Thursday, May 31, 2012

Top 6 Myths about Running an Online Business | 3 in 1 SEO Services

The Internet has gained tremendous popularity in the last years and everyone wants to benefit from it. Many entrepreneurs dream of the numerous awards awaiting them when they finally become their own boss. Starting an online business takes energy, focus, persistence, and a determination to succeed. Here are the most common myths about running an Internet business:"online business myths"

It Takes Money to Make Money

While it is true that you can?t start an online business without minimum investment, you don?t need to spend thousands of dollars in order to succeed. Building your own website or publishing an eBook only requires a small investment. Some good examples are Facebook and Google ? they?ve started with nothing but have become billion dollar businesses now.

You Need a Great Looking Website

A visually appealing website can help you attract more visitors only if you provide quality content. Even though it is important how your website looks, it is even more important what it offers. You can create a basic site and provide relevant information that offers value to your readers.

There Is Too Much Competition

You don?t need to have the biggest and most popular website in order to succeed; just deliver a clearer and more persistent message than your next competitor. There are many small niches that are waiting to be discovered.

Earn Money on Autopilot

Everyone loves the idea of working less while still earning a steady income. A successful business requires time and effort. As you build your website through blood, sweat and tears and see your profits grow, that?s when you are able to automate some of your tasks. Nobody is going to give you an automated business that makes money.

Outsourcing Will Solve All of Your Problems

Many people who have just started an online business spend hundreds and even thousands of dollars for outsourcing work. You should outsource only after you?ve figured out how most things are meant to work. Once and if your business grows, it will then become feasible to hire a professional.

Building a Website will Ensure Instant Success

Making money online and building your brand takes months and even years. Lunching a website does not guarantee your success. If you don?t promote your site, no one will know about it. You need to build high quality links, post relevant content, and optimize your site for search engines. Then you have to wait several weeks or months to get your website indexed. Building a successful website is a process that can?t be done overnight.

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Rio's housing prices spell trouble in paradise

In this May 23, 2012 photo, people exercising are reflected on the entrance of a beachfront apartment in the Leblon neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil?s burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

In this May 23, 2012 photo, people exercising are reflected on the entrance of a beachfront apartment in the Leblon neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil?s burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

In this May 23, 2012 photo, a woman cleans the windows of a beachfront apartment bellow a sign that reads 'for rent' along Copacabana in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil?s burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

In this May 23, 2012 photo, beachfront apartments overlook the ocean along Ipanema in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil?s burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

In this May 23, 2012 photo, a view of Guanabara Bay is available from an apartment in the Flamengo neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil?s burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

In this May 23, 2012 photo, Sugarloaf mountain is visible from an apartment in the Flamengo neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil?s burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

(AP) ? Moving to Rio, I had visions of paradise, of a sprawling apartment with panoramic views over a palm-lined beach.

Instead, I found myself plunged into the inferno of one of the hottest real estate markets in the world.

Brazil's burgeoning middle class is moving up in the world, into fancier high-rises. The discovery of vast oil deposits off the coast has flooded the city with renters carrying fistfuls of petrodollars. And property owners already are hiking rents in anticipation of Rio's upcoming mega-events, the 2014 soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics.

Property prices in some neighborhoods have risen sixfold in the past decade and now rival those in cities such as New York or Paris. I was moving from Paris and had previously lived in New York, so I thought I knew a little something about finding a place in notoriously difficult rental markets.

Hubris. It'll get you every time.

Armed with the Sunday classifieds, I launched what was to become my epic quest for an apartment back in January. I went first to Rio's showcase neighborhoods: tony, seaside Copacabana, Ipanema and Leblon, the ones everyone imagines when they think of fabulous Rio. Perusing the ads, however, it seemed as if an extra zero had been tacked onto the price of every apartment. A studio with a shared toilet on the landing for $1,000 a month? Or $2,750 for a 400-square-foot (37-square-meter), one-bedroom on the first floor, apparently with no natural light? Could I be reading this right?

Unfortunately, I was. For the rent I used to pay on my Paris penthouse looking out onto the Eiffel Tower, I found I could get a postage stamp-sized place on the third floor of a down-at-the-heels Ipanema building with a spectacular view ? into the neighbor's bathroom.

These neighborhoods had become the favorite haunt of the expat crowd ? deep-pocketed executives from foreign oil companies, banks, car manufacturers, cosmetics giants and other multinationals eager to get in on the booming Brazilian market. With the number of foreign workers in Brazil up some 60 percent over the past four years, demand for seaside digs had exploded.

Priced off the beach, I focused my search instead on the stately neighborhoods of Flamengo and Botafogo on picturesque Guanabara Bay. Their beaches are too polluted for swimming, but at least I'd have a view of the sea, I thought.

Again, I made the rounds with classifieds in hand. About two-thirds of the time, real estate agents didn't even bother to turn up for our scheduled appointments. When they did show, a quick peek through the open door frequently sufficed: A two-bedroom in which neither bedroom was large enough to fit a bed. ("Sleep on a mat," the agent helpfully suggested.) A "loft" overlooking an eight-lane highway that was so loud it felt like it sat in the median.

My search stretched from weeks into months. I couch-surfed for weeks, shedding more of my belongings with each subsequent move ? including my cat, whose jittery nerves required pet anti-depressants.

Rio's property boom is a reversal of fortune for a city that had been in steep decline since 1960, when Brazil moved its capital from the Marvelous City to the red-dirt plateau of Brasilia, and businesses fled to industrial Sao Paulo.

Now, the question on everyone's lips is whether the city's spiraling real estate prices are a bubble, like the one that burst in the U.S. in 2008, or a response to increased demand in a city surrounded by mountains and the sea with no room to grow. But even if the bubble were to burst, surely it would be after the 2016 Olympics, and I needed a place to live immediately.

As my desperation spiraled, the advice came pouring in from other expats who'd also been through the Rio housing crunch. "Find a street you like and go ask the doormen if there's a vacancy coming up," well-meaning friends counseled. Several sweat-drenched days going door-to-door under the scorching summer sun yielded nothing but shaking heads.

"This is Rio. You've got to lower your standards. And raise your budget," was another frequent piece of advice.

But even with my newly minted standards, I found precious few places within my price range that were safe, sanitary and could fit a bed in the bedroom. Of the 70 places I looked at, I ended up applying for just four. Three of my applications were rejected out of hand because I didn't have a guarantor who lived up to the owners' now-stringent standards in a competitive market. Whereas in years past they would have almost certainly been willing to accept a multinational company, many owners now demand the guarantor be the owner of not one but two properties in the city of Rio de Janeiro.

For a foreigner parachuting into the country, it was an impossible demand.

"Don't worry," the real estate agents cooed, as the tears welled in my eyes. "We'll find a solution."

In the end, that meant paying an insurance company the equivalent of nearly two months' rent to act as a cosigner, or roughly an extra $4,000 annually.

And it meant paying a hefty "finder's fee" to help convince the landlady to choose me out of the long list of potential renters for the fourth and final apartment I bid on.

The apartment is old, with rusty pipes and possibly faulty electric wiring, and rent is a third more than I'd wanted to pay. But outside my bedroom window, palm trees shake in the breeze and the squawks from a flock of wild parrots echo through my apartment. Each time I leave my building, I'm greeted by the picture postcard sight of Sugarloaf Mountain and the Guanabara Bay, the expanse of its azure waters glinting warmly.

Finally, I'm home.

Associated Press

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1962 FORD THUNDERBIRD (Auction ID: 112645, End Time : Jun ...


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1962 FORD THUNDERBIRD, VEHICLE ID: 154, SOLD... SOLD... SOLS... POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES, POWER WINDOWS, CHROME OPTION, KELSEY HANGER WIRE WHEELS, ROADSTER OPTION.

Phone no;- 856-309-8808120TO131
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Tim Cook On Apple TV: ?We?re Going To Keep Pulling The String?

apple tvApple CEO Tim Cook talked about the company's TV plans tonight at the D10 conference. His comments were all pretty vague, but if nothing else, he hinted strongly that Apple does in fact have plans for future TV products. When interviewers Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher pressed Cook on whether he thinks the current Apple TV product is good enough, he said, "We're going to keep pulling this string and see where it takes us." Mossberg then suggested that the current version of Apple TV doesn't solve all of the problems with TV watching, to which Cook replied, "I agree" ? but he didn't want to talk about it further. Of course, a full-fledged Apple TV (one that includes an actual TV) has been rumored for a long time now, and this isn't the first time the company's executives have suggested that big plans in this area ? but if nothing else, Cook's comments should chase any lingering doubts away.

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Then and Now: The Descent of Ethics in the Medical Field | Medical ...

I feel blessed to have grown up and become a nurse in the era of TV programs like?Marcus Welby, MD, Ben Casey,?and?Medical Center.?I couldn?t wait to be part of such a noble profession and I proudly recited the ?Florence Nightingale Pledge,? the nursing equivalent of the Hippocratic Oath, at my graduation from a Catholic nursing school in 1969.

Written in 1893 and named in honor of nurse/hero Florence Nightingale, the pledge reads:

I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly, to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug. I will do all in my power to maintain and elevate the standard of my profession, and will hold in confidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my calling. With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work, and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care.1

Description: http://www.lifenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/physician2.jpgForty-three years later, I still subscribe to those simple but powerful principles but the healthcare world around me has changed dramatically. On the plus side, I have witnessed the great advances in treating illnesses, pain, etc. However, on the minus side, I have witnessed an increasing rejection of traditional ethics that has turned the world I knew upside-down in so many ways. In 1969, I could never have imagined that the crime of abortion would be declared a constitutional right or that euthanasia in the guise of ?physician assisted suicide? would become legal in any state. And could any of us ever have imagined a time when a US president would try to force even Catholic healthcare institutions into violating their conscience rights?

These changes did not happen overnight and neither were they the result of new scientific discoveries. The tragedy is that this all began with small, deliberate steps.

Contraception and Abortion

In 1965, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) redefined conception from the union of sperm and egg to ?the implantation of a fertilized ovum,?2?allowing hormones ? like those in the Pill ? that can interfere with implantation to be classified as contraceptive rather than potentially abortifacient. Eventually, this opened the door not only to widespread acceptance of artificial contraception but also later developments such as abortifacient ?morning after? pills, embryonic stem cell research, and in vitro fertilization (IVF).

Unsurprisingly, abortion itself was legalized a mere eight years after the ACOG redefinition of conception when the stage was already set for a pervasive contraceptive mentality making childbearing merely a ?choice.? Now, we not only have abortion celebrated as a right but also infertile couples who want to adopt having to compete with same-sex couples for a smaller and smaller pool of available children to love and raise. Some desperate infertile couples resort to IVF, artificial insemination, or surrogate motherhood. Today, unborn babies themselves routinely have to pass ?quality control? prenatal tests to escape abortion. And just recently, two parents won almost $3 million in a ?wrongful birth? lawsuit because they claimed that they would have aborted their daughter with Down Syndrome if the prenatal tests had been accurate.3

Moreover, according to two ethicists writing in a recent article in the?Journal of Medical Ethics, even a newborn without disabilities does not necessarily have any right to live. Ethicists Alberto Giubilini and Francesca Minerva baldly state that ?what we call ?after-birth abortion? (killing a newborn) should be permissible in all the cases where abortion is, including cases where the newborn is not disabled.? This, they argue, should be permissible because, like a fetus, the newborn is only a ?potential person.?4

Organ Donation

In 1968, an ad hoc committee at Harvard Medical School issued a report defining a type of irreversible coma as a new criterion for death,?stating that ?[t]he burden is great on patients who suffer permanent loss of intellect, on their families, on the hospitals, and on those in need of hospital beds already occupied by these comatose patients? and the ?[o]bsolete criteria for the definition of death can lead to controversy in obtaining organs for transplantation.?5

Since then, all 50 states have adopted laws adding brain death to the definition of death but each hospital can determine its own, often widely varying, criteria for what counts as brain death.

When brain death did not provide enough organ donations to transplant, some ethicists and doctors devised a new way of obtaining organs. Now, we have non-heart-beating organ donation (aka donation after cardiac death) for people who do not meet the brain death definition6?and doctors like Robert Truog, who argues that the traditional ?dead donor rule? before organ transplantation should be eliminated in favor of?taking organs from living patients on life support with ?valid consent for both withdrawing treatment and organ donation.?7

In a final step, doctors in Belgium have already combined euthanasia with organ donation.8?Could this happen here? Just last year, the?New York Times?published an article from a death row inmate in Oregon arguing for the right to donate his organs after his own capital punishment by lethal injection, and started an organization promoting this for other prisoners.9

The ?Right To Die? and Euthanasia

The 1970s brought the invention of ?living wills? and the?Euthanasia Society of America changed its name to the Society for the Right to Die. The so-called ?right to die? movement received a real boost when the parents of Karen Quinlan, a 21-year-old woman considered ?vegetative? after a probable drug overdose, ?won? the right to remove her ventilator with the support of many prominent Catholic theologians. Karen continued to live 10 more years with a feeding tube, much to the surprise and dismay of some ethicists. Shortly after the Quinlan case, California passed the first ?living will? law.

Originally, ?living wills? only covered refusal of life-sustaining treatment for imminently dying people. There was some suspicion about this allegedly innocuous document and, here in Missouri, ?living will? legislation only passed when ?right to die? advocates agreed to a provision exempting food and water from the kinds of treatment to be refused.

But, it wasn?t long before the parents of Missouri?s Nancy Cruzan, who was also said to be in a ?vegetative? state, ?won? the right to withdraw her feeding tube despite her not being terminally ill or even having a ?living will.? The case was appealed to the US Supreme Court, which upheld Missouri law requiring ?clear and convincing evidence? that Nancy Cruzan would want her feeding tube removed, but, in the end, a local judge allowed the feeding tube to be removed. Shortly after Nancy?s slow death from dehydration, Senators John Danforth and Patrick Moynihan proposed the Patient Self-Determination Act (never voted upon but became law under budget reconciliation), which required all institutions to offer all patients information on ?living wills? and other advance directives. Since then, such directives evolved to include not only the so-called ?vegetative? state and feeding tubes but virtually any other condition a person specifies as worse than death and any medical care considered life-sustaining when that person is deemed unable to communicate.

But has this choice become an illusion? The last several years have also seen the rise of so-called futility policies and even futility laws in Texas that can override patient or family decisions to continue treatment on the basis that doctors and/or ethicists know best.

CLICK LIKE IF YOU?RE PRO-LIFE!

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In the early 1990s, Jack Kevorkian went public with his first assisted suicide and the ?right to die? debate took yet another direction. By the end of the decade, Oregon became the first state to allow physician-assisted suicide. At first, the law was portrayed as necessary for terminally ill people with allegedly unrelievable pain. Within a short time, though, it was reported that ?according to their physicians, the patients requested assistance with suicide because of concern about loss of autonomy and control of bodily functions, not because of concern about inadequate control of pain or financial loss.?10

In 2008, Washington became the next state to legalize assisted suicide and in 2009, Montana?s state Supreme Court declared that it was not against public policy for a doctor to assist the suicide of a competent terminally ill person. Relentless efforts to legalize assisted suicide in other states have failed so far, but many euthanasia proponents support terminal sedation as a stopgap alternative to assisted suicide for the present.11?Ominously, just last year assisted suicide activist and terminal sedation advocate Dr. Timothy Quill was named president-elect of the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM).

In just the last few months,?popular health expert Dr. Mehmet Oz voiced his support for physician-assisted suicide on his TV show and Dr. Phil McGraw hosted a segment on his widely seen TV show featuring a Canadian woman who wanted her adult disabled children to die by lethal injection. Ironically, the mother, along with former Kevorkian lawyer Geoffrey Feiger, argued that removing their feeding tubes was an ?inhumane? way to end the lives of the adult children. Tragically, when the studio audience was polled, 90% were in favor of lethal injections for the disabled adults.

The Challenge Ahead

After 43 years, I don?t miss the starched nursing uniforms and glass IV bottles of my youth but I certainly do miss the idealism and ethical unity that I shared with my colleagues during that time.

Back then, Catholic nursing education like mine added a level of ministry to our efforts but, Catholic or not, we all shared the common goal of providing the very best health care for every patient regardless of age, socioeconomic status, or condition.

But now, in capitulation to the new ideal of ?choice,? we doctors and nurses find ourselves ostracized from our professional organizations for being ?politically incorrect? when we oppose abortion and stand up for discrimination-free medical care for the disabled. We are warned not be ?judgmental? when a terminally ill person asks to die. At the same time, we see our conscience rights being legally dismantled with excuses such as ?Doctors, nurses and pharmacists choose professions that put patients? rights first. If they foresee that priority becoming problematic for them, they should choose another profession.?12

This did not happen overnight but rather by small and ever deepening steps. The result has not been a more compassionate and just society but rather a culture with a false sense of power and entitlement. We have been seduced into believing not only that we deserve control over having or not having children but also the degree of perfection of those chosen children. We think we deserve a life in which the seriously ill or disabled don?t financially or emotionally burden us. We think we deserve to decide when our own lives are not worth living, and have a right to be painlessly dispatched by a medical person. And we desperately but ultimately futilely want to believe that our actions and attitudes will not have terrible consequences.

It will take all of us openly and constantly challenging this culture of death to restore the traditional respect for life that protects all our lives.

Notes

1 American Nurses Association. Online at:?nursingworld.org/ FunctionalMenuCategories/AboutANA/WhereWeComeFrom/FlorenceNightingalePledge.aspx.

2 American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Terminology Bulletin. Terms Used in Reference to the Fetus. No. 1. Philadelphia: Davis, September, 1965.

3 ?Jury awards nearly $3 million to Portland-area couple in ?wrongful birth? lawsuit against Legacy Health? by Aimee Green. The Oregonian.?oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2012/03/jury_rules_in_portland- area_co.html.

4 ?Killing babies no different from abortion, experts say? by Stephen Adams. The Telegraph. February 29, 2012.?telegraph.co.uk/health/ healthnews/9113394/Killing-babies-no-different-from-abortion-experts-say.html.

5 ?A Definition of Irreversible Coma ? Report of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Harvard Medical School to Examine the Definition of Brain Death, The Journal of The American Medical Association. August 1968. Excerpt?jama.ama-assn.org/content/205/6/337.extract.

6 ?Death and the Organ Donor? by Nancy Valko, RN. Voices, Eastertide 2009.?wf-f.org/09-01-Valko.html.

7 ?The dead donor rule: can it withstand critical scrutiny? By Miller FG, Truog RD, Brock DW. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 2010 Jun; 35(3):299-312. Epub 2010 May 3. Abstract:ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20439355.

8 ?Initial Experience with Transplantation of Lungs Recovered from Donors after Euthanasia?. Applied Cardiopulmonary Pathophysiology 15: 38-48, 2011.?applied-cardiopulmonary-pathophysiology.com/fileadmin/downloads/acp-2011-1_20110329/05_vanraemdonck.pdf.

9 ?Giving Life after Death Row? by Christian Longo. March 5, 2011. New York Times:nytimes.com/2011/03/06/opinion/06longo.html.

10 ?Legalized Physician-Assisted Suicide in Oregon ? The Second Year? by Amy D. Sullivan, PhD, MPH, Katrina Hedberg, MD, MPH, and David W. Fleming, MD. The New England Journal of Medicine, 2000; 342:598-604 February 24, 2000.?nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM200002243420822.

11 Timothy E. Quill, MD and Ira R. Byock, MD for the ACP-ASIM End-of-Life Care Consensus Panel, ?Responding to Intractable Terminal Suffering: The Role of Terminal Sedation and Voluntary Refusal of Food and Fluids?, Annals of Internal Medicine. 2000; 132:408-414. Abstract:annals.org/content/132/5/408.abstract.

12 ?An Unconscionable Conscience Rule?, St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial, December 24, 2008:stltoday.com/news/opinion/columns/the-platform/an-unconscionable-conscience-rule/article_8c777b41-d4f4-539c-bd82-2760fd738037.html.

Reprinted from LifeNews.com -?http://www.lifenews.com/2012/05/16/then-and-now-the-decent-of-ethics-in-the-medical-field/

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Discovering the best Real Estate Agents | SF Real Estate Today

by Doherty

For most of us ?it is? the ?biggest? financial transaction we are involved in . Selling or buying a home can be a complicated process but that process can be made much ?simpler? with the ?aid? of a professional realtor.

Yet how does one go about sorting through the myriad listings of real estate agents? How do we select a realtor qualified to handle the sale or purchase of our home ?

Midland Storage wants you to ?think about the following? tips for finding a qualified realtor.

* ?Basic Credentials? .?You want an ?graduate from a credentialed Medical School? to ?manage? your health ?issues? . ?(I know I would not want the guy from Wal-Mart photo lab doing my prostate exam just because he stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night. ?I actually would not want anyone to do this sort of exam on me, so forget my prostate point.) ?You ?most likely want? a CPA to take care of your tax problems . (You don?t want the Capone Brother Tax and Moving Company to do it.) ?So, make sure your realtor is a ?credentialed professonal too? . Are they a member of the National Association of Realtors? ?Request? to see their license and any specialty certifications. ?The respectable ones will be proud to ?reveal to? you they are trained and qualified to help you deal with this major life situation. ?The ?shadier ones of the bunch? will probably not deliver much more than a notarized napkin from the Lego company.?

* ?Full-time?? Nothing against ?humans? who do real estate on the side, but?you will want someone ?regularly? engaged in the ?business of real estate? on a daily basis. This ?will ensure that? an agent will be familiar with current market conditions, selling prices, new developments and past histories of homes on the market. Full time agents are also ?up to date? on existing laws and regulations, including any laws or code statutes particular to your local community. ?These ?real estate rules? do ?tend to shift? and you want a full-timer who has the time to stay on top of the legalities so they don?t ?unintentionally get? you stuck in a negative spot.

* ?High Performers?? ?Some Good Questions: ?How many homes and properties ?has this person? sold in the past ?year? ? ?What is? the average time ?this agent?s? listings have been on the market before selling? For the ?houses? they?ve sold, has there been a ?major difference? between the asking price and the selling price? How familiar ?is this agent? with the type of home or property you ?are selling? ? A commercial property specialist probably ?is not? the ?ideal? choice if ?you are attempting? to sell or buy a residential home.

* Know what the letters mean. ?In real estate terminology, you?ll see these designations.?
CRS = Certified Residential Specialist. Extensive training in residential real estate sales.
ABR = Accredited Buyers Representative. Additional certification in representing buyers in real estate transactions.
SRES = Seniors Real Estate Specialist. Specializing in the 50+ age market, such as retirement communities, etc.

Knowing these distinctions might aid you in making wise choices from the outset.

* How long have they been in business? ?As one real estate expert put it, ?If they?ve been in business less than five years, they?re learning on you.? Try to find a veteran agent who has a good number of current listings. In particular, listings that mirror the type of property you?re trying to buy or sell. If you have a luxury home to sell, find an agent with experience in that market. If you?re trying to buy farm land, find a realtor with a working knowledge and client base in the rural market.

Midland Self Storage wants you to get top dollar for the property you?re trying to sell.

Related posts:

  1. Realtor Vs. Real Estate Agent
  2. Online Estate Agents Save Home Buyers Time
  3. Comparative Market Analysis: A Must in to Real Estate World
  4. Dealing with Dual Real Estate Agent
  5. The Benefits Of MLS Real Estate Listing

Tags: home buying, Midland Storage, realtors, Storage
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Monday, May 28, 2012

Benefits of shopping cart solutions for e-commerce hosting on server

Shopping cart is a vital for growth and expansion of business and presenting clients and customers with a gratifying shopping experience. To find the best Shopping cart solution is indeed the need of every business. A shopping cart is a comprehensive package in itself. With help of shopping carts individuals can get access to different products and services online and even make payments for the goods bought using their credit cards. There are several website designing and software development agencies that offer e-commerce web development services and shopping cart software.

Several of these website design companies help to integrate these features on existing e-commerce website. Those having a website, they can get a shopping cart designed, developed or uploaded onto their website. In case, they find it difficult to get it installed on their own, it would be wise to take help of the company that had created the shopping cart.

They have proficient and experienced experts who can handle all their queries and perform the tasks of configuration and installation as well.

Shopping cart software available nowadays is usually based on PHP templates, which helps the web owners to make modifications in their websites easily. To do this, they would require no knowledge of programming language.

Web owners might think they would have to pay a hefty amount in order to get the license, however, it is not so. They can even acquire additional software at a discounted price. Moreover, once they have added it to their e-commerce website, they would be able to bring quality traffic as well. Another benefit of e-commerce shopping cart is that it comes integrated with HTML catalog that helps in gaining the benefits of lively and static HTML, which is preferred by search engines. In addition, web owners can integrate these features as per their choice as well. Thus, they have the option to customize their shopping carts according to their requirements. By using shopping cart software, it would help the business to expand enormously.

A hosted e-commerce shopping cart would provide its services for the online business. Thus, all data, store details and inventory, are kept in a secured way with the host server. Website owners might require paying monthly subscription fees to the company to host their store remotely. When site owners host on their individual server, they gain control over their shopping cart solution and design motivating a prospective client to make purchase from their website, or request visitors to add something on their cart, and lead them to the sign out point.

As the online store is managed by a reliable e-commerce solutions hosting company, site owners would gain technical assistance to improve and upgrade the software regularly. The online merchants can get away from the nuisance of having to download latest updates for their software.

Nowadays, individuals may come across numerous shopping cart software providers that offer packages with similar types of features, each of them pledging to offer best quality services, and thus it becomes essential to find the right one that suits both requirement and budget.

Read more about shopping cart solutions here: http://www.vocso.com/shopping-cart-solution.php

Article Content Source: http://www.vocso.com/articles/

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Take Backup of Gmail, Microsoft Exchange, POP3 Mails with MailStore Home

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MailStore Home is a free application that enables you to archive all your emails across different mailboxes at a centralised archive. The application creates a backup of all your important emails on either your computer or on a removable flash drive. With MailStore you can easily manage your emails and be able to search and retrieve them when you need them.

Features

  • MailStore incorporates a fast text-based search to sift through large volumes of emails in a few moments
  • Centralised email archive
  • Portable Application can be launched from removable drives like USB flash drives

How to use it

To archive an email, you need to create a profile. Click Archive Email to add an account. Click the Advanced button to add email accounts from Google, Kerio Connect, Microsoft Exchange and other IMAP and POP3 Mailboxes. You also have the option of choosing selected email clients on the E-mail clients section. You can create an email profile by adding an MBOX email file or other email files from a local directory.

MailStore Home
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For Gmail, choose Google Mail in the dropdown. Enter a valid email address and your password. Click Test to check whether you entered the correct details or are able to logon to the server. Next, configure archiving options and set a timeout and click Finish. A confirmation message appears to inform you if the address was successfully added. To archive emails, double-click on any of the listed addresses or click Run. A small interface takes you through the archiving process. If any security concerns are raised by the program, kindly confirm that the certificate you are using is indeed from Google.

For easier access you can create a desktop shortcut to execute the archiving progress more faster and easily by clicking Create shortcut on desktop button. You can edit the details of any email address by clicking Properties and following the prompts provided. The Commands button allows you to access editing features like cut, copy, paste, rename and delete. These commands can also be accessed via the default hotkeys except for the rename function that uses the F2 function key. Archived messages can be viewed by clicking My Archives Folder and navigating to the inbox directory. Archiving procedures can vary slightly for the different types of accounts.

MailStore Home

To search for emails, click on Search email. Enter text in the search for text box, and select which items should be searched by checking their respective text boxes. In the general section, select a folder to be searched or use the default which searches all folders. You can narrow down your search by entering the recipient?s name or names of persons it was copied to and date the mail was sent-chances are you won?t be remembering these so leave them blank. You can narrow down your search further by selecting whether the email you are searching for contained attachments, its size or its priority by checking the respective text boxes. Click Search to run the search and New Query to perform another search.

MailStore Home

MailStore Home allows you to export emails to other programs. To export emails, click Export emails in the left menu. Before you can archive emails, you need to create an account using at least one of the options provided. Program settings can be accessed by clicking Administrative Tools. The section allows you to set a default directory for MailStore, free up unused space in MailStore?s files and create a search index for faster searching.

Pros

  • Archive emails in a few easy steps
  • Fast and simple to use
  • No profile and archived mail limits
  • Support for a wide variety of mail providers

Cons

  • No auto archiving or archiving schedule feature

Conclusion

MailStore Home offers you a simple and efficient way to store your mail locally.

Home Page: Click Here
Download (Free): Click Here
Works With: Windows XP, Vista, 7
Free / Paid: Free

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Sunday, May 27, 2012

Gamblers Maric Commits to Colorado College

Press Release

Green Bay Gamblers forward Peter Maric has committed to play hockey at Colorado College following his USHL career.

Maric put up 17 points (4g, 13a) and posted a plus-10 rating in 40 games for the Gamblers after being acquired early in the season from the Sioux City Musketeers. The Milwaukee, Wisconsin native returned to his home state and was part of the Gamblers Anderson Cup squad that finished with a 47-9-4 record in the regular season.

The 19-year-old added two points (1g, 1a) while playing in all 12 postseason games to help the Gamblers capture the Clark Cup. He recorded an assist on the game-winning goal in the series-clinching 5-2 Game Five victory over Waterloo on May 23rd.

Maric first broke into the USHL during the 2010-11 season and scored 17 points (5g, 12a) in 55 games for the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders. He is one of eight players to play in the USHL this season that is committed to Colorado College, joining Christian Heil (Chicago Steel), Alex Roos (Chicago Steel), Jaccob Slavin (Chicago Steel), Matt Hansen (Des Moines Buccaneers), Duggie Lagrone (Des Moines Buccaneers), Cody Bradley (Dubuque Fighting Saints), and Jared Hanson (Lincoln Stars).

Colorado College is a member of the WCHA and recently completed their season with an 18-16-2 record. A total of 17 USHL alumni were on the roster for the Tigers this season; Nick Dineen (Sioux Falls Stampede), Dakota Eveland (Omaha Lancers), Gabe Guentzel (Sioux Falls Stampede), Tim Hall (Ohio Junior Blue Jackets), Joe Howe (Waterloo Black Hawks), Alex Krushelnyski (Sioux City/Chicago), Joe Marciano (Omaha Lancers), Eamonn McDermott (Fargo Force), William Rapuzzi (Green Bay Gamblers), Jaden Schwartz (Tri-City Storm), Scott Winkler (Cedar Rapids RoughRiders), Aaron Harstad (Green Bay Gamblers), Peter Stoykewych (Des Moines Buccaneers), Jordan DiGiando (Dubuque/Cedar Rapids), Charlie Taft (Muskegon Lumberjacks), Scott Wamsganz (Dubuque/Waterloo), and Ian Young (Fargo/Chicago).

In addition, Colorado College head coach Scott Owens and assistant coach Eric Rud have both spent time in the USHL as coaches.

(Nathan can be reached at fourniern@students.nescom.edu)

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How to Write a Professional Law Essay

Law is among the major academic disciplines that students in different academic levels learn. As part of their writing assignments, such students are required to complete law essays on different topics. This is an extremely daunting task that most students find boring or hard. In such a case, they often prefer to seek writing help from custom writing companies online. With advanced technology, several companies have emerged, and all of them often claim to provide quality services. Due to these claims, it becomes extremely hard for students to figure out a reliable company that can truly provide professional law essay help. Students need to be extremely careful so that they do not fall into the traps of fraudulent companies that are only interested in making easy money or profits. Several factors should be taken into consideration when looking for professional law essay help, as it will be discussed below.
Quality is among the fundamental factors to take into consideration.

Professional law essay help should lead to provision of law essay papers that are of superior quality. Such papers should guarantee excellent grades at the end of an academic semester or term. In addition to quality, price should also be considered. A company that provides professional law essay help should provide affordable services. Most of the times, companies that are too cheap, tend to provide low quality custom papers. It is thus advisable to choose a company that is affordable. The kind of writers that a company hires also matter a lot. For a company to provide professional law essay help, it has to hire professional essay writers. These writers should be conversant with and have skills in the law field. They should also be able to write high quality law papers on different topics. They should provide their customers with not only professional law essay help, but the help should also be authentic.
For a company to provide professional law essay help, it should be committed and dedicated toward helping its customers. This means that the company needs to consider its customers the first priority. Hence, customer satisfaction should be guaranteed. Am sure many students might be wondering where to locate a company with all the mentioned qualities. Well, there is no need to look further because our dedicated team is always ready to give writing help to such students. Our company, which was established about ten years ago, has professional writers who are ready to give professional law essay help to our esteemed customers. We provide different types of law papers including law research papers, dissertations, law thesis and many more. Our writers hold degrees and have expertise in the field of law. Hence, they will surely write law papers according to all the instructions given by customers.
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Saturday, May 26, 2012

Typical CEO made $9.6M last year, AP study finds

FILE - In this Sept. 16, 2010 file photo, David Simon, CEO of Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group speaks at the Economic Club of Indiana's speaker series luncheon at the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis. Simon is the highest paid CEO at a publicly held company in America in 2011, according to calculations by Equilar, an executive compensation data firm, and The Associated Press. The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year. (AP Photo/The Indianapolis Star, Charlie Nye, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 16, 2010 file photo, David Simon, CEO of Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group speaks at the Economic Club of Indiana's speaker series luncheon at the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis. Simon is the highest paid CEO at a publicly held company in America in 2011, according to calculations by Equilar, an executive compensation data firm, and The Associated Press. The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year. (AP Photo/The Indianapolis Star, Charlie Nye, File)

FILE - In this Thursday, July 7, 2011 file photo, Les Moonves, president and CEO of CBS Corporation, greets a member of the media at the Sun Valley Inn for the 2011 Allen and Co. Sun Valley Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho. Moonves is one of the top 10 highest paid CEOs at publicly held companies in America last year, according to calculations by Equilar, an executive compensation data firm, and The Associated Press. The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson, File)

FILE - This undated file photo provided by Discovery Communications Inc., shows president and CEO David Zaslav. Zaslav is one of the top 10 highest paid CEOs at publicly held companies in America last year, according to calculations by Equilar, an executive compensation data firm, and The Associated Press. The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year. (AP Photo/Discovery Communications, Inc.)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2011 file photo, Sanjay Jha, Chairman and CEO of Motorola Mobility, is interviewed on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange after his company's stock began trading. Jha is one of the top 10 highest paid CEOs at publicly held companies in America last year, according to calculations by Equilar, an executive compensation data firm, and The Associated Press. The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

FILE - In this April 14, 2012 file photo, Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman arrives to the TV Land Awards 10th Anniversary in New York. Dauman is one of the top 10 highest paid CEOs at publicly held companies in America last year, according to calculations by Equilar, an executive compensation data firm, and The Associated Press. The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation during the last fiscal year by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year.(AP Photo/Charles Sykes, File)

(AP) ? Profits at big U.S. companies broke records last year, and so did pay for CEOs.

The head of a typical public company made $9.6 million in 2011, according to an analysis by The Associated Press using data from Equilar, an executive pay research firm.

That was up more than 6 percent from the previous year, and is the second year in a row of increases. The figure is also the highest since the AP began tracking executive compensation in 2006.

Companies trimmed cash bonuses but handed out more in stock awards. For shareholder activists who have long decried CEO pay as exorbitant, that was a victory of sorts.

That's because the stock awards are being tied more often to company performance. In those instances, CEOs can't cash in the shares right away: They have to meet goals first, like boosting profit to a certain level.

The idea is to motivate CEOs to make sure a company does well and to tie their fortunes to the company's for the long term. For too long, activists say, CEOs have been richly rewarded no matter how a company has fared ? "pay for pulse," as some critics call it.

To be sure, the companies' motives are pragmatic. The corporate world is under a brighter, more uncomfortable spotlight than it was a few years ago, before the financial crisis struck in the fall of 2008.

Last year, a law gave shareholders the right to vote on whether they approve of the CEO's pay. The vote is nonbinding, but companies are keen to avoid an embarrassing "no."

"I think the boards were more easily shamed than we thought they were," says Stephen Davis, a shareholder expert at Yale University, referring to boards of directors, which set executive pay.

In the past year, he says, "Shareholders found their voice."

The typical CEO got stock awards worth $3.6 million in 2011, up 11 percent from the year before. Cash bonuses fell about 7 percent, to $2 million.

The value of stock options, as determined by the company, climbed 6 percent to a median $1.7 million. Options usually give the CEO the right to buy shares in the future at the price they're trading at when the options are granted, so they're worth something only if the shares go up.

Profit at companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index rose 16 percent last year, remarkable in an economy that grew more slowly than expected.

CEOs managed to sell more, and squeeze more profit from each sale, despite problems ranging from a downgrade of the U.S. credit rating to an economic slowdown in China and Europe's neverending debt crisis.

Still, there wasn't much immediate benefit for the shareholders. The S&P 500 ended the year unchanged from where it started. Including dividends, the index returned a slender 2 percent.

Shareholder activists, while glad that companies are moving a bigger portion of CEO pay into stock awards, caution that the rearranging isn't a cure-all.

For one thing, companies don't have to tie stock awards to performance. Instead, they can make the awards automatically payable on a certain date ? meaning all the CEO has to do is stick around.

Other companies do tie stock awards to performance but set easy goals. Sometimes, "they set the bar so low, it would be difficult for an executive not to trip over it," says Patrick McGurn, special counsel at Institutional Shareholder Services, which advises pension funds and other big investors on how to vote.

And for many shareholders, their main concern ? that pay is just too much, no matter what the form ? has yet to be addressed.

"It's just that total (compensation) is going up, and that's where the problem lies," says Charles Elson, director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.

The typical American worker would have to labor for 244 years to make what the typical boss of a big public company makes in one. The median pay for U.S. workers was about $39,300 last year. That was up 1 percent from the year before, not enough to keep pace with inflation.

Since the AP began tracking CEO pay five years ago, the numbers have seesawed. Pay climbed in 2007, fell during the recession in 2008 and 2009 and then jumped again in 2010.

To determine 2011 pay packages, the AP used Equilar data to look at the 322 companies in the S&P 500 that had filed statements with federal regulators through April 30. To make comparisons fair, the sample includes only CEOs in place for at least two years.

Among the AP's other findings:

? David Simon, CEO of Simon Property, which operates malls around the country, is on track to be the highest-paid in the AP survey, at $137 million. That was almost entirely in stock awards that could eventually be worth $132 million. The company said it wanted to make sure Simon wasn't lured to another company. He has been CEO since 1995; his father and uncle are Simon Property's co-founders.

This month, Simon Property's shareholders rejected Simon's pay package by a large margin: 73 percent of the votes cast for or against were against.

But the company doesn't appear likely to change the 2011 package. After the shareholder vote, it released a statement saying that "we value our stockholders' input" and would "take their views into consideration as (the board) reviews compensation plans for our management team." But it also said that Simon's performance had been stellar and it needed to pay him enough to keep him in the job.

Simon's paycheck looks paltry compared with that of Apple CEO Tim Cook, whose pay package was valued at $378 million when he became CEO in August. That was almost entirely in stock awards, some of which won't be redeemable until 2021, so the value could change dramatically. Cook wasn't included in the AP study because he is new to the job.

? Of the five highest-paid CEOs, three were also in the top five the year before. All three are in the TV business: Leslie Moonves of CBS ($68 million); David Zaslav of Discovery Communications, parent of Animal Planet, TLC and other channels ($52 million); and Philippe Dauman of Viacom, which owns MTV and other channels ($43 million).

? About two in three CEOs got raises. For 16 CEOs in the sample, pay more than doubled from a year earlier, including Bank of America's Brian Moynihan (from $1.3 million to $7.5 million), Marathon Oil's Clarence Cazalot Jr. (from $8.8 million to $29.9 million) and Motorola Mobility's Sanjay Jha (from $13 million to $47.2 million).

? CEOs running health-care companies made the most ($10.8 million). Those running utilities made the least ($7 million).

? Perks and other personal benefits, such as hired drivers or personal use of company airplanes, rose only slightly, and some companies cut back, saying they wanted to align their pay structure with "best practices."

Military contractor General Dynamics stopped paying for country club memberships for top executives, though it gave them payments equivalent to three years of club fees to ease "transition issues" caused by the change.

The typical pay of $9.6 million that Equilar calculated is the median value, or the midpoint, of the companies used in the AP analysis. In other words, half the CEOs made more and half less.

To value stock awards and stock options, the AP used numbers supplied by the companies. Those figures are based on formulas the companies use to estimate what the stock and options will eventually be worth when a CEO receives the stock or cashes in the options.

Stock awards are generally valued based on the stock's current price. Stock options are valued using company estimates that take into account the stock's current price, how long until the CEO can cash the options in, how the stock price is expected to move before then, and expected dividends. Estimates don't generally take inflation into account.

The shift to stock awards is at least partly rooted in what is known as the Dodd-Frank law, passed in the wake of the financial crisis, which overhauled how banks and other public companies are regulated.

Beginning last year, Dodd-Frank required public companies to let shareholders vote on whether they approve of the top executives' pay packages. The votes are advisory, so companies don't have to take back even a penny if shareholders give them the thumbs-down. But shame has proved a powerful motivator.

It got Hewlett-Packard to change its ways. After an embarrassing "no" vote last year on the 2010 pay packages, including nearly $24 million for ousted CEO Mark Hurd, the company huddled with more than 200 investment firms and major shareholders, then threw out its old pay formula. New CEO Meg Whitman is getting $1 a year in salary and no guaranteed bonus for 2011. Nearly all her pay is in stock options that could be worth $16 million, but only if the share price goes up.

Other companies took notice, too. Last year, shareholders rejected the CEO pay packages at Janus Capital, homebuilder Beazer Homes and construction company Jacobs Engineering Group. All won approval this year after the companies made the packages more palatable to shareholders.

To be sure, shareholders aren't voting en masse against executive pay. Instead, they seem to be saving "no" votes for the executives they deem most egregious.

Of more than 3,000 U.S. companies that held votes in 2011, only 43 got rejections, according to ISS. But the mere presence of the "say on pay" vote is triggering change, shareholder activists say.

"Companies that have gone through that trial by fire don't want to go through it again," says McGurn, the ISS special counsel.

Even Chesapeake Energy, a company perennially in the cross-hairs of corporate-governance activists, is bowing to pressure. The company has drawn fire for showering CEO Aubrey McClendon with assorted goodies. In addition to handing him big pay packages ? $17.9 million for 2011 ? Chesapeake in recent years has spent millions sponsoring the NBA's Oklahoma City Thunder, which he partially owns, paying him for his collection of antique maps and letting him buy stakes in company wells.

Last year, shareholders of the natural gas producer passed the proposed 2010 pay package but by a low margin, 58 percent. This year, with shareholder pressure mounting, the board has ended some of McClendon's perks and stripped him of his title as chairman. A lawsuit settlement is forcing him to buy back his $12 million worth of maps.

After losing the chairman job, McClendon issued a statement saying the demotion "reflects our determination to uphold strong corporate governance standards." Chesapeake will seek shareholder approval for McClendon's 2011 pay at its annual meeting in June.

So far, Citigroup is the highest-profile company to have its pay package rejected this year. The bank planned to pay CEO Vikram Pandit about $15 million for his work last year, noting that he had returned the company to profitability in 2010 and worked for $1 that year. Shareholders, who watched the stock price plunge 44 percent in 2011 (after adjusting for a reverse stock split) weren't so forgiving.

It's usually around January that boards decide how much to pay a CEO for the previous year. Then they inform shareholders and ask for their vote in the spring ? usually after the cash portion has already been handed out. For Pandit, that meant he had already received $7 million in salary and cash bonus by the time shareholders voted against his pay.

In a statement, Citi said it took the vote seriously and planned to "carefully consider" the input of major shareholders. It hasn't given more specifics. Richard Parsons, who retired as Citi's chairman after the April annual meeting, as previously planned, said after the vote that the board should have done a better job explaining to shareholders how it determined CEO pay.

Another big change is that more companies are giving themselves the right to take back a top executive's pay from previous years if they determine that the executive acted inappropriately to inflate the company's financial results.

The Dodd-Frank overhaul will eventually require public companies to include such broad "claw back" provisions, which will expand on narrowly written rules from a decade ago. But companies aren't waiting. In a separate study, Equilar found that 84 percent of Fortune 100 companies now include claw backs in their executive pay packages, up from 18 percent in 2006.

Last year, the former CEO of Beazer Homes agreed with regulators, who cited the older claw back rules, to turn over $6.5 million he had earned when profits were inflated. In February, UBS took back half of the previous year's bonuses awarded to many investment bankers because of subsequent losses in the unit.

Picking the right mix of incentives is partly just guesswork, and sometimes the results are simply a force of serendipity. Stocks can get swept up in rising or falling markets, so the fortunes of CEOs with well-designed pay packages can reflect luck ? good or bad ? not just managerial skills.

In February 2009, James Rohr, the head of PNC Financial Services, was granted options that allowed him to buy shares in the future at the then-current price, which had fallen 62 percent in five months on its way to a 17-year low the next month.

The stock has since doubled, and the options, mostly based on hitting certain profit and cost-cutting goals, are worth more than $20 million in paper profit, according to research by GMI Rating, a corporate governance watchdog. If investors had bought PNC stock just before the financial crisis in 2008, they would still be down more than a fifth.

Luck, of course, can cut both ways. Rohr is still waiting to cash in options granted in 2007, valued then at $2.5 million, when the stock was 18 percent higher than it is today.

Some shareholder groups doubt that ever-higher CEO pay, ingrained as it is in the corporate psyche, will ever be refashioned dramatically enough to satisfy shareholders and consumer groups who see the paychecks as too big, too disconnected from performance, and set by wealthy directors who are oblivious to the way that most of their shareholders live.

"I hope we have seen the last of this," says Rosanna Weaver of the CtW Investment Group, which works on shareholder issues with union-sponsored pension funds and has lobbied against CEO pay packages at a number of companies. "But I would be very surprised, just given what I know of human nature, let alone what I know of the financial markets."

Still, she's encouraged by the change that has already been stirred.

"It's a very big task," Weaver says. "I still believe it is worth trying."

Associated Press

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St. John Fisher College Decides Against Adding a Law School

? "I?d love to hear from a few vendors about why they have or have not become COUNTER compliant" | Main | Friday Fun: Don't Be a Private Snafu ?

May 24, 2012

St. John Fisher College Decides Against Adding a Law School

Words I never thought I'd hear from a college president who has studied the option to add a law school to the academic program:

"I think it was more a matter of the decision that given the strategic plan of the college, our vision of what it should be, we had other priorities. I think that was the main thing."

That was from from Dr. Donald Bain, President of St. John Fischer College on the four year old plan to open a law school in downtown Rochester, NY. ?Further:

"We had thought about it at one point but we just found that other programs and projects that (sic) frankly we believe were more important to the college and also more important to our students?especially."

Amazing. ?A college president (and I assume a board of trustees) that read the studies and came to the conclusion that the school didn't need to invest in a law program. ?With Syracuse, Buffalo, and Ithica, home to established law schools and not terribly far away, the Rochester area is not necessarily underserved. ?There are fifteen law schools in New York State according to the New York State Unified Court System web site. ?More on this is available from the local ABC News affiliate in Rochester. ?[MG]

May 24, 2012 in Law School News & Views | Permalink

Comments

Excellent move on their part. Sadly, that kind of thinking ability would serve a President of a College or University with a law school, well

Posted by: Brian L. Baker | May 24, 2012 10:43:18 PM

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Facebook Friday: What Is Your Church Website Built On? [Poll]

Last week?s Facebook Friday poll ended up pretty one sided.

I thought it would end up being closer, but the answer to the question, Which mobile OS do you use??(see results) was very clear.

This week, let?s talk about your church website!

This Week?s Facebook Friday Poll

What is your church website built on?

  • WordPress
  • Drupal
  • Joomla
  • My church has a website?

If you don?t see yours listed, Clover, static HTML, etc ? , add it!

Take the poll!

The Results

Look for the results next week, right here!

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Nokia has its wicked way with Bing Maps, stork delivers traffic advice and geocoding

Nokia has its wicked way with Bing Maps, stork delivers traffic advice and geocoding

We already knew that Nokia had been running its fingers through Bing's map-like hair, marking it with its scent, now it's added a little lipstick to its collar. The latest addition to the Microsoft-mapping service now uses Nokia's live traffic and geocoding algorithms. This brings the functionality of Nokia's "Where" platform over to 24 nations (including the US, UK and Canada) of Bing users. Best of all for American maps that info also covers side streets. Good to see the Nokia / Microsoft collaboration yielding ever more fruits, let's just hope they're considering the bigger picture, too.

Nokia has its wicked way with Bing Maps, stork delivers traffic advice and geocoding originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 May 2012 09:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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