Real Work At Home Truths
Scare Tactics
Tiffany Dow reveals, in her new New E-Book, that it's a scare tactic used to get you to invest in more Internet marketing products. They're using scarcity to make you believe that if you don't use twelve different methods of making money online, you may not get rich enough.
The truth is, you don't need more than one source of income, as long as it's producing enough for you to reach your financial goals. The problem is, when you start dividing up your time to focus on multiple streams of income, you wind up not getting good enough at one skill to become a top producer in your niche.
Multiple streams of income means you're working harder than you have to, which conflicts with the message of "easy money" that online business opportunities deliver. Instead of halfway succeeding at a dozen different methods, wouldn't it be better if you took one idea and ran with it all the way to the top?
Not only would it deliver the same amount of money, if not more, but it would lighten your workload to focus on one money-making option rather than numerous ones. Many marketers experience burnout and quit the industry altogether because they're running in circles trying to get all of their income streams operating at once.
In order to actually find the success online that you want, you should be focusing on only one thing, like creating eBooks, and become an expert and authority in that one area. Once you're successful there and are able to manage your workload easily in this area, then you can repeat the process.
Repeating what works is the tried and true tactic all top marketers use to build seven-figure salaries. While they're preaching that you should "divide and conquer," they themselves are generating a steady income from what they know works. See what else the gurus are doing to succeed by reading Building an E-Book EmpireToday!
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Telecommuting, e-commuting, e-work, telework, working from home (WFH), or working at home (WAH) is a work arrangement in which employees enjoy flexibility in working location and hours. In other words, the daily commute to a central place of work is replaced by telecommunication links. Many work from home, while others, occasionally also referred to as nomad workers or web commuters utilize mobile telecommunications technology to work from coffee shops or myriad other locations. Telework is a broader term, referring to substituting telecommunications for any form of work-related travel, thereby eliminating the distance restrictions of telecommuting.Nilles, Jack M., Managing Telework: Options for Managing the Virtual Workforce, John Wiley & Sons 1998, ISBN 0-471-29316-4 All telecommuters are teleworkers but not all teleworkers are telecommuters. A frequently repeated motto is that "work is something you do, not something you travel to".Leonhard, Woody, The Underground Guide to Telecommuting, Addison-Wesley 1995, ISBN 0-201-48343-2 A successful telecommuting program requires a management style which is based on results and not on close scrutiny of individual employees. This is referred to as management by objectives as opposed to management by observation. The terms telecommuting and telework were coined by Jack Nilles in 1973. JALA biography of Jack Nilles Last modified: January 5, 2006 Accessed: March 11, 2007



