Friday, April 30, 2010

Blinds.com CEO Builds $75 Million Company Debt Free



Blinds.com CEO Builds $75 Million Company Debt FreeIn the last couple of years, a lot people have been forced out of their jobs and into self-employment. Jay Steinfeld, pictured right, can certainly identify. When he was fired from his CPA job in the late 1980s, he went to work with his wife in their drapery design store. At that point, most people would not have described his career as successful. 

But, the day Steinfeld went into business for himself, he believed he was already a success. "Success is not about achieving a certain point," he said. "It's about being on that road. The steps you take to reach that point are success." 

After 23 years on that road, Steinfeld is the CEO of Blinds.com, the largest online retailer of window coverings in the world. This year, the company will do $75 million in sales with 110 employees. 

Blinds.com Born on a Borrowed Computer 
When Steinfeld started selling drapes and blinds, it was 1987. There was no internet—he didn't even own a computer! So how did this modestly successful brick-and-mortar business become the top online retailer in its field? 

As Steinfeld explained on The Dave Ramsey Show on the Fox Business Network, much of the company's success can be traced to two of his core values. First, he is dedicated to continuous improvement. Second, he allows himself to explore new ideas without fear of failure. 

In 1993, Steinfeld put those values to the test when he decided to try an experiment he hoped would improve his business. "By that time, I'd heard about the internet," he said. "I thought it could be a good way to promote my business." He paid $1,500 to launch his website—the first in the window-covering industry. 

Three years later, he launched another website—this one costing $3,000—that would allow him to sell his product online. "That's all (the money) I've put into it," Steinfeld said. "It was just me, in the garage with a borrowed computer." 

By the way, he borrowed that computer from one of his manufacturers. Blinds.com now accounts for a third of that manufacturer's business—not a bad investment on their part! 

For years after that, Steinfeld built the business in both the real world and the cyber world. "I did all the marketing, all the SEO—even social media," he said. "Of course, it wasn't called social media, then." 

Early in the morning and late at night, Steinfeld posted comments on news groups and bulletin boards, answering people's questions about window coverings and establishing himself as a credible industry resource. During the day, he was in his van, selling his product face-to-face. Eventually, he started hiring employees, and in 2001, he closed the stores and began selling exclusively online. 

Steinfeld agrees with Dave on another key factor in Blinds.com's success—get and stay debt free. "It's been our goal to grow inch by inch, never spending beyond our means," Steinfeld said. "We've done it all debt free!" 

Because of the company's careful planning, Steinfeld said they have continued to grow while most of the industry has suffered a significant drop in sales over the last two years. "We've made some acquisitions and some distribution deals and built up our technology with the money we'd saved up," he explained. 

Core Values and Everyday Life 
You've seen how Steinfeld's core values changed his business, as well as the window-covering world. Can dedication to constant improvement and overcoming fear of failure change your life as well? 

Absolutely! But Steinfeld knows from experience that the first step is the hardest part. "The same can be said about getting out of debt," he said. "You just have to start, and you'd be surprised what might happen. 

"If I think of success as achieving one particular thing," he added, "I'll see myself as unsuccessful until I reach that point." 

Instead, Steinfeld's advice is to make small, incremental changes—baby steps—toward your goal, and count each step as a success. 

Posted via email from Kleerstreem's Posterous

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Bad habits can age you by 12 years, study suggests

Four common bad habits combined — smoking, drinking too much, inactivity and poor diet — can age you by 12 years, sobering new research suggests.

The findings are from a study that tracked nearly 5,000 British adults for 20 years, and they highlight yet another reason to adopt a healthier lifestyle.

Overall, 314 people studied had all four unhealthy behaviors. Among them, 91 died during the study, or 29 percent. Among the 387 healthiest people with none of the four habits, only 32 died, or about 8 percent.

The risky behaviors were: smoking tobacco; downing more than three alcoholic drinks per day for men and more than two daily for women; getting less than two hours of physical activity per week; and eating fruits and vegetables fewer than three times daily.

These habits combined substantially increased the risk of death and made people who engaged in them seem 12 years older than people in the healthiest group, said lead researcher Elisabeth Kvaavik of the University of Oslo.

The study appears in Monday's Archives of Internal Medicine.

The healthiest group included never-smokers and those who had quit; teetotalers, women who had fewer than two drinks daily and men who had fewer than three; those who got at least two hours of physical activity weekly; and those who ate fruits and vegetables at least three times daily.

"You don't need to be extreme" to be in the healthy category, Kvaavik said. "These behaviors add up, so together it's quite good. It should be possible for most people to manage to do it."

For example, one carrot, one apple and a glass of orange juice would suffice for the fruit and vegetable cutoffs in the study, Kvaavik said, noting that the amounts are pretty modest and less strict than many guidelines.

The U.S. government generally recommends at least 4 cups of fruits or vegetables daily for adults, depending on age and activity level; and about 2 1/2 hours of exercise weekly.

Study participants were 4,886 British adults aged 18 and older, or 44 years old on average. They were randomly selected from participants in a separate nationwide British health survey. Study subjects were asked about various lifestyle habits only once, a potential limitation, but Kvaavik said those habits tend to be fairly stable in adulthood.

Death certificates were checked for the next 20 years. The most common causes of death included heart disease and cancer, both related to unhealthy lifestyles.

Kvaavik said her results are applicable to other westernized nations including the United States.

June Stevens, a University of North Carolina public health researcher, said the results are in line with previous studies that examined the combined effects of health-related habits on longevity.

The findings don't mean that everyone who maintains a healthy lifestyle will live longer than those who don't, but it will increase the odds, Stevens said.

Posted via email from Kleerstreem's Posterous

Does My Wife Need More Faith or an Anti-Depressant?

--by Billy Graham

Q: I don't understand what's happening to my wife. She seems to have lost any joy for living, and some days she almost can't get out of bed. Her doctor says she needs to go on an anti-depressant medicine, but some friends say we just need more faith. She wants me to make the decision, but I don't know what to do. -- K.S. 

A: I'm thankful for your concern for your wife, and I hope you'll do everything you can to help her. After all, if you were in her position I'm sure you'd look to her for help -- just as she's looking to you. The Bible says to husbands, "Each one of you... must love his wife as he loves himself" (Ephesians 5:33). 

I'm not a psychologist or psychiatrist, of course, but your wife certainly seems to be suffering from depression (as her doctor says). Sometimes depression has a spiritual cause; King David, for example, was depressed after he secretly committed adultery -- and his depression didn't lift until he confessed his sin and sought God's forgiveness (see Psalm 32). 

But often depression has other causes, such as biochemical imbalances in our bodies. Your doctor apparently suspects this is the case with your wife. Our brains are incredibly complex, and when something gets out of balance it can affect the way we think and look at the world. Often this can be corrected with proper medication. 

Does this mean you would be leaving God out of the process, or looking to medicine instead of God for a solution? No, you shouldn't think this way. Instead, if the medicine works see it as God's way of answering your prayers -- and thank Him for it. In the meantime, constantly assure your wife of your love -- and of Christ's love, as well. 

Posted via email from Religion

Can a Lifetime of Sinning be Forgiven by Deathbed Contrition?

---By Billy Graham

Q: My cousin has gone off the deep end and is living like the devil right now. He says it doesn't matter, because before he dies he's going to ask God to forgive him, and God will, because (according to him) that's what God has promised to do. Is he right? -- B.N. 

A: No, your cousin is not right. God has only promised to forgive us when we repent of our sinful ways. But repentance means to be sincerely sorry for our sins and to turn away from them -- and from what you say, this isn't what he wants to do, either now or later. 

Does this mean God can't forgive someone who turns in faith to Christ at the last minute? No, not at all. One of the criminals who was crucified with Jesus turned to Him in faith, and as a result received His promise of salvation: "I tell you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise" (Luke 23:43). But this man knew he was a sinner, and he was sincerely sorry for his sins (as the previous verses demonstrate). 

Your cousin is in a very dangerous position spiritually. Not only is he deceiving himself about God's mercy and grace but he is deceiving himself about his future. How does he know he won't die suddenly, with no opportunity to turn to God? How does he know his heart won't grow colder and colder toward God as the years go by -- which often happens? 

Pray for your cousin, and urge him to face the emptiness and hopelessness of his life. Make sure, too, of your own relationship to Christ. The Bible says, "Now is the time of God's favor, now is the day of salvation" (2 Corinthians 6:2). 

Posted via email from Religion

Sin Under God's and Man's Law


Q: How can someone be a Christian and yet secretly do something that's obviously illegal? Someone in our church was convicted of embezzlement recently, and now she's headed for prison. How could she do this but still go to church every week? -- Mrs. V.L. 

A: What this person did wasn't only wrong in the eyes of the law, but it brought your church and the name of Christ into disrepute (at least in the eyes of unbelievers). Paul's instructions about church leaders could be applied to every Christian: "He must also have a good reputation with outsiders, so that he will not fall into disgrace and into the devil's trap" (1 Timothy 3:7). 

Sad as they are, incidents like this remind us of two truths we should never forget. First, they remind us of our own weakness. When we come to Christ, God forgives our past, and He comes to live within us by His Holy Spirit. But our old sinful nature still lives in us also -- and if we aren't on guard, it will try to take over. We'll discover (as the Apostle Paul did) that "nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature" (Romans 7:18).

Second, this reminds us that we are engaged in a spiritual battle -- and Satan will do everything he can to defeat us. The Bible says, "Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith" (1 Peter 5:8-9). 

Never assume you are beyond sin's reach -- for you aren't. Instead, stay close to Christ, and ask Him to guard you from temptation. And pray for this person and her family, that God will be their strength in the hard days ahead. Encourage them also as God gives you opportunity. 

Posted via email from Religion

Thursday, April 22, 2010

How Do You Know Heaven is Real?

--By Billy Graham

Q: How do you know heaven is real? I'd like to think it is, and my mother looked forward to going there when she died, but maybe heaven is just a myth or fairy tale. -- G.P. 

A: No, heaven isn't a myth or fairy tale. Heaven is real -- more real than the ground you walk on or the stars you see at night, because some day they'll all come to an end, but heaven will remain. 

How do I know heaven is real? I know it first of all because Jesus told us it's real -- and His word can be trusted, because He cannot lie. He said, "In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you" (John 14:2). Just as God is eternal, so heaven is eternal, for it is the dwelling place of God. 

I know heaven is real also because Jesus Christ came to earth for one purpose: To make it possible for us to go there. Only one thing can keep us out of heaven, and that is our sin. But Christ came to take away our sins by His death on the cross, and now He offers eternal life to all who put their faith and trust in Him. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life" (John 3:16). 

But most of all I know heaven is real because Jesus Christ came back from the grave. Death and hell have been conquered, and heaven's gates are now open -- because of Him! Your mother knew this truth -- and I pray you will also, as you open your heart and life to Jesus Christ. 

Posted via email from Religion

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Will God Help Me With My Checkered Past?

----By Billy Graham

Q: I've wasted most of my life -- drugs, alcohol, jail, pregnant at 17, you name it. But now I've given my life to Jesus and that's all behind me. But I've still got bad health and a police record from my past, so I can't get a decent job. Will God do something about these, or is it asking too much? -- D.J. 

A: No, it's not asking too much for God to help you with these problems. God loves you, and He is concerned about every detail of your life. The Bible says, "Cast your cares on the Lord and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous fall" (Psalm 55:22). 

Does this mean all our problems vanish if we turn them over to God? I wish I could say "Yes" -- but in all honesty, I can't. Sometimes the problems we've created for ourselves stay with us, even when God has forgiven them. Decisions have consequences -- and when we make bad decisions, the consequences also are bad. The Bible warns, "A man reaps what he sows. The one who sows to please his sinful nature... will reap destruction" (Galatians 6:7-8). 

Ask God to give you wisdom to deal with your problems. He may take some of them away -- but even if He doesn't, He wants to help you overcome them. If you need more education, for example, ask Him to open that door. In the meantime, be faithful in whatever He gives you. 

Most of all, take steps to strengthen your faith -- through prayer, reading God's Word, and fellowship with other believers in a church which is focused on Christ. Don't get discouraged, but remember Jesus' promise: "I am with you always, to the very end of the age" (Matthew 28:20). 

Posted via email from Religion

Monday, April 19, 2010

How Can Jesus Be Your Best Friend?

---Billy Graham

Q: A woman I work with says Jesus is her best friend, but I don't understand what she means. How can you be best friends with someone who lived 2,000 years ago? She seems like an intelligent person but I really don't understand what she's saying. -- Mrs. M.R. 

A: Just a few days ago, Christians throughout the world celebrated the greatest event in all history: the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. And those two momentous events provide the answer to your question. 

You see, Jesus isn't just someone who walked this earth 2,000 years ago. He is alive today! We know this because the grave could not hold Him -- and the reason is because He conquered death by the power of God through His resurrection from the dead. Afterward, He appeared repeatedly to His disciples -- even hundreds of people on one occasion (see 1 Corinthians 15:3-8). Then, the Bible says, He was taken up into heaven, where even now He is praying for us. And by His Holy Spirit He is present with us today. 

Only one thing separates us from God, and that is our sin. But Jesus Christ gave His life as the final and perfect sacrifice for our sins -- and because of that, we can be forgiven and become part of God's family forever. The Bible says, "To all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God" (John 1:12). 

Your friend knows these truths, and has acted on them by giving her life to Jesus Christ. And because of that, she knows Christ is with her and is her friend. Why not make the same discovery she has, by giving yourself to Jesus and inviting Him into your life? Then you too will know Christ personally, and experience His presence every day. 

Posted via email from Religion

Why Does God Spare Some and Take Others?

----Billy Graham

Q: I was discharged from the military recently after being in Iraq for two tours of duty, and while there I barely escaped serious injury or death at least three times. In fact, some of my buddies didn't make it. I can't help but feel that God must have spared me for a reason, but how do I figure out what it is? I'm kind of at loose ends right now. -- R.N. 

A: First, let me thank you for your commitment to freedom, and your willingness to serve your country. Our world is a dangerous place -- but without the dedication of men and women like you, it would be even more dangerous. 

I don't know exactly why God spared your life -- but He knows! That's why I urge you to seek His will, both for the immediate future and for the rest of your life. God has a plan for you, and the most important thing you can do is seek it. And He wants to show it to you! Jesus' promise is true: "Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you" (Matthew 7:7). 

How do you seek God's will? Begin by yielding your life without reserve to Jesus Christ. By a simple prayer of faith tell Him you know you need His forgiveness and guidance, and that you want to give your life to Him. Then ask Him to help you grow in your faith -- through prayer, the study of the Bible (which is God's Word), and fellowship with other believers in a church with Christ at its center. 

Then make your future a matter of prayer every day. God may not show you the whole path -- but He'll show you the next step as you trust Him. God bless you. 

Posted via email from Religion

Monday, April 5, 2010

ZEGERID OTC™ -- Newest OTC Treatment for Frequent Heartburn Now Available

ZEGERID OTC™ hits the shelves today as another over-the-counter option for treating frequent heartburn. What makes this treatment different from Prilosec OTC and Prevacid 24HR is that it combines more than one ingredient to help treat heartburn.

The first ingredient is omeprazole, a proton pump inhibitor, and sodium bicarbonate. The sodium bicarbonate acts as a protection from stomach acid and allows it to be absorbed. According to Dr. Michael Rahmin, gastroenterologist at The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, New Jersey, "Other OTC PPIs have used an enteric coating to prevent the medicine from being broken down by acid in the stomach prior to absorption. ZEGERID OTC capsules do not need an enteric coating because the sodium bicarbonate offers built-in protection against stomach acid, so the omeprazole can be absorbed by the body."

Frequent heartburn sufferers now have more choices in over-the-counter remedies for their heartburn. Prilosec OTC came to the store shelves in 2003, and recently Prevacid 24HR became an option. Now patients for a third over-the-counter proton pump inhibitors option available to them. It is important, however, that you talk with your doctor about treatment options before you begin taking ANY over-the-counter remedy.

For more information about Zegerid OTC, and to be informed of any updates in information, you can visit www.ZegeridOTC.com

Posted via email from WellCare

Keith Olbermann on Tea Partiers

Tea Partiers = George Wallace’s Racist Legacies

“If racism is not the whole of the Tea Party, it is in its heart, along with blind hatred, a total disinterest in the welfare of others, and a full-flowered, self-rationalizing refusal to accept the outcomes of elections, or the reality of democracy, or the narrowness of their minds and the equal narrowness of their public support. On Saturday, that support came from evolutionary regressives like Michele Bachmann and Jon Voight. On a daily basis that support comes from the racists and homophobes of radio and television: the Michael Savages and the Rush Limbaughs.”
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann on Countdown, March 22.

Posted via email from Anointed One

Keith Olbermann on Tea Partiers

Tea Partiers = George Wallace’s Racist Legacies

“If racism is not the whole of the Tea Party, it is in its heart, along with blind hatred, a total disinterest in the welfare of others, and a full-flowered, self-rationalizing refusal to accept the outcomes of elections, or the reality of democracy, or the narrowness of their minds and the equal narrowness of their public support. On Saturday, that support came from evolutionary regressives like Michele Bachmann and Jon Voight. On a daily basis that support comes from the racists and homophobes of radio and television: the Michael Savages and the Rush Limbaughs.”
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann on Countdown, March 22.

Posted via email from Global Politics

Keith Olbermann on Tea Partiers

Tea Partiers = George Wallace’s Racist Legacies

“If racism is not the whole of the Tea Party, it is in its heart, along with blind hatred, a total disinterest in the welfare of others, and a full-flowered, self-rationalizing refusal to accept the outcomes of elections, or the reality of democracy, or the narrowness of their minds and the equal narrowness of their public support. On Saturday, that support came from evolutionary regressives like Michele Bachmann and Jon Voight. On a daily basis that support comes from the racists and homophobes of radio and television: the Michael Savages and the Rush Limbaughs.”
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann on Countdown, March 22.

Posted via email from Kleerstreem's Posterous

Crispy Fish In A Dill Sauce

For sustainability reasons, be sure to choose Alaskan cod, or substitute halibut or even tilapia.

Prep Time: 30 minutes
Yield: 4 servings (serving size: 1 fillet and about 2 tablespoons sauce)

Ingredients

  • 2  large egg whites, lightly beaten
  • 1  cup  panko (Japanese breadcrumbs)
  • 1/2  teaspoon  paprika
  • 3/4  teaspoon  onion powder
  • 3/4  teaspoon  garlic powder
  • 4  (6-ounce) skinless cod fillets
  • 1  teaspoon  black pepper
  • 1/2  teaspoon  salt
  • Cooking spray
  • 1/4  cup  canola mayonnaise
  • 2  tablespoons  finely chopped dill pickle
  • 1  teaspoon  fresh lemon juice
  • 1  teaspoon  chopped fresh dill
  • Lemon wedges

Preparation

1. Preheat broiler.

2. Place egg whites in a shallow dish. Combine panko, paprika, onion powder, and garlic powder in a shallow dish. Sprinkle fish evenly with pepper and salt. Dip each fillet in egg white, then dredge in panko mixture; place on a broiler pan coated with cooking spray. Broil 4 minutes on each side or until desired degree of doneness.

3. Combine mayonnaise, pickle, lemon juice, and dill. Serve with fish and lemon wedges.

Wine note: This dish requires a wine with acidity to cut through the breading and also to act like a final spritz of lemon. Waterbrook 2008 Pinot Gris from Washington state's Columbia Valley ($12) does all that with a touch of fruit. —Sara Schneider

Nutritional Information

Calories:
245
Fat:
5.2g (sat 0.2g,mono 2.7g,poly 1.4g)
Protein:
34.5g
Carbohydrate:
11.5g
Fiber:
0.8g
Cholesterol:
63mg
Iron:
0.7mg
Sodium:
654mg
Calcium:
18mg

Posted via email from WellCare

World Stats Updated in Real Time

Sources Of Help For Indie Artist

@NoiseTrade
www.NoiseTrade.com
This site enables you to post a full project (or a simple single) online absolutely free. Fans can download the songs from your unique url, or via a widget they provide you with for any sites/profiles you wish, simply by offering up their email addresses and zipcodes. NoiseTrade simply takes 20% from any tips fans choose to contribute to your work. The widget and landing page also offer means for fans to tweet and shout about their fabulous free music find. Creating an account takes all of 15 minutes (including your initial uploads), so you can create an EP in the same amount of time and start publicizing it pronto. Great for live sessions, demos, previews and old albums you don’t care to put up on iTunes but do want to share with dedicated fans on your website(s). Founded in part by @DerekWebb.

@AmieStreet
www.AmieStreet.com
Operating on a similar principle to Noise Trade’s ‘Fair Trade Music’ philosophy, Amie Street enables fans to download new albums for free initially. They earn credit for writing reviews/recommendations. As an EP grows in popularity, a small price becomes involved for the next few hundred people or so who download it, something like 15 cents a track or a little over a buck for the whole CD. By the time a project makes it to full price, it’s gotten there because enough people fell in love with it and downloaded it to prove that it was worth the listen. You can create a direct account on AmieStreet, or submit through other digital distributors. The downside of working with a third party distributor in this case is that you’re (currently) locked in to only distributing in the country of your distributor. So if the bulk of your fans are in England but your digital distributor is in the US? You’re out of luck. The UK fans can listen, but will be frustrated when they can’t download, and begin their search for a pirated release online elsewhere.

@MusicForte
www.MusicForte.com
Music Forte has tremendous benefits for both fans and artists, working hard at being a solid community for both. Over the years, I’ve relied on Music Forte as my audio archive – a place that rarely had restraints when it came to how many songs you can upload or how long the audio streams. Storing much of my audio in one place made it an easy reference point for new band members who needed access to this or that song, without my having to shuttle mp3s to them via email or ftp. Artists are regularly spotlighted, interviewed, and invited into collaborations on the forums. Encyclopedic in its resource nature, and maintained by a friendly guy who’s an artist himself: Greg Percifield. 

@Tunecore
www.Tunecore.com
Tunecore is a digital distributor and stand alone music store that deeply cares about artists participating in the new business model for the music industry. Their forums and newsletter keep you involved in vital, innovative discussions. They distribute indie (and corporately labeled) artists to iTunes, Amazon (for both mp3 download and On Demand hardcopy), Rhapsody, Nokia, eMusic, Napster and a slew of others that grows like a weed. They’re very responsive when you have a question or suggestion. Co-founded by @TunecoreGary. Also follow @TCSupport.

@ReverbNation
www.ReverbNation.com
Reverb began as a music profile site that later expanded into distribution (with the main players in its own hat – iTunes, Amazon and the like). Their primary focus is helping you stay in touch with fans; Though there are some newsletter and fan communications that come standard with your free RN account, others require a small fee. One of their strengths is offering free downloads of songs you specify for fans willing to sign up for your newsletter. You can upload far more cuts here than MySpace and some others offer, and the fan exclusives offered are entirely up to you. Video links are also an option with your song streams.

@CyberPR
www.ArielPublicity.com
Ariel Hyatt is all about building your fanbase and rethinking your angles. She’s created a great starter pamphlet at http://arielpublicity.com/files/2010/02/IndieMaxExposure2010.pdf. By starter, I by no means insinuate the resource is for the beginner only; It’s simply a springboard for your own ‘what comes next’ as it relates to your music goals and strategies. A great read, quoting some of the best in the new business.

@DiscMakers
www.Discmakers.com
DiscMakers remains the top company for hard copy replication and duplication. (Their friendly reps will be happy to explain the difference to you.) Whether you need just 25 super simple CDs for a demo or family or a full package with graphic design, EPKs and the works – they’ve got you covered. They also have a free newsletter that’ll fill you in on what music convention they’ll be at next, sometimes offering you 10 free CDR copies of your latest project when you stop by their booth. I dropped into one of the events they mentioned in a newsletter and met a great guitarist/producer who’s now a friend and collaborator for life. They also have packages available with a direct shipment to CDBaby (for those 5 hardcopies they require to get you off and running in their distribution setup), so you can check one more thing off your to do list when you order. Sign up for their (free) seasonal catalog to drool and dream.

@BMI
www.BMI.com
I was pleased to find, when I attended a BMI orientation, that back when the other PROs (Performing Rights Organizations / Royalty Societies) were shunning artists of color, BMI was happy to sign up the world’s brightest jazz, blues and pop artists of any ethnicity. They also presently carry the (slightly larger) majority of artists on their roster, which enables them to ask for a bit more when licensing with venues, stations and others. BMI offers great showcases and career building sessions across the US and in the UK (sign up for their free newsletter for the latest), and also monitors and samples 4 full weeks a year per station (as compared to the three days of monitoring done by their main counterpart; Working as a reporting Music Director at a radio station, I can back that up). Signing up as an artist to receive your royalties is free; Being listed with them as a Publisher requires a one time fee of roughly $175.

@SonicBids
www.SonicBids.com
Sonic offers grand access to top festivals and venues looking for quality talent that can draw a crowd. Check with your PRO of choice; You may be able to grab your first 6 months of SonicBids membership free. Your musician profile essentially acts like an EPK, but enables you to be found in a collection of EPKs, helping bookers easily access the info that matters most. Their stage plotting feature is a fun and time saving tool that helps you communicate your setup easily to anyone in the event planning scheme. They’ll also keep you up to date on songwriting competitions if you sign up for email alerts.

@BroadJam
www.BroadJam.com
Hoping to get your music licensed in a film or TV show? BroadJam is like the music supervisor want ads. Films and shows of all varieties (even webseries) send their fervent and detailed requests for tunes – some broadly asking for pop/dance tunes, other asking for any song about hope or family, etc. – straight to your inbox. Alerts and newsletters are free. Submitting requires a nominal fee per project, but it’s a favor to you in the long run, because it adds a threshold; Only the more serious artists will take the time to pay the five bucks, so it keeps supervisors from being inundated by joe schmo who’s willing to send in his homegrown country demo in for every single audio request. The fee acts as quality control.

@iLike
www.iLike.com
iLike is thankfully the go between for @Facebook, @Twitter & @MySpace. Post a concert on iLike and (with your settings decisively permitting) it’ll broadcast to Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and iLike itself. (ReverbNation can also receive your Twitter feed, so the resulting tweet will also make it into your RN status update.) Songs posted on iLike also post to your Facebook Music tab (on artist/music profile pages), but you’ll still have to upload MySpace audio directly. iLike also has a great sidebar for iTunes that enables fans to be alerted to new songs, concerts and videos you’ve posted while they’re using iTunes. Fans do have to download the add on, but with some encouragement from you….. ;) iLike also enables Facebook users to dedicate your songs to one another on FB.

@Pandora_Radio
www.Pandora.com
Pandora is the online radio station that listens to you. Playlists are guided by your preferences and the song and artists ‘seeds’ that you plant in your customized stations. (Thankfully, these require no watering.) It’s a great way to sample indie artists while listening to the artists you already know and love. Best yet, indie artists with a UPC code attached to their projects (easily attained when you release an Amazon On Demand project, for those of you who don’t care to keep a tangible inventory on hand;) can submit a couple of their songs from a project for consideration. If accepted into the Pandora roster, you’ll be contacted to send in your full project. Buy links accompany every tune played for listeners who love what they hear.http://submitmusic.pandora.com/

@TessTaylor
www.NARIP.com
The National Association of Recording Industry Professionals is one of God’s great gifts to the musical world. Tess Taylor founded the organization that prides itself on offering supportive pushes, nudges and playgrounds for artists, managers, producers – the whole lot. Membership is a pretty penny, but thankfully most or all workshops, brunches and networking events are only about $10 more when you’re not a member. NARIP has hubs in Los Angeles, NYC, Houston, Phoenix, San Fran, and…I’m sure I’m leaving out some others. They also have a great heart for those disenfranchised by the economy. If you've lost a job (or hours) due to the downturned market, reach out to them; They’ll fill you in on open jobs on their closed forum. At the brunches, everyone (I mean EVERYone) gets 60 seconds to introduce themselves and summarize what they’re up to or what they’re currently seeking in the industry. Even introverts feel welcome. Sign up for their free enewsletters for event updates.

@OnStageSuccess
www.OnStageSuccess.com
Tom Jackson has got the live performance thang all figured out, and he’s happy to fill you in with humor and practical advice you can immediately put into action to improve your show. From planning the setlist to what not to do on stage, he’ll give you the building blocks to create your best gig. His enewsletter is free, and his video and tape resources are both entertaining and timelessly beneficial. You’ll never think of anyone else when you hear ‘Death eating a cracker’ again. Not that you ever heard anyone else say it. Just sayin. If you shake his hand, tell him that girl who sprained her ankle at his Nashville conference sentcha.

@Musician_Friend
www.MusiciansFriend.com
Drooling over that guitar amp in the window? Needing a new mic but not sure where to start or what you can afford? Musician’s friend is the consummate warehouse for all things music gear. When I built my home studio, I got a $300 package from them that included my MXL990 diaphragm mic, a set of Nady drum mics, three mic cables, two mic stands, monitors and…there may have been something else. They have great specials, a gamut of products in nearly every purchase range and add on warrantees to make sure you’re set. Customer reviews on their site help to ensure that you’re getting the right gear for the right sound at the right price. It’s the Amazon of instruments and equipment.

@RootMusic
www.RootMusic.com
If you miss the old days when your Facebook artist page had everything on one page – before the new era of tabs – you may fall in love with Root Music. Their sleek design is user friendly and encourages more interaction than the current static and compartmentalized options Facebook offers on its own. The downside is that it supercedes your iLike features that translate to FB – the ability for fans to ‘like’ your music and dedicate to friends and family. Using RM also means that when you update your iLike concert calendar, it’ll only post to iLike and MySpace – not Facebook. So, six of one, half a baker’s dozen of the other. For now I’m sticking with iLike, but I’ve emailed the friendly guys at Root and told them that if they wind up adding those other features, I’m in. 

Posted via email from Music Business Information

Sunday, April 4, 2010

WHAT IF GOD HAD NOT DESTROYED SODOM, AND GOMORRAH?

         After His visit to Abraham and Sarah to assure them of a child, the divine messenger, and his angels “looked toward Sodom” (Genesis 18: 16).  Abraham accompanied them to a certain point where God revealed to him His plan to annihilate both Sodom and Gomorrah. The reason for the coming destruction of the two cities was the fact that their sins and their evil deeds were “grievous” (V. 20).

                 Abraham attempted to convince God to spare the two cities, but their wickedness was so pervasive that not even ten righteous could be found in them. Thus, God “rained brimstone and fire on Sodom and Gomorrah”(V. 24), and “He overthrew those cities, and all the plain, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew on the ground” (V. 25).

            God’s intervention was, no doubt, radical. Because it was radical, some find it difficult to understand why a God of love would do something so seemingly cruel and destructive. After all, the entire population of the two cities was eradicated -- and that included the old, women and children. To skeptics, such an all-encompassing destruction appears unnecessary and capricious. But is that really the case?

  What if God had simply punished the people of Sodom and Gomorrah in some other way, so as to get them to change? What if God had just destroyed one city and had allowed the other to behold the consequences of sin, and perhaps repent?

            Let’s first understand the extent of the wickedness prevalent within the two cities. God describes the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah as being “very grievous” (Genesis 18: 20). One quickly understands how grievous their sins were, by reading the story very carefully. The Scriptures tell us that, when the angels went down to the city of Sodom, Lot invited them into his home. We read that, upon entering Lot’s house, “the men of the city…both old and young, all the people from every quarter surrounded the house” (19:4). They then demanded that Lot bring out his angelic guests so as to “know them”(V. 5). Lot, instead, offered to them his two young virgin daughters, but the men of Sodom refused the offer and arrogantly tried to force the two angels out so as to abuse them sexually.

            This picture reveals a level of depravity that is difficult to conceive. Let’s note that “all the people” of Sodom, “from every quarter,” that is, rich and poor, young and old, were lusting after the two foreigners and craved to rape them. Their lurid lust was also accompanied by both aggression and arrogance.

            From this picture alone, we may safely infer that the Sodomites were a totally brutal bunch, without conscience and self-control. We can also safely infer that within those two cities violence abounded, as did other sinful acts such as lying, cheating, stealing, adultery and all kinds of sexual depravity.

Sodom and Gomorrah were the nest of a virulent, evil virus that was spreading quickly through the area and onto other cities. Evil has a way of spreading far and wide, when left unchecked. The two cities had to be dealt with, not only because their evil deeds could no longer be tolerated by the God of righteousness but to also prevent their debauchery from spreading far and wide.

The New Testament tells us that another reason why God overthrew the two cities was because He wanted their destruction to be “an ensample to those that after should live ungodly” (2 Peter 2: 6). God’s intervention was meant to be so powerful, and so drastic, that all would hear and tremble. He wanted generations to come to know that His will is supreme, that He will not forebear evil forever and that, though He is longsuffering, the day will come when He will extirpate evil in very dramatic ways. Jude warns that “Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities about them in like manner, giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire” (Jude 7).

            If God had not intervened, the evil in Sodom and Gomorrah would have continued, and it would have actually become much worse. As a result, the suffering that invariably accompanies evil would have multiplied; the influence of the two cities would have increased, and it would have affected a great many near and far; God would have been perceived as distant and uninvolved and, lastly, the great lesson of God’s ultimate punishment of evildoers would not have received the powerful emphasis that it received.

            God’s intervention was, therefore, timely and appropriate. It shouts to all generations that God is a righteous God, that he will not endure depravity forever, and that He will finally punish evildoers by using, if necessary, very drastic means.

Posted via email from Religion

15 Ways to Create an Hour a Day of Extra Time … for Solitude


Solitude

Post written by Leo Babauta

One problem with our complicated lives these days is that many of us never find time to spend alone, in peace, without being bombarded with noise and information. There’s no time for solitude and quiet contemplation, and as a result, we have stress and anxiety and depression and repression.

Find time each day to be alone, for your mental health, by stealing pockets of time from other areas of your life.

This time will pay off for you in the long run. You will become sane, and with the ability to reflect on your life, on what you’ve gone through in the last 24 hours, in the last week, in the last year, you can slowly improve it or learn to be happy with it.

Finding time for solitude is extremely important, and yet it’s an area that is often neglected. I don’t mean time alone, where you’re watching TV or surfing the Internet or reading or watching the news. There’s nothing wrong with those activities, but they aren’t conducive to contemplation, to getting to know yourself, to reflecting on what you’ve been going through, for thinking about your dreams.

Learning to spend time in quiet solitude is also very difficult. It’s probably best if done in small doses at first, so if you only do it for 20 or 30 minutes at first, that’s OK. Learn to fight the urge to turn the TV on or turn your computer on or play music or read. It’s hard, but it’s worth it.

What follows are just some ideas for recapturing about an hour a day of extra time, from other sources of time, so that you can have time for solitude. These are temporary fixes … ways for you to find that time for 30 days, and in those 30 days, you can find other ways to simplify your life so that you can have this time permanently. Use those 30 days, in part, for thinking about the complications in your life, about things you might want to eliminate to free up more time for important things, like your dreams, your loved ones, your passion, and solitude.

  1. Television. I’m not on a crusade against television, and I’m not saying you should get rid of it. I watch TV. And though I’ve eliminated cable TV from my life, I’m not saying you should. This is a temporary fix, remember … so try to reduce your television consumption by 60 minutes, just for 30 days. You may find that you enjoy reduced TV consumption, but every person is different.
  2. Internet. Again, I’m not saying you should stop using the Internet. Just reduce your consumption of the Internet by 60 minutes for 30 days. Be sure to use those 60 minutes for solitude and contemplation.Reducing your Internet use will force you to use the time you do use the Internet more productively … you can still do the things you love to do, but you have to use them in a more focused way.
  3. Wake earlier. I’ve talked about the benefits of rising early, and how to do it in the past, and one of its best benefits, for me, is the quiet time I have alone. I like to use this time for writing, for exercise, and for contemplation. Try waking 1 hour earlier, just for 30 days. Or if that doesn’t work for you, stay up an hour later. Either way works.
  4. Email. If email consumes a huge part of your life, try going on an email diet. Only allow yourself to do email once a day, for 30 minutes. See if you can stop yourself from doing email at all other times. Remember, this is just for 30 days … after that, if you want to go back to doing email all day long, you can.
  5. Stop shopping. Again, it’s only temporary! But if you’re also trying to reduce debt or save money, this is a great permanent solution. But just try it for 30 days. Eliminate all shopping except essential grocery shopping. Everything else goes on a 30-day list.
  6. Leave work early. If your work allows it, see if you can leave work earlier. If you have a smart boss, the only thing that will matter is if you’re getting your work done — not how long you’re in the office. So really focus on getting the essential work done within the time you have, and leave an hour earlier.
  7. Go to work late. The flip side of the above suggestion. Again, this is if your work allows it.
  8. Take a longer lunch. Sometimes it’s easier to squeeze out extra time for your lunch break than it is to come in early or to leave early. If you can take 90 minutes for lunch, use the first 30 for eating (pack a lunch if possible) and the other 60 for solitude.
  9. Stop digesting news. Are you a news junky? I’ve written before about how I haven’t watched TV news or read a newspaper or even Internet news sites for a couple of years. It’s possible to go without it. See if you can stop reading newspapers, or watching TV news, for just 30 days. After that, you can go back.
  10. Don’t do anything after work. If you make social commitments after work, or business meetings, or whatever, stop making these plans for 30 days and use this time for solitude.
  11. Skip civic commitments. Do you volunteer or serve in an organization or are you a member of some group? Skip the meetings and other functions for a month. The organization won’t fall apart without you … even if you’re president, you can temporarily hand the reins over to your vice president.
  12. Minimalize laundry. Do you do a load of laundry several times a week, or even every day? That’s an hour or two each time. Instead, go to a laundry mat and do your laundry all in one shot — that’ll take about two hours. You can easily save 1-3 hours this way.
  13. Minimalize housework/yardwork. Do these chores take up a large part of your day? See if you can minimalize this, just for a month. Relax your standards a little. Or do a speed-cleaning stint once a week for two hours, and don’t clean the rest of the week. For yardwork, hire a teen-ager to do it for a month.
  14. Cut out non-essential reading. Cut out magazine reading and most book reading (unless it’s essential) to give you some extra time. This will also include cutting out newspaper and Internet reading, if you aren’t implementing the tips above.
  15. Minimalize recreation. Partying, drinking, playing sports, playing video games … however you spend your free time, see if you can cut into that time.

Remember to use any time you free up for solitude and contemplation, not extr

Posted via email from WellCare

What God Commands; So Shall We Do (Conquest of the Land)

20 “Behold, I am going to send an angel before you to guard you along the way and to bring you into the place which I have prepared. 21 “Be on your guard before him and obey his voice; do not be rebellious toward him, for he will not pardon your transgression, since My name is in him.22 “But if you truly obey his voice and do all that I say, then I will be an enemy to your enemies and an adversary to your adversaries. 23 “For My angel will go before you and bring you in to the land of the Amorites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Canaanites, the Hivites and the Jebusites; and I will completely destroy them. 24 “You shall not worship their gods, nor serve them, nor do according to their deeds; but you shall utterly overthrow them and break their sacred pillars in pieces. 25 “But you shall serve the LORD your God, and He will bless your bread and your water; and I will remove sickness from your midst.26 “There shall be no one miscarrying or barren in your land; I will fulfill the number of your days. 27 “I will send My terror ahead of you, and throw into confusion all the people among whom you come, and I will make all your enemies turn their backs to you. 28 “I will send hornets ahead of you so that they will drive out the Hivites, the Canaanites, and the Hittites before you. 29 “I will not drive them out before you in a single year, that the land may not become desolate and the beasts of the field become too numerous for you. 30 “I will drive them out before you little by little, until you become fruitful and take possession of the land. 31 “I will fix your boundary from the Red Sea to the sea of the Philistines, and from the wilderness to the River Euphrates; for I will deliver the inhabitants of the land into your hand, and you will drive them out before you. 32 “You shall make no covenant with them or with their gods. 33 “They shall not live in your land, because they will make you sin against Me; for if you serve their gods, it will surely be a snare to you.”

Posted via email from Religion

Chemical in furniture, clothing and shoes linked to skin rashes! (Made in China)

Shipments from China, of furniture , clothing and shoes, are now being linked to severe skin rashes in many people. The chemical is called Dimethylfumate, (DMF), and it is used to prevent the growth of mold during shipping. Some people are very allergic to it. Over 1,000 cases have already been reported in Europe and many in Canada. Most US doctors aren't yet aware of it and don't realize that many cases of severe rashes may be caused by it.

 The chemical is put into little packets or sachets that are then put in with furniture, clothing and shoes to prevent mold during shipping. It contaminates the furniture and clothing. One US doctor had a patient with a severe foot allergy. They discovered that it came from her contaminated shoes. When the shoes were disposed of, the rash disappeared.

Many countries in Europe have already banned its use. A few states are thinking about doing it. If you sit on your sofa and start itching in the back of your legs, that is the first sign of it. 

Posted via email from Kleerstreem's Posterous

Chemical in furniture, clothing and shoes linked to skin rashes! (Made in China)

Shipments from China, of furniture , clothing and shoes, are now being linked to severe skin rashes in many people. The chemical is called Dimethylfumate, (DMF), and it is used to prevent the growth of mold during shipping. Some people are very allergic to it. Over 1,000 cases have already been reported in Europe and many in Canada. Most US doctors aren't yet aware of it and don't realize that many cases of severe rashes may be caused by it.

 The chemical is put into little packets or sachets that are then put in with furniture, clothing and shoes to prevent mold during shipping. It contaminates the furniture and clothing. One US doctor had a patient with a severe foot allergy. They discovered that it came from her contaminated shoes. When the shoes were disposed of, the rash disappeared.

Many countries in Europe have already banned its use. A few states are thinking about doing it. If you sit on your sofa and start itching in the back of your legs, that is the first sign of it. 

Posted via email from WellCare

The Importance of Being Karl (Rove)

 

Dick Morris

The second half of Karl Rove's memoir, "Courage and Consequences," you've already read if you have followed the intricate and specific defenses the Bush administration put forth to parry Democratic attacks. 

But ... the first half you've never seen before. Here we meet a vulnerable, human, sensitive man struggling to rise above a plebian background and make his way in the world. The transition from the honesty and appealing openness of the first half and the institutionalized, politically correct defenses of the second perhaps illustrates the changes that power brings to us all. 

Yet it is to Rove's credit that he can reach back to the days when he was still a regular person and bring that young man back to life in the pages of his memoir. 

You meet his troubled mother who ended her own life, his father's pursuit of his dreams and the sense of abandonment of a young man facing college costs with no help ... and then of a grown man in the full flush of his career success, meekly and humbly going back to school to get his B.A. We follow Karl's rise through the ranks of professional young Republicans, his relationships with the likes of Lee Atwater (the universal mentor of young talent) and his early encounters with the Bush family. 

The Rove account of the 2000 election and its aftermath is a page-turner that will rank with any Robert Ludlum novel -- gripping, inside and compelling. His rendition of the early Bush campaigns keeps the flavor of the innocent young operative feeling his way through rough-and-tumble politics. 

Karl not only takes us inside his mind, he brings us into his body, as well. He is forever somatizing his political troubles. He gets sick to his stomach when bad news breaks. He feels dizzy when he learns of the machinations of the 2000 recount. He gets a sickening feeling when he reads a bad column. 

Beautifully written throughout and easily readable, Karl's memoir is an important contribution to the literature of the Bush presidency and, more importantly, a riveting account of a young man on the way up the ladder of America's political consulting industry. 

You won't know Karl Rove until you read this book. And he is well worth getting to kno

Posted via email from Global Politics

Social Media

Big companies have rushed head long into the social media space creating social media departments and titles like Social Media Strategist, Community Manager, and Director of Conversation. You know, I’ve never been very big on job titles, but I also think stuffing social media participation into a department or job function limits the way organizations should be thinking about social media.

On the other hand small businesses seem fixated on figuring out if Facebook is a more valuable play than LinkedIn – again missing what’s going on all around them.

Perhaps in the beginning the new set of social tools dictated some restructuring and scrambling as people were trying to figure out what to make of this new space, but a funny thing happened on the way to those discoveries. Social media behavior just sort of poured into every corner of the business, regardless of size.

The notion of social media as behavior suggests that you simply can’t contain it to a department, an activity, something more to do, even if you try.

Social media activity has proven its value as a way to create awareness, trust, leads, opportunities, content, customers, employees, service, referrals, collaboration and communication in its multiple forms.

Social media is an umbrella behavior that has life in some form in every department. (Hint to PR and social media consulting firms this is how you should position your work.)

It might be safe to suggest that marketing has this same sort of pervasive reach and that it is the rightful home for social media integration, but there’s something less tangible, yet more pervasive about this evolving business behavior that feels more like business strategy.

So, instead of planning that suggests lists of social media tactics it might be more appropriate to simply start asking – how will we be more social? How will we use social behavior to change our business, our customers, our people, our community, and our industry?

Posted via email from Music Business Information