Personality Tests

A post in response to: Why Are We Obsessed With Personality Tests? – by Julien Smith

I am an ESFJ Extroverted Sensing Feeling Judging – according to a facebook test I had taken a little while back. It’s based on the Jungian Typology. This means something like I want to like everybody, I strive to see others point of views and like to make people feel good about themselves. I’m warmly interested in others. I use my Sensing and Judging characteristics to gather specific, detailed information about others, and turn this information into supportive judgments. I want to like people, and tend to be skilled at bringing out the best in others. I strive to understand other points of view. – As cheesy as this sounds, it’s kinda true.

It’s interesting that you mention personality tests and how they can help you “find your place in the world”. On ecademy (a business focused social networking site) they came up with a color profiling system that is supposed to help you find compatible business associates. I was measured as a “High Blue”. If you think about it, the success of team building depends upon a balance and cooperation of each personality type involved.

I haven’t really found my place in the world yet, I’ve been a little busy helping other people find theirs. :) I really liked Julien’s In Over Your Head blog. I am not really sure why, but I think he writes like the kid in class who would be really quiet, yet very intelligent. You know, the type who only speaks when he really has something to say. So, you can’t help but stop and listen.

Talking About Twitter’s SUL

First, I have to say, I LOVE his statement:
“If @facebook (Twitter’s top competitor, according to @ev Evan Williams, co-founder of Twitter) got on Twitter’s SUL that would be funny! But imagine a world where Twitter gets that confident!”

I laughed out loud when I read that one.

And secondly, I might agree with Scoble as far as getting rid of the list, but I don’t know if I can back up his idea of removing the follower count. Too many people (even me, I’ll be honest) like to see how many people they have in their network.

However, I do get irritated at the nobodies who mass follow people and then mass unfollow people to try and make it look like they are someone special or something. It’s kinda lame.

And finally, he shouldn’t take it too personally that he isn’t on the list. In fact, he is with the majority on this one. But he is a fabulous writer and the fact that his post received 113 comments before I ever even got here, I bet I’m not the only one who thinks that with as much research and thought he poured into his post, @scobleizer probably should be.

Facebook URL’s

Quick News about Facebook Fanpages:

Get More Facebook Fans

This just in! Facebook changed their fanpage URL requirement of 100 fans down to 25 fans to get a vanity url! http://www.facebook.com/WorkAtHomeParents – Check it out! Even though mine’s kinda new, I still have the benefit of a nice  fanpage URL. Fanpages are great as long as you take advantage of all the tricks to making is as SEO friendly as possible. And we all know that starts with the simplest path to your site/page possible. Go get yours!

Here’s how.

After you have your page setup, and get 25 fans:

Go to http://www.facebook.com/username/ See “Set a username for your Pages”.

If you don’t have a facebook fan page yet check out this simple facebook fan page setup, or contact the facebook fan page pros.

My Site Reviews from Linkreferral

Site Reviews

“Good resources! Easy to navigate.
simple and clear. Keep up the good job!”

Pauline Cheong

healthpendant.blogspot.com/

“You have a nice site. The design is simple and clean. It’s cool that you have integrated your
link referral reviews into your site. I don’t feel that there’s anything that needs changing. I wish you luck.”

Helen

loveswagbucks.blogspot.com/

“I can definitely learn from this site and i chose it to be a later to use reference in my favorites list. It helps me to understand tips
about adsense and google. Gives me understanding of other resources yet to be discovered.”

Frank

allaboutmypiano. blogspot. com

“Really professional site! I think the design and layout are great, it loaded fast,
and it was easy to navigate. Also it seems to get your message across in a clear and efficient way. Nice work.”

David

workathomehome.info

Get your own reviews, free traffic at

Link Referral

Why Work at Home?

I’m a Virtual IT Assistant so that I can build my home business and stay home with my kids.

There is a delicate balance that MUST be kept if you are serious about wanting to work from home and not have to send your child to be raised at a day care.

me and the kiddies

I hope to bring this reality to more stay at home moms and stay at home dads.

Virtual IT Assistants

Great News!

I have joined forces with a great team of professional graphic designers, web developers, and other skilled virtual assistants!
We all know that no one person has the ability to be everything to all people. I have widened my network by carefully selecting a group of innovative and creative talent to enhance the services for all of my clients’ businesses. My goal for internet marketing and web design is to guarantee that our customers are provided with the newest and hottest technology services out there!

Visit Virtual IT Assistants for more information.

Here are a few of my professional references:

As a consultant for another VA firm, I had the opportunity to work with an international Career Coach icon:

Sherri Thomas

” Working with Amber was fabulous! She’s extremely creative, customer focused, fun to work with, and a whiz at internet design. She helped me create a polished and professional on-line image, and took my website from ordinary to extraordinary! Thanks Amber :)

- Sherri Thomas,  Career Coach and Author,  CareerCoaching360.com
 
Susie Matthews

” I met Amber through a mutual client. I was immediately impressed by her work ethic, ability to multi-task but stay focused, and her amazing attention to detail. Being in the customer service field, I always look for those types of traits in people, and Amber brought it all to the table and served it up with a smile! ”

- Susie Matthews,  Online Operations, PrintsMadeEasy.com

 

Recommendations from Linked IN:

Jennifer Goodwin
“I have had the pleasure of working with Amber over the last few months. She has been brought on board to work on sites for a range of new clients. I know that if I give her a task, not only will it be executed to the client’s fullest desire, but in a timely manner as well.”
I highly recommend Amber.
Top qualities:Personable, Expert, High Integrity – Jen Goodwin hired Amber as an IT consultant in 2009, and hired Amber more than once
 
Revka Stearns
“Amber is a joy to work with: quick, thorough, a fast learner, and determined, she always found a way to accomplish every task given her, even those tasks that were completely new to her.”
I highly recommend Amber as a Virtual Assistant. – Revka Stearns, Owner, Berries and Cream Blog Design

URL Shorteners

bitlylogo

The verdict is in!
Bit.ly is my favorite
URL Shortener.

What is a URL Shortener?

The best way to describe it is to use an example.

Gotta long URL?

Here’s one: http://www.virtualitassistants.com/inbound-marketing-university/

Now if I wanted to tweet and share this URL in twitter, the address would take up 64 of the 140 characters allowed for my message! That doesn’t leave much room to tell you what the link is about.

What if you could type in: http://bit.ly/IMUinfo and get to the same place? Well that is why so many people use url shorteners. (Beware though, as you could imagine, this can also be a bad thing because someone mischievous could hide unsafe links. Be careful of what you click on!)

All I have to do is go to bit.ly to shorten and share, type in the address I needed shortening. I also chose “show options” and gave it a custom name. Hit “shorten” and voilà! A shorter, and easier to remember URL.

closeup

Thanks to bit.ly, the URL is now: http://bit.ly/IMUinfo.

Note: The thing to remember when choosing a custom name for a website is that it is case sensitive. So, if you go to http://bit.ly/imuinfo it won’t work. But this is a good thing! if someone already had: http://bit.ly/IMUinfo , then I could use http://bit.ly/IMUINFO.

Now, the reason why bit.ly wins my vote: I can log in and see the traffic for each my shortened links. I use twitterfeed to automatically change my blog post URLs to bit.ly addresses for twitter updates (because of the 140 character rule). When I log into bit.ly I can see how much traffic my blog posts are getting from twitter!

 

history

Make sure you sign in to bit.ly before you shorten any links you want to actually track.


A Lost Grandfather

Update on this story: December 2009, we think we have found this man, but if it is him, then it turns out that he passed away in 2007. I’ll leave his story up, just because it’s still an interesting story.

This is probably going to be a strange read, because it feels so strange to actually write it. And here is the real kicker: it’s a story about a man that I never knew. And it’s a story that is over 57 years old. You see, I am looking for the man in this photograph.

old photograph
A picture of my grandfather?

Supposedly, he is my grandfather. My dad didn’t find out that his real last name was Edwards until he was a senior in high school. He needed his birth certificate to apply for a driver’s license. Can you imagine what that would be like? Little explanation was given before my Grandmother, Mary Ellen, passed away. Dad never really even mentioned it as I was growing up. I remember being about twelve the first time I heard about it. He sounded sad, when he told the story as he knew it. I made an effort one day to look up my family ancestry on ancestry.com.
I knew his name: Ralph Edwards.  Am I afraid to actually include his last name in this post? Yes, for two reasons. Number one, there are some weird crazy people out there on the internet, you know. And Number two, I have no idea of any concrete details of the story, except for the one’s in the preceding paragraph. So, there’s your disclaimer: I have no idea really what happened. The saddest part is, I probably will never know. Unless, I’ll get to ask him about it in the afterlife.  It can be quite the flaw to be the optimist, and the truth probably is more bleak than I want to believe.  But, I’d still like to know what the story is. Wouldn’t you?  So here goes, the third hand fragments of the details that may be true, may not be true, or even remembered correctly:


Their wedding photo?

My grandparents, “Ralph” and Mary Ellen , married too quickly and too young (I mean look at the picture! They look like kids right?) The divorce followed just as quickly. In fact, this was the first of three marriages that ended in divorce for my Grandma Mary. I guess she never found her true love. Anyways, this Ralph fellow was in the service (Army, I think? Maybe you can tell by military uniform in picture?), and one day he just went home to Scranton Pennsylvania. – This was the only thing my Grandma Mary would tell my dad about it. The story told by my great grandmother, Dorothy, was that he left because his mother (who would have been my other great grandmother, right?) had a job for him driving a brand new “rig”? My dad’s grandad (my great grandfather who lived in Greenville, PA until he passed away before I was born) would only say that he had liked the boy (meaning Ralph). And great granddad loved his daughter (my Grandma Mary) to pieces. I don’t see how he could have said he liked the boy when he supposedly left my grandma, without some real explanation.

And that’s it, that’s all I know. See what I mean? There has to be more to this story! I can’t imagine that this Ralph would have been a bad, neglectful man. There is nothing uncaring about my dad, he’d give anyone anything if he they needed it. I can’t believe it to be possible for my dad to have come from a man who just didn’t care. Did this Ralph Edwards on my dad’s birth record ever even know of him at all? What happened to him? What does he look like now? Does he have anything of genetic importance we (or his great grandkids) should know that runs in our family? Is he even alive? I wish I knew. And if it turns out to be a to be a terrible story, then maybe my dad wasn’t ever meant to know. I really think he deserves to know though. This a glimmer of curiosity has appeared in his eyes the few times he has spoken of his real father. My aunt (dad’s half sister) dug up the photograph of Ralph and Mary Ellen above. It does look like a wedding photograph. But who knows anything? Maybe it will always be a mystery.

So in conclusion, I must thank you for reading my long, awkward story. Even though once again I admit being painfully optimistic, I do realize it could be a terrible idea to even pursue the truth. He may not want to be found. He may have a family somewhere else. It’s possible that he doesn’t know about my dad. It’s possible he does. But seriously, ask yourself, if you were me. . . would you at least try?  For your dad? If you think you know anything about this man at all, could you find it in your heart to just consider sending me a message? Who is he? Who was he?

moved from: hindsightblind.wordpress.com

Domain Life Expectancy

How long should I register your domain for?

Even for a startup business, it is advisable to register a domain for a minimum of 2 years. Search engines look at the date your domain expires, and if it is less than a year you will get a lower page score (Bing) and page rank (Google) right away.

Often it is cheaper to go ahead and register for 2 years than it is to register for 1 year and then 6 months down the road you realize that it is better search engine optimization to go ahead and tack on 1 or 2 more years of ownership.

★ Just renewed darkbluesun.com for 5 more years today. :)