels.

Yes, Camels have hooves but with thick leathery pads designed for sandy soil. And their feet are bigger than you imagine.
So when I think of camels today and the special care they needed in the deserts of the American South West, I am reminded, these creatures are suited for other conditions and circumstances.

Similarly, some of the tools we use in business online are better suited for one business or task than another.  Think it through first. What is the tool or program designed to do? Are you using it to your best ability to make the most of the tool’s capacity? Or are you using camel’s feet to do the job of a mule’s foot?  Use the right tool or the correct animal to do the job.You will suffer less and so will the camel if you choose wisely.

All backlinks are not created equal. Remember that. Neither are all feet.

Posted by iwrite at 02:20:22 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Where else can you learn about BACKLINKS?

Here is a short list of Review Sites and each has some information about backlinking
and how to use the skill to benefit your business.

First Hand Review Site on 1WayLinks

Daniel McGonagle on 1WayLinks Review

1WayLink Site at Squidoo

1WayLinks Review on WordPress

A Hub dedicated to 1WayLinks.net Review

Take some time and write short articles with appropriate links back to your site. Then submit them to article directories. Be careful of duplicate content. Avoid it. That is one of the simplest forms of one way back links you can build to last.

Posted by iwrite at 21:08:06 | Permalink | No Comments »