Monday, October 22, 2012

Why MLM Leaders Are Flocking To Network Marketing VT ...

mlm leader josh liffordHey there, It?s Marketing Coach & MLM Leader Josh Lifford here today with an important post about why many leaders in the Network Marketing Industry are flocking at a rapid pace toward something you may have heard of called Network Marketing VT. Let me be the first to say that as a Professional Network Marketer Online, I too have rushed toward this opportunity. Now, let me clear the air for you and let you know that NMVT is not my primary income stream, yet however it is very powerful, but money aside, what is so attractive about Network Marketing VT is that it addresses the largest concern that struggling network marketers have. It?s a fact and you perhaps have heard it before, 97% of all those who attempt working in the Direct Sales industry end up making absolutely ZERO, and I mean ZERO Money from their new home based business that was supposed to be the change YOU were looking for to begin with.

Now, what this constant failure does is give the Network Marketing/Direct Sales Industry a BAD NAME. That?s where Network Marketing VT comes in. Here?s the deal, people are hurting and they need to make money, that is exactly why I began my private coaching program over a year ago, and have to date made 1,000?s of dollars online as a marketer. What allowed me to do just this was the education that I received from a personal mentor. In fact, unless you have a personal mentor you will NOT make it online. It is a proven fact, that you must have the right education pertaining to the industry you choose in the public arena in order to land a job in any particular field, for example, in order to become a Doctor, you must go to medical school, and of course, that takes years and years. Well you can continue doing one of two things, you can continue down the path you are on right now, and try to figure this whole thing out on your own, or You can Eliminate all that Pain And Struggle with the Mentorship Program offered through Network Marketing VT. Let me break it down for you in simple form.

Partner With & MLM Leader Who Can Help You Master Your Marketing Through The Power of NMVT

Network Marketing VT provides everyone a training platform where you can cut the learning curve and begin generating leads almost immediately on complete Network Marketing VT with MLM Leader Josh Liffordautopilot, in other words, once you master the training and setup your sales funnels, you can literally, just keep adding content, focus on the marketing and watch the leads pile in ever single day. I could literally talk all day about Network Marketing VT but that would be boring to you, so i?ll not waste your time as I know time is precious, so do yourself a favor and watch this short presentation about NMVT right now & see for yourself the power behind this online mentorship program and how it can propel your business to new heights beginning right now. Oh, I forgot to mention, you can actually get started FREE for the 1st 14 days, so you have ZERO excuses now, All the barriers have been removed for you to make the decision to go here now, (hint) ??>> Click Here!?

See you at the bank, ?Josh Lifford ? Your Online Marketing Coach & MLM Leader.

Again Here is the Link To the FREE Video ? www.onlinementorsnow.com?

Source: http://www.joshlifford.com/why-mlm-leaders-are-flocking-to-network-marketing-vt/

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The Jargon Of TV Advertising Explained | Business 2 Community

Behind the scenes.

Image by: roland

The effect of TV advertising agencies is incalculable and their impact undeniable with their ability to reach a massive global audience.

TV advertising and marketing companies use their own language and terminology that is very different from that used in any other profession. Whether it?s talking about placing adverts, designing campaigns, or measuring results, there is a specific language tailored to the TV advertising industry.

Sometimes it can all get a bit overwhelming and confusing, and whilst the terms are so varied and broad and cover a wide area, there are some terms and definitions that crop up more than others.

The following (alphabetical) list is by no mean comprehensive, but it should give you some pointers and help demystify some of the jargon associated with the wonderful world of advertising.

AFP ??Ad Funded Programmes. Programmes that are either partly or fully funded by an advertiser

Average Frequency ??An expression of the average number of times a particular campaign or advertisement will be seen or heard by someone

BACC? ?Broadcast Advertising Clearance Centre. All adverts appearing on member stations must be cleared by BACC prior to transmission

Bumpers ?Short branded sponsorship credits shown either side of the programme coming in and out of the commercial break.

Commercial Minutage ?The number of minutes (per day, per week, etc) on television during which commercials are broadcast

Coverage? The coverage level of an ad campaign ? also known as ?reach? ? to show the exent it is viewed by its target audience

DAL? Dedicated Advertiser Location. Accessed via the red button which allows viewers to enter an advertiser environment outside the broadcast system

Day-part? Broadcast time period (segment), for example: daytime 0900-1730

Establishment Survey ?A UK annual survey carried out by BARB (Broadcaster?s Audience Research Board) and used to update population estimates and targets for the maintenance of the BARB panels

Focus Group? Group of people invited to comment on a new product or campaign which are then used to decide on how to best market the product

Free-to-air? ?TV channels offered free to users, subscription free

Frequency? ?Average number of times a target audience is able to see an advertisement

Household ?A group whose viewing is measured by the ratings supplier hat implies their social class

Impacts ?Number of people who view a commercial. One impact is one person viewing a commercial in a thirty second period.

Ofcom ?The regulating authority for television, radio, telecommunications and wireless communication services

Programme Sponsor? An advertiser who has paid for an association with a specific programme or genre

Road Blocking? An advertiser booking the same time for a product (ie: Channel 4 and Channel 5) to increase its coverage

Sample Size? Number of individuals used in analysing market or audience research results

Strike Weight ?The weight of advertising ratings brought per week

Target Audience? The group advertisers are aiming to reach

Universe? Number in the target audience available to watch V measured in thousands in each television area

Weekly Channel Reach? Percentage of target audience that views a channel in an average week?

So whether you?re considering breaking in to TV advertising or already work for a production company in London, this list should give you a heads-up.

If you work in advertising, have you got any abbreviations or terms that might be useful to add to the list?

Source: http://www.business2community.com/marketing/the-jargon-of-tv-advertising-explained-0312117

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Source templates for UK sources - Family Tree Maker software ...

I've just started with FTM for Mac V2. When looking at Source recording the templates all appear to be aimed at US sources. Are there any appropriate for UK sources? If not what is the best way to record BMD certificates?

Any help is appreciated.

Peter

Source: http://boards.ancestry.co.uk/topics.software.famtreemaker/9081/mb.ashx

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US nurse arrested in Macedonia awaits trial verdict

By NBC News staff

An Alabama nurse who was on a humanitarian mission in Macedonia is now awaiting a judge's ruling after she was arrested and tried for allegedly stealing rare coins.

Candi Dunlap, of Meridian, Ala., was arrested on Sept. 28 at Macedonia's airport after the coins were found in her carry-on luggage, the Clarion Ledger reported.?

The judge had been expected to rule Friday but delayed her decision until next Wednesday.

Others on the mission trip with Dunlap insisted she was given the coins as a thank you from a Macedonian and that she had no idea they were not to be taken from the country.


U.S. lawmakers representing Meridian have been hopeful she will be released.

"I am hopeful that there will be a resolution to this soon that will allow Candi to return home,"?Rep. Gregg?Harper said Thursday. "We know that this has been an extreme hardship on Candi and her family."

In Washington, the State Department said U.S. Embassy officials in Macedonia have been visiting with Dunlap regularly to ensure she is well treated.

Dunlap's husband, Marc, is also in Macedonia trying to secure her release. He has been posting updates on a Facebook page dedicated to her freedom.

More world stories from NBC News:

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/20/14578637-us-nurse-arrested-in-macedonia-awaits-verdict-in-coin-smuggling-trial?lite

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Questions for Medicare in meningitis outbreak

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Medicare is coming under scrutiny in the meningitis outbreak that has rekindled doubts about the safety of the nation's drug supply.

The giant health insurance program for seniors long ago flagged compounded drugs produced for the mass market without oversight from the Food and Drug Administration as safety risks. In 2007, Medicare revoked coverage of compounded inhaler drugs for lung disease.

But Medicare doesn't seem to have consistently used its own legal power to deny payment, and critics say that has enabled the compounding business to flourish.

Now program officials are scrambling to find out how many Medicare beneficiaries are among the more than 270 people sickened in 16 states in a still-growing outbreak that has claimed 21 lives.

The illnesses have been linked to an injectable steroid used to treat back pain, made by the New England Compounding Center, a Massachusetts specialty pharmacy. The medication was contaminated with a fungus.

A senior lawmaker and consumer advocates are raising questions about Medicare's role, including an apparent lack of coordination between Medicare and the FDA, the two most powerful agencies within the federal Health and Human Services Department.

In response, a department spokesman says Congress needs to provide the FDA with stronger powers.

The meningitis outbreak has called attention to the role of compounding pharmacies in supplying medications routinely used by hospitals and doctors to treat patients. Regulated primarily by states, the pharmacies specialize in customizing doses for individual patients who have allergies to ingredients in an FDA-approved drug, or who might need a smaller dosage than what's available commercially. But some pharmacies have pushed into full-scale manufacturing.

Medicare has long been aware of the risks.

"By compounding drugs on a large scale, a company may be operating as a drug manufacturer within the meaning of (federal law), without complying with requirements of that law," Medicare's coverage manual, a reference for contractors that handle payments, says in a section dealing with compounded drugs.

That situation, adds the manual, fails Medicare's basic standard, that treatments must be "reasonable and necessary" in order to be covered. "This means, in the case of drugs, the FDA must approve them for marketing," says the manual.

It goes on to say that billing contractors should wait for instructions from Medicare before cutting off payment in specific cases where the FDA has determined that a company is producing compounded drugs in violation of the law.

"Medicare indicates in its own policy documents that it can cut off payments for compounded drugs produced under manufacturing-like conditions," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who over the years has pushed for stronger government oversight of the pharmaceutical industry.

"Medicare should explain whether it uses this step, and if not, why not. Every avenue for explaining how this health crisis occurred and preventing others like it needs exploration," he added.

Joyce Lovelace of Albany, Ky., says she doesn't understand how the outbreak could have happened. Eddie Lovelace, her husband of 55 years, died of a stroke after receiving injections of the steroid implicated in the outbreak as a treatment for pain from an auto accident.

"I'm 100 percent behind not paying ... whether it's Medicare, Blue Cross, or whatever," she said. "Somebody dropped the ball and as a result my husband is gone." Eddie Lovelace, 78, a long-serving judge, was still working at the time of his death and Medicare was not his primary insurance.

Medicare officials are looking into whether the program paid for drugs that have sickened patients.

"If the FDA determines a company is producing compounded drugs in violation of (federal law), Medicare will not reimburse for drugs produced in that facility," said HHS spokesman Tait Sye. "The FDA's regulatory authority over compounding pharmacies is more limited by statute than it is for typical drug manufacturers. We urge Congress to strengthen the FDA's authority."

FDA records show that in 2006 the agency issued a warning letter to the New England Compounding Center for producing anesthetic creams, but officials were unable to say if Medicare was alerted.

In a separate case, Medicare seems to have taken sweeping action on its own without much prodding from the FDA. In 2007, Medicare stopped coverage for compounded inhalation drugs used to treat lung disease.

"Compounded drugs are not considered interchangeable with FDA-approved products," said an information bulletin at the time from Noridian, a major Medicare payment contractor. "The absence of testing for safety and effectiveness has the potential of putting a patient at increased risk of injury, illness or death."

Michael Carome, deputy director of Public Citizen's health research group, says Medicare's policy on compounded drugs seems "internally contradictory."

"They do appear to have a policy for which the default setting is that Medicare does not cover drugs that have not been approved by the FDA," said Carome. "That essentially applies to many, if not all, drugs made by compounding pharmacies."

Medicare's defenders say the agency may be reluctant to act for a number of reasons. Cutting off compounding pharmacies could aggravate drug shortages. Also it could open Medicare to a political counterattack from industry, even charges of rationing.

But Carome, a physician who once served in an HHS regulatory office, says the alternative is that compounding will continue with little federal oversight and recurring outbreaks.

If Medicare had expanded its compounding crackdown beyond just lung disease medications, "that might have prevented the widespread use of these drugs," Carome said. "Without coverage, things don't get used."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/questions-medicare-meningitis-outbreak-080233292.html

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Soyuz craft readied for space station mission

BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan (AP) ? A Russian-made Soyuz rocket was erected into place Sunday, ahead of the start of a mission to take a three-man crew to the International Space Station.

For the first time since 1984, the manned launch will take place from Baikonur cosmodrome launch pad 31, while the pad that is normally used, from which Yury Gagarin began his landmark space mission, is undergoing modernization.

The Soyuz craft remains the only means for international astronauts to reach the space station since the decommissioning of the U.S. Shuttle fleet in 2011.

NASA's Kevin Ford and Russian astronauts Oleg Novitsky and Yevgeny Tarelkin will blast off Tuesday from the Russian-leased facility in southern Kazakhstan and will spend around six months on the orbiting laboratory.

They will join U.S. astronaut Sunita Williams, Russia's Yuri Malenchenko and Aki Hoshide of Japan's JAXA agency.

In accordance with custom, the entrance to the hangar storing the Soyuz craft slid open in the pre-dawn darkness as Russian and U.S. space officials looked on and took photographs.

By the end of the Soyuz's slow, half-hour trip from storage to the launch site resting on its side on a flatbed railway car, the sun had risen to reveal a cloudless sky.

Over the following hour, the craft was raised into its upright launch position, setting it off starkly against a backdrop of rolling, tinder-dry steppe.

Russia's Roscosmos space agency spokesman Alexei Kuznetsov said launch pad 31 had recently been renovated and already been used for an unmanned mission over the summer.

"Now we need to do similar things at Site No. 1. As soon as that is finished, it will be in a condition to resume launches," he said.

Site No. 1, better known as Gagarin's Start in recognition of the historic 1961 mission, was last overhauled in 1983.

The need for a back-up launch site became particularly acute with the decommissioning of the U.S. shuttle fleet, when Gagarin's Start became the only operating pad available for manned launches to the space station.

The Soyuz's trip will last around two days and end when it docks with the Poisk module in the Russian segment of the ISS.

Ford, Novitsky and Tarelkin are scheduled to remain in orbit until March, covering a busy time at the space station that will include the first ever arrival of "Cygnus," a commercial cargo vehicle from the Orbital Sciences Corp., of Dulles, Virginia, scheduled for December.

Another two commercial SpaceX Dragon craft are also expected over the same period, as are an additional four Russian Progress resupply vehicles.

Of the three men blasting off Tuesday, only Ford has spent any time in orbit. He spent two weeks in space as pilot of the space shuttle Discovery in 2009 on a mission to transport scientific equipment to the ISS.

"They'll be really prepared. Their training has been excellent," said William Gerstenmaier, NASA's associate administrator for space operations, speaking at launch pad 31.

"They have got time to learn on station, so if there are some little rough spots as they get started, they'll be able to accomplish their tasks," he said.

NASA's Tom Marshburn, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield and Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko will join the station in December, taking the place of Williams, Malenchenko and Hoshide, who are due to return to earth next month.

In August, a Russian booster rocket failed to place two communications satellites into target orbits, stranding the Russian Express MD-2 and Indonesia's Telkom-3 satellites in a low orbit where they could not be recovered.

A Russian robotic probe designed to study a moon of Mars got stranded in Earth's orbit after its launch in November and eventually came crashing down in January.

Gerstenmaier said the Russian space agency treated crewed programs differently from other launches.

"The hardware that's chosen for this rocket is better quality hardware than they would use for a satellite or for a different launch because of the criticality of what they're doing," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/soyuz-craft-readied-space-station-mission-055953494.html

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PayPal Here Gets Its First U.S. Retail Deal; Now Sold At AT&T Stores

PayPalOn eBay's earnings call this past week, CEO John Donahoe revealed that the company's Square competitor, PayPal Here, had landed its first U.S. retail deal. PayPal Here is now being sold at 1,800 AT&T stores across the US. Previously, PayPal only had an international retail deal in Japan with Softbank.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/nxIsqVqvwVE/

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