Tampilkan postingan dengan label goodbye. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label goodbye. Tampilkan semua postingan

Is Kylie Jenner saying goodbye to her plump lips

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Kylie Jenner took to her Instagram yesterday to share this photo of her real lips which are tiny and beside it was a photo of her lip-injected pout flying away and she captioned it: fly away my friend. Wonder if it means that she would stop injecting her lips to make it look fuller. Her lip injected pout after the cut....
 


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Goodbye to HubPages as Panda and Penguin Traffic Drops Further

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stickman and dog saying goodbye and leaving
For over two years I have been creating content at the HubPages writing site.  It has been a mostly enjoyable experience and I have met a lot of people and learnt a lot about the write content for money game.

Mostly I have learnt it doesnt pay any money but thats a lesson of sorts I suppose. 

When I first joined in October 2010 people could write any old garbage and the ranking was still good.  That was because Google unfairly favoured the large content sites over small amateurs.  Write rubbish and get paid would be a reasonable slogan at the time.

Great!  Im not proud and after a few months I was beginning to understand the sheer awfulness required to get some traffic and money.  How to do the simplest thing - with wall to wall Amazon and eBay adverts.

The first Panda strike came in 2011 and decimated HubPages traffic.  Much better awful writers than me complained and left.  Their tricks no longer worked and HubPages had lost a large amount of ranking clout.

I stayed.  I was still learning and mistakenly thought things might turn around.  They never did.  In fact, virtually every Panda release has further ground down HubPages ranking and traffic.  There have been brief periods of false recovery.

All the time I have been improving my content.  Not with tricks but techniques - to try to provide a reasonable result for my search visitor.  My stuff isnt great but compared to the rest of the web - its OK.  Yet my traffic continues to drop.

A rough estimate of the drop. If traffic from two years ago was based on my content now I would expect ten times as much.  Yes, I am that much better but my visits are worse.

As I have developed my offering and tried to provide sets of pages that have some relevance to each other - aiming for that all important stay with me angle - I have become increasingly irritated by the way HubPages interferes with that.

Despite their content being largely generic crap, they group their pages not by author, but by subject.  Search for something and the bottom of the page will have lots of links to other peoples content.  It wont be written the same, but apparently being on the same subject is good enough.  No benefit to me at all.

Sure, I get some cross fertilisation (visits) from other Hubber pages, but that is small recompense for the links promoted on my pages.  I am selling ME, not cupcake recipes.

The other huge and growing problem is the sheer weight of spam advertising on a HubPages page.  We all know that the adverts pay the bills - indeed they are the reason most of us are there - but there is surely a limit.

The pages consist of more adverts than is acceptable in my opinion.  They say I am a spam site the moment you open the search result.  HubPages have recently introduced an additional set of floating ads that accompany the poor reader as they scroll through the page.  Not only are these ads intrusive and poor - the revenue from them is not shared!  Are they trying to milk the last remaining money before they sell up?

What is ridiculous is that HubPages have been running a quality control process for months.  This is not a bad idea at all.  Five years too late of course, but at least they appear to be trying.  Just as that might be about to bear fruit in terms of Google seeing the site as less awful than it was - they add their new set of excessive adverts!

As a HubPages contributor I have no say in this.  My carefully constructed offering has over the top adverts and links to other peoples content.  I am surrounded by a sea of generic crap.  My reader is encouraged to do anything but stay with me and read another of my pages.

As Google tightens the screws on content sites each search visitor becomes more important.  I know that.  It is why I have tweaked and improved my pages as far as makes reasonable sense.  The idea being to offer the reader enjoyment and interest, and to hope that a single search hit turns into a proper visit.

HubPages are doing everything they can to thwart that aim.  That is why my bounce rate on blogs and sites is far lower than HubPages.  Yet my best content remains on their site.  It is where I have concentrated my efforts for so long.

I wonder if I had put all that effort into my own sites where would I be now?  Probably nowhere - because content writing is a hard game to crack.  At least though I would retain control.  The links and adverts would be mine - my choice as to how hard to spam my poor reader.

As Google via their Panda and Penguin algorithm changes have hammered HubPages, Squidoo and others the content farm reason for being has disappeared.  There is no ranking benefit anymore.  A revenue sharing site becomes a revenue drain - well take half and give you nothing in return for your efforts.

They do offer a site - for those who cannot face setting one up themselves.  Given that most pages consist of some text and pictures it is not really that hard to create your own web offering.  Perhaps their best attribute is that they give people like me a place to start creating content and learning the game.

Time to leave the nest and fly or crash on my own.   Forget about algorithm changes and constant hope against the reality of dropping traffic.  Create something that doesnt have wall to wall adverts and other peoples links.

Goodbye HubPages.  It was fun and I will always be grateful for that first taste and learning experience but the game has changed. 

stickman and horse riding off into the sunset


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Adsense Checklist

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Step #1

Create a Website and upload it. Want to create websites in a jiffy? Check out the AdSense website builder.

Step #2

Sign up for AdSense.

Learn How to Apply for Google AdSense

When the Google Adsense Page opens, click on the button which says Click Here to Apply. You will need to mention the URL of the website created in Step #1 while signing up.

Step #3

Wait for the approval mail from the Google Adsense Team. If your application is rejected for some reason, go back to Step #1 and redo your site till it meets the specifications of the Adsense Team.

Step #4

Once your account is approved, login to your Adsense account. Copy the code from your account and add it to all the pages on your website.

Step #5

Drive traffic to your site. If you need help with this, I recommend these resources:

Instant Traffic Formula

Underground Traffic System

You should NEVER ask people to click on ads on your site. If you do this, your account will be terminated.

Step #6

Sit back and watch the money flow in. :-)

Step #7

Create more sites and add your Adsense code to it. Remember, you just need to apply for Adsense once. After that, you can put the same code in all the websites that you own.
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Financial Discipline… making every naira count By Kemi Adeosun

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Article written by Finance Minister, Mrs Kemi Adeosun. Read below...
Economists have long found Nigeria to be something of a conundrum. The macro picture has always appeared compelling - large population, oil reserves, mineral reserves, endless tracts of arable land, land and sea borders for regional domination. Indeed the absurdity of our underperformance is only surpassed by our ability to accurately quantify our losses and missed opportunities.


In the short period that I have been privileged to serve as Minister of Finance, I have observed that even the most basic systems and controls over the management of our resources are in dire need of strengthening. While we are regaled with and shocked by details of amounts stolen, diverted or wasted, we must face the cold reality that such acts are facilitated by weaknesses in our systems. Even if we successfully prosecute and jail every looter, ghost worker and other economic saboteur, there is every risk that those caught will only be replaced by persons who are just as bad, or worse - unless we radically strengthen our systems and institutions.

Our Presidents brave and committed fight against corruption and waste is as much an economic crusade as it is a moral one. The objective is not just to stem the corruption and loss but to execute an economic plan to channel those monies into much needed areas that will support and reposition the economy.  In short, the fight against corruption is not about retributionand meting out punishment, it is about releasing funds for our economy. I am humbled to be part of the ongoing work on recovery and can report that the urgency in the work, especially our interface with nations where our money has been stashed, is propelled by our need for funds to invest into our economy. 

Our economic plans are not about austerity and frugality; if that were the case then we would not be attempting an expansionary budget. We could have pursued fiscal consolidation and maintained 2015 budget size, and then introduced severe public spending cuts to balance the books by laying off workers and cutting projects. Had we done so, we would by now be the darling of the IMF and other multi-laterals. 

Conversely, we are undertaking an ambitious counter cyclical strategy to stimulate our sluggish economy and expanding government spending with a focus on infrastructure, the true catalyst for economic growth. This will have contractors returning to site and re-engaging workers, it will see new projects commencing, arrears released and economic activity reinvigorated across the nation.  We plan to take advantage of low global prices for commodities and contract prices. Existing contracts are being renegotiated downwards, with significant savings recorded and new projects priced to reflect current commercial realities. Our spending stimulus is private sector driven, supported by a robust procurement system that will see permanent local capacity built in a number of sectors including oil and gas, housing construction and agriculture. However, and this is the key differentiator, we plan to spend in a disciplined manner that will extract the maximum value for every naira spent.

The process of building the internal control framework to support this need for disciplined spending has begun in earnest. Our Efficiency Unit has reviewed four years of detailed expenditure data to identify trends and is already negotiating volume discounts that appropriately reflect the buying power of government. Personnel remains our largest cost. In addition to the BVN driven cleaning of our payrolls that has so far removed 23,000 fraudulent entries, we have initiated significantly stronger controls over our payroll.  These efforts will exert a constant downward pressure on personnel costs until such a time as we have assurance that every payment is accurate and valid. A similar process is now commencing in Pensions. The N160 Billion spent monthly on personnel and pensions related costs demands this as an absolute minimum. 

The revenue focus is non oil. We are revisiting historical decisions that are no longer in the best interests of the national economy. The establishment of various Boards and Parastatals to undertake the operational and revenue generating business of government was a well-intentioned attempt to provide separation from policy makers. However, as the economy has grown, so too has the revenue earned in these agencies and their financial autonomy has grown in a manner that no longer fully serves the public interest. Port charges, maritime charges, airport landing fees, visa charges, passport charges, telecoms licence fees, among many others, must be tracked and accounted for. 

While the Fiscal Responsibility Act was designed to provide control, actual compliance has been poor. The result has been leakage on a staggering scale, as findings from our ongoing audits suggest. This is a serious issue. The upside is a significant revenue opportunity which the TSA implementation has given us sight of, and which we are supporting with a proactive drive for improved accountability.
At the same time, our traditional revenue sources are being supported to be more effective.

In Customs, we are making the necessary investments in container scanners and other equipment required to improve collection efficiency. This is combined with the results of a compensation survey which will see the introduction of performance related pay, to reduce corruption and create an alignment of interest that will enhance revenue generation. With FIRS there is a well-defined plan to enhance compliance by widening the tax net. Using data to drive tax compliance, we will ensure that the tax regime is efficiently administered and that everyone pays their fair share.

There is a need for disciplined and effective system of managing our financial resources to ensure maximum value. We will no longer measure performance by the size of our budget or the amount disbursed; we must measure by the impact of that expenditure on the lives of Nigerians. To measure and manage this we have already made some key changes in the way funds are released. We have abandoned the old system of capital releases that funnelled a proportional share of available funds released to each Ministry, Department and Agency. We have a robust system in place where funds are tied to specific outcomes as documented by each agency. This is being supported by follow up reviews to ensure implementation.

As Benjamin Disraeli once said, We are not creatures of circumstance; we are creators of circumstance.  I am firmly convinced that Nigeria is on the right path. The path of discipline will confront some age old destructive habits. It will challenge some unwritten rules, and I personally will step on some highly placed toes on this journey. All this I am fully prepared for, and so I do not expect nor do I particularly want to be popular.
However, I will act in the best interest of all Nigerians to ensure that we build the economy that we desire and richly deserve.

This is the second of three articles by Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, Minister of Finance, Federal Republic of Nigeria.
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