Fun Little Link Post:

First, for those of you that do this sort of thing:

www.chrisbrogan.com/if-i-started-today great post by the illustrious CB on what he’d do now.

Second:

DoFollow:  This builds your backlinks.  No substitute for mattering, but here we go:

http://seoimp.blogspot.com/2008/12/more-then-1000-dofollow-blogs.html

LifeHacker some time ago had a place to go to get your username on all sorts of blogs:

http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/401713928/find-out-where-a-username-is-already-registered

Then Athol said g’bye.  I liked Athol.

Freelance Switch had a fab. post the other day: feedproxy.google.com/~r/FreelanceSwitch/~3/4GBo…

Ok, it was a month ago.

Remember Brother Jed?  He doesn’t show up in Reason very much, so here he is.

Andy Whiman’s taste is better than ours.  Here’s his list of good albums for 2008.  His blog is currently fantastic, mixing metaphysics, rock and roll and tech writing.

Making A Blog More Popular Using A Few Easy Tools.

I’m not a huge fan of twitter.  I use it, but I have a highly filtered stream that I mostly ignore (except–of course–when they are talking about me).  But…since I’ve been playing with some feeds for Tim and Julie, using the “Feed WordPress” plugin for what I want to do.

Simply put, I already use “twitter tools” to auto post blog stuff to here and Facebook.  Works fine, if not perfectly.  It’s one thing I don’t have to do and it seems to have increased my Twitterer Followers and FB follwowers in my virtual dick waving contest to collect people.  I don’t ‘try’ that hard, but I want ot think it through.

Since Josh says to me that comments beget comments, and I happen to agree, why not use Feedwordpress + Twitter tools to beget yourself some comments.

Here’s what I’ll be doing, and this may be a kudge on a kludge.

I’ll set up a blog @ comments.genuinechris.com, and I’ll feed it with the comment stream of approved comments.  I’ll make sure all nofollow tags are removed.

Then, I’ll install twittertools to that.  And each time I get a comment, it’ll show up in my twitterstream, inviting more people into my house to have a ‘spirited debate’ with me, to tell me I’m full of it, or to tell me what’s what.

This should not take long at all–it’s on the list for tomorrow.

Sidebar Up: Goals and More.

gdocs

December 1st is tomorrow.  And that’s makes tonight my “new years.”   For 7 years I was in the real estate business.  I watched people piss away the time between Halloween and Christmas in a stupor, going to title company luncheons, builder opens, and other nonsense.   See–there’s a decoupling in Real Estate.  You get paid NOW for the work that you did 2 months ago.  So often, inertia carrys Realtors/LOs through the winter and they coast.

Then January hits and they do 0-1 deals, and the deeals that they do are carryover from December–fallout.

Then Feburary hits and they start to panic.

Well, I’m not in that boat–i’m not a full time practitioner anymore, I still am in the RE cycle.  And i still need business both now and in January.   So, I decided to do something fun:

I’m counting December 1, 2008 as my ‘fiscal year.’  I want to start a month early, while I’m focused and motivated so I hit my goals….starting this month, not wanting to dig a hole is a kludge to make sure I get what I want to get done, done.  I created something in Google Docs to hold myself publicly accountable.  Since I switched from being a Realtor->mortgage broker->freelancer…I needed to do this to make sure I do what I say I’m doing.

I made this scorecard to make sure that I stay on task & on target:

I’ve got 21 planned work days so that generates the calculations that are going to show what pace I’m going to be on/etc.  The workouts that I do will either be ahead or behind because I do one at a time, and that’s OK.   The rest of it tracks me.

It has some oddball goals: to lose 4.5#/week through the holidays is to be fun, and much easier this year…but the way it usually works is that suddenly I find myself 3# lighter, after staying the same weight for 2-3  days.  Anyway, that’s produced the idea that I’ll be losing 63# in December based on the fact that I weighed in on a ‘high’ weight day.  it’ll normalize when time passes and I don’t have extra days.  Still, kind of fun.

In 2009–which starts tomorrow–I’m going to have a good year.  My primary goal is to get myself to 160#.   That’s not going to be easy by any means, but it will certainly happen–of this I have no doubt.  The next goals are to finish the rewrite of Subprime, to get F–therapy up and out, and to have a practice that rakes in $225-250k in consulting fees.  All while continuing to enhance my character and work out my relationship with the Nazerene.  I’ll codify a little bit better tomorrow, at some point.

Right now, I’m overdue on about 400 deadlines cause I was fighting a war maiahost.com  (great company for 1-5 blogs, needs help for more than that).  So extricating 25++ blogs I manage for people to my new host is a PITA.  I can thank Laura for that stuff.

Anyway, as is always the case, more to come.

Tools: Google Keyword Tool.

https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal

Just creating a resository of tools in my toolbox–this way if I get blocked I can look at thE tools I use to know what sites, etc, has worked in the past.

Moving Towards Splendor: Getting a Schedule That Helps You Do What You Do.

I needed to make sure that I was doing things the way that I wanted to, and I wanted to make sure that I had time to run my money projects as well as the rest of the stuff I was doing & trying to do. So, I created a schedule for myself. It’s pretty intense, but I get to do different things all the time. I can meet what obligations I have and really understand what’s what.

The color codes are semi self explanatory:

Red – family time,
blue = gym
green = writing
gold = money earning stuff (top line lead gen)
purple: straight on execution.
brown: whatever i need to gtd/etc.

You can see the whole thing if you like. I can set you up too, if you like. I’m in week 2 of this thing, and so far it works fine.

I need to be in bed by 11:30 to make 5:am not be a burden and that’s the hardest part of this splendor quest thing.

Snapz Pro X.

I dig doing screen captures.

That’s one example. I didn’t edit anything there.

I like making them so that we can see what’s happening, and I’ve been using snapz pro x. That program is by Ambroisia, a company that I remember from the late 90′s–the last time I was a Mac user. They have a lot of little tools that seem to fill holes that nothing does, and snapzpro takes flawless screen caps in .mov or whatever format you want. It’s launched with a hotkey, and dismissed with the same.

It’s fast, you can edit the footage in imovie or final cut…and then put it up.

It’s the perfect screen capture solution, and while i’d like it if it would simultaneously record what’s on the video, I’m cool with it.

CRM Review: Heap CRM: You’re the One That I Want

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I’ve been questing for a while for CRMs.  I wanted something that was dead simple, that wasn’t gonna get in my way, and was going to be powerful enough that I could use.  A really important feature for me was “workflow rules,” or as Act called them “Activity Series”  I basically wanted to “set and forget” a lot of the iterated tasks that I do.

An example is that every loan needs a certain level of care and communication.  Every loan that I do needs to have an FAQ/Expectations Letter, needs disclosures, needs a title & appraisal order, etc.  Having a CRM like Highrise CRM that wasn’t set up to do that–and would require a litany of todos was out of the question.

Zoho CRM was cumbersome to use.  It probably has all of the features I would want–and it was a close second.  But the interface was clunky.  It wasn’t exciting to use.  It didn’t say, “wow, there is some thought into simplicity and elegances and not-flooding me.”   It took a lot of clicks to get to the tabs you wanted, and that was a bummer.

Zoho does get points though for support–they support the free version with both feet–they found my blog, and sent me some communications about which features were coming, so that was quality.  I just couldn’t quite get past the clunky interface that didn’t have the ability to generate sales letters.

ACT has been my standby, but it seriously peaked with ACT 6.  Those fools then went to a different code structure, and broke the simplicity and speed.  Those fools never had email right, and their email client was horrific from the get go–but they had enough going right (an example was being contact-centric, and being able to add a new contact with the <INS> key.  Sharing was a chore, and it was sort of in Al Reis’s mushy middle.  Not powerful enough to be powerful, not simple enough to be simple.

Salesforce & SugarCRM I tried, and if I had a 12-15 person team, I’d really think about scaling the learning curve.  Neither of these had any kind of usability, and unfortunately both implementations were slow.  Like Top Producer Circa 2003 Slow.  Click and wait.  And that’s OK for mouse users, but I have to tab through stuff, and click tab wait…nah, notworking.

I also gave FreeCrm a try.  That was an ugly interface with too many kludges.  If you are really really into the CRM concept, and willing to accept stupid, ugly software, I guess it has some powerful features, but having AdSense in my daily workplace is not a good solution–and the features that it takes out

The folks at Simple Sales Tracking dropped me a note, and I didn’t see any compelling reason to use their program…because I found Heap.

Etelos was probably the worst, and stupidest CRM I’ve ever used.  Both feature poor and hard to use.  If that catches on and gets traction, man oh, man.  What a cumbersome heap of garbage that software was.  The promise of working with Google docs is great, but it does nothing that it says it dos, and I really think that they could be sued for fraud.  Arrogant stupid limited software that requires 11 clicks to do something else.  This is–undoubtedly–the worst piece of software I’ve used in any field, and that includes Outlook 97.

Heap CRM:  Good, Promising, Cool, and Fun

A CRM didn’t have to be ‘fun to use,’ in order to get me to use it.  But Heap is.  I was up and creating contacts and sharing todos in about 3 minutes.

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That’s the bar that you work out of–and “Leads|Opportunies|Customers have good definitions.

You can email Heap whatever you want to email it–new contacts, etc.  The documentation is here  http://heap.wbpsystems.com/forward.php, and it’s very, very cool what it will do for you as simple as emailing.

Instead of a roundup–i’ll give heap it’s own review; it’s dead simple, takes three minutes to learn, and has the perfect balance between ease of use and power.  I absolutely, positively love this software.