Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Creating my own Website

A year ago I never would have dreamed I'd be poring over websites and books toward the purpose of creating my own website. I know of a woman who's been taking classes for at least months in order to learn website design. And I'm not artistic enough to think of myself as a website designer. Weirdly, I think of myself more as a website builder. I want to make a website; I'll think about "design" either as I go or after I get it made. I know it's not likely to be as pretty as some of the amazing blog websites I see, but still... 

The fun thing is, this is the era, now is the time to create a website. I found out that I don't have to learn the programming languages that I think all website designers used to have to learn before they could create. The tools are available and probably almost all of them are available for free. Which means that a person can create even their own family business on a very shoestring budget. What a time we live in! Not too many years ago, a person had to have a storefront to have a business. Okay, maybe more years ago than I think--I guess I'm getting old, and can remember things that most people today might not. 

It's an amazing time we live in, and when people complain that they're not in the top 1% of one of the richest nations in the world, I have some questions: 1) Why do you need to be in that top percentage? 2) How many people can expect to be in the top 1%? (Answer: Only 1%. And when you join that 1%, that means you shoved someone else way down into the 2% category, which is now part of the 99%. How uncharitable of you!) 3) Whose fault is it that you're in the percentage that you're in? (Answer: Only yours.) 

So in today's technology, if you have internet access, you basically have the resources you need to be as rich as you want. You don't even have to go to school to learn website design; just do your research on the internet. And the answers that the internet doesn't have for you, you can find in books that you can check out at your library. Learning doesn't have to cost you money! Starting a business hardly has to cost you anything. It just takes some initiative, time, willingness to learn, creativity, and...courage. I dare you, get to it. Bump someone else out of the top 1%. But be charitable in the process and help others along the way.

So here are some websites that are at the tip of the iceberg of what's out there on the internet for potential business owners: 

My Own Business – An international nonprofit organization helping people succeed in business since 1992. Offers a free training course for prospective business owners.
My Own Business, home-based business page

And here are some for (business) website building, starting with being an affiliate (this isn't what I'm aiming at, but I'm glad it's there in case I want an easy way to start) and I haven't personally checked these out, so beware: 

AFFILIATE, READY-MADE BUSINESS WEBSITES: 


MAKE YOUR OWN WEBSITE (though I'm not sure we need to know programmer tools and coding any more; still learning): 


Let me stress that this is only the tip of the iceberg. Look for articles on e-commerce, customer care, time management, boosting productivity, etc. If you don't find what you need online, go to the library and get books on creating a website or starting a business or e-commerce. No matter what you need to learn, the information is available for free.

I also want to share that in one book that I checked out of the library, Basic Website Creation, by Peter Cope, the author describes (to my amazement) how you can make a website (not hosted, just designed) on Microsoft Word. Really. If you have MS Word, you’re probably halfway there. Try it out, you have nothing to lose!

Friday, May 13, 2011

A List of Websites for Working at Home

Recently, my friend Laurie G. sent me a couple of links that she thought might be useful toward the thought of working from home. I don’t suppose she even suspected how much that would send me off on a research project finding all the useful links I could for the purpose of setting up a business. I had some very vague notions, and just looking through these websites has clarified some plans for me. It isn’t that I know about all these topics; but I now have them bookmarked and can study them as I need and want to.
I am convinced these are just the tip of the iceberg…but still I thought if they seemed useful to me, they might to someone else as well; I hope that even if you weren’t thinking you could do a home business, this would open up that possibility some for you.

WORKING FROM HOME—Whether for someone else or as your own home business:
BRAINSTORMING:
COMPUTER UPGRADES, RESOURCES, SOFTWARE etc.:
Software:
CONTACTS:
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES:
INTERNET TECHNOLOGY:
File Sharing Online:
Website Design:
            Sign up | Tumblr
            Make a free website - Webnode
PHONE APPS:
PLANNING:
RESUME-BUILDING:
TECHNOLOGY EXPLAINED:
TIME MANAGEMENT, APPOINTMENTS:
GENERAL BUSINESS APPLICATIONS, ARTICLES, INFORMATION and ONLINE SERVICES:
BUSINESS PLAN:
Small Business Administration Business Plan Template app1.sba.gov/training/sbabp/bptemplate.pdf
FINANCIAL:
Billing:
    Accounting:
                Expensify - Expense Reports That Don't Suck!
    Taxes:
           
A-Z Index for Business
                IRS Virtual Workshop
                Single Member Limited Liability Companies
                Self-Employed Individuals Tax Center
                Resources to Help You Via Phone and Internet
                Starting, Operating, or Closing a Business
FURNITURE and COMPUTER PURCHASING:
INSURANCE:
MISC. GOVT. WEBSITES:
PUBLICITY:
IRS Tax Calendar  http://www.tax.gov/calendar/
SCANNING, RECORDKEEPING:
WORKING DOING FREELANCE WRITING:
SETTING RATES:
WORKING AS A VIRTUAL ASSISTANT:

Sunday, May 8, 2011

The Sanity That was Saved Through Technological Wonders and Conveniences

Last summer a relative put together a family reunion. On the way home (about a 4-hour drive), we had a flat tire, the first I'd experienced in years! What could have been a stressful ordeal became fairly simple and inexpensive and as a result, low-stress in comparison to my previous flat tire experiences. For one thing, we have a GPS. Well, actually, my husband "has" it, as I gave it to him since he drives all over the state with his work. In spite of my thinking that he needed it, I'm the only one who actually uses it. I'm so thankful for that piece of technology! The other thing that reduced the stress of that day was having our AAA number programmed into my cell phone.
So when it was clear that we had a flat tire, the first thing I did was whip out my cell phone and call AAA without even having to pull out my card and look up their number. AAA of course wanted to pinpoint where we were; so we looked on our GPS and found out which would be the next exit north of where we were.
While we were waiting for the tow truck, I looked up automotive care on our GPS. WalMart was the closest one available; the GPS gave us the address and phone number and of course the map; I called the store. It was $10 to repair a punctured tire. So that's where we took the car. In about half an hour, we were at the store, and another hour later, we were on our way home. Admittedly, an hour in a WalMart store without a list of things to buy goes by fairly slowly, but it could have been so much worse! I'm thankful that we weren't stuck on the side of the road without a cell phone, without a GPS, waiting for some sympathetic or law-enforcing individual to stop and see how to help us, and not having any clue about who could fix the tire or how much they would take us for. Yup, these times are amazing, and that was one of my most delightful testimonies regarding the wonders of technology.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Sometimes You Can Just Learn by Doing

I'm not very technological, but I have kept up with the things I want and need to be able to do by just trying them out. I remember when I first started using a computer, I was afraid that I'd touch some button and do irreparable harm. Little by little, I found that it isn't very easy to destroy a computer with the touch of a button, and so my confidence with that has increased such that I rarely look at the keyboard. I know this is an elementary example, but it's the first one I remember dealing with where there was a hurdle of fear in the way of learning.
More recently, I got a cell phone and found that it wasn't much good if I didn't have people's phone numbers at my fingertips. I had to learn how to program the numbers in, and I put it off longer than I should have, and that delay caused a nuisance; promptness would have supplanted that nuisance with a convenience. I finally sat down to learn how, and found that it was just a matter of intention and attention. Technology is almost always intended for convenience, so learning to do things is generally user-friendly and intuitive. You might need someone to just sit down with you for a few minutes and get you off to an easy start, but once you know, you're equipped. Even my 80-year-old mom now knows how to program her phone, but she just did the other day so she'd be ready to go on a trip. She's had a cell phone for years and never had the convenience of the numbers in it.
Learning by doing also applies to blogging. Blogger.com makes blogging pretty easy; just sign on and follow the instructions. If you have trouble, they have help links; for that matter, there are lots of bloggers around and you could ask for help from someone you know. From my own experience, I just tried it out, and kept doing it. Now I have four blogs going, one of which I've had for a number of years.
Learning by doing isn't just for technology; here I am a "housewife," but I've fixed appliances, plumbing, and lamps, refinished furniture and used various power tools, not because I was taught to do any of it, but because I just started and kept going until it was done. Not very often have I ever gotten stuck or caused more harm than good. (Sometimes I wish I didn't know how to do these things, because then all the maintenance ends up being my job; but still it has saved me a lot of money and the frustration of dealing with repair people.)
My point in writing this is that if there is something that has just immobilized you because you're afraid to start, I recommend that you get whatever minimal help you need and just try it. Get an instruction booklet; go online and google for an instructional video; even take your gadget to the library or to a store where they sell the things, and ask someone. I find that techies in stores are almost always happy to share what they know. Chances are, though, that if you just sit down with a cup of coffee and try pushing the buttons or connecting the plugins that make the most sense, in many cases, you can figure it out on your own. If not, then you can always find help somewhere. Once you figure it out, it will build your confidence for the next thing.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Finding Tech Resources that Equip us When We're Stuck

If (or should I say, when) you should ever find that you can't figure out how to do something technological, you have a variety of resources, pretty literally at your fingertips, to help you, and I want to briefly guide you through what some of them are; you perhaps will come up with various resources that I missed, and I would love you to comment and share your favorites.
The first I would think of is Google. If you want to know how to do anything, google the name of that action/application/hardware, or even type in a particular short and well-phrased question. I find that there are people who have gone before me who had the same question and found answers. For example, just yesterday I was taken by surprise with the scribd application I ignorantly signed up for on my facebook, that many people were subscribing to my scribd account (well, "many" being about 16 in one afternoon...for me that was a lot for something I didn't even understand). So I googled it with the question, "What is scribd?" and found a variety of answers. I think it's originally intended for sharing pdf documents. It sounds like it can be used for blogging, perhaps...but I have to see it in action to see how it would be better or perhaps a good supplement to a blog. 
The next resource I'd recommend would be a library website such as we have. I hope your library is like mine, in that you can go online to find a resource and reserve it, and it will be waiting for you when you go in. Maybe your library is even better; I'm not sure I want to hear about it! Ha...anyway, secondarily, I hope that you know how to search for the books and reserve them. My library website is a great resource. I will search by subject, by author name, by book title...and when a list of books come up, if I don't find what I want, I'll search with any synonym I can think of; be as general or specific as is helpful. When the book comes up, I can usually look at some information about that book such as a summary, maybe the table of contents, excerpts, commentaries. These things can be informative in and of themselves! If necessary, I'll reserve the book. Usually I will get carried away and reserve armloads of them. But sometimes I only need to look at some of the internal information carried on the website and learn what I need.
Then there are video websites that can teach how to do things in a visual way, such as doityourself, howstuffworks, or YouTube. It's a strange medium in that when you find what you're looking for, supposedly related videos will likely be available at the side and usually they are foul or disturbing in some way. If you don't like foul and disturbing, be cautious clicking these...but I digress. These websites have how-to videos that can help you learn about many topics, some of which you never wanted to learn. Sometimes the video is inadequate or the teacher is intolerably boring, but keep trying with other videos or other websites and chances are a more gifted teacher will have posted something that will help you. Even googling will send you to these sites.
Computer websites are also a good resource for understanding certain software and whether it's one you want on your computer; cnet and pcmag are websites rich in computer information. Use their search to find videos or other information.
If you want to read part of a book without buying it or even going to the bookstore, you can often find it on books.google.com; you might find the first hundred pages or so of the book here, and if you have a list of books on the same topic, you can get a pretty good overview without even leaving your computer chair or spending a penny. 
This is probably a good list...to start. After a day or two, I'll probably have another bunch that I think of to share. 

The Triggers that Motivate me to Start this Blog

At 51, I am finding that the latest technological developments and other current trends are moving along faster than I can easily keep up with it. I want to work at this and find ways to enable others like me to navigate these currents and stay afloat...stay savvy, productive, tuned in. I have some catch-up work to do, as probably most of us do. We don't need to be ashamed of that! The world is moving fast. It makes it an exciting place, and we can just keep learning and growing along with it.
There are a number of prompts that cause me to think writing on this topic would be helpful. One, I need to keep learning for my own sake to avoid becoming incapable of working with the latest new tools that make people's lives more productive and efficient. I want to be productive! Another, I know a man in my church who would so benefit from learning how to use an mp3 player so he can listen to podcasts, music, sermons. I do these things, and it isn't that hard. I found that our library has a program that utilizes teens to teach the older people how to use their gadgets. What a great tool! Get a teen and learn a gadget. You could do this in your own life. For some reason, the younger mind can learn faster by doing than by using an instruction manual; I often find need for the manuals or for someone who can guide me through it. And the third thing was that on facebook, I signed up for an application "scribd" in order to download a document a friend had posted. Next thing I knew, various people were subscribing to me on this application. I don't know what it does or what is expected of me because of it! But I want to find out. I know it has something to do with publicizing pdf files, and that could come in handy. I can't maximize its usefulness, though, without understanding what it is about and why people would subscribe to it. There is yet a fourth event that caused me to think of blogging on the topic of keeping current: I checked out a book from the library because the title made me laugh and intrigued me at the same time: The Seniors' Survival Guide. I have to say I had high expectations that I would learn something in it, but reading it only made me realize that I could have written something more helpful. The book is funny but only very minimally informative.
So here is the start of what I hope will be a great learning process for both me and those who choose to read what I will be learning and writing about. I think topics abound and at the rate that technology advances, I will be busy until the day I die. And that's a good thing!