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I am the creator of ThisIsWhyImBroke<br><br>Wordpress. We done lots of tweaking to Wordpress, but by far the biggest performance booster was cutting the site down to the bare minimum for plugins, and the plugins that are used are all designed specifically for less clutter (such as Gregg High Performance SEO, Hypercache, etc). I also got a customized version of the infinite scrolling plugin running to drastically cut down the server load.<br><br>Before this was your full time job did you work at a design or digital shop?<br><br>I had actually landed a semi comfy job with a Groupon like website a little bit before the site took off and I was doing low level web design stuff with a little bit of database work involved as well,Galaxy S4 Cases.<br><br>Any advice for a web developer who is looking to generate side income from a website that collects ad dollars or similar<br><br>Think of an idea for a website that people genuinely want to visit and share with their friends, and the rest should come relatively easy.<br><br>Do you have a portfolio of your other work?<br><br>I do, but it not worth mentioning. I wish you luck.<br><br>I asked elsewhere what theme you used, but in general, can you speak to what is involved with adding new products? Ie. what the work flow like? Do you just make a new post in Wordpress, upload an image and BAM new item is added?<br><br>From a marketing standpoint, can you give some of the story as to how you got your traffic in the beginning, what worked/didn work, and what source you find most successful (if you don mind sharing)?<br><br>I manage about 8 figures in digital media spend at a top paid search agency and am an affiliate on the side (although no Amazon since I in Illinois thank you affiliate tax) so really curious as to the technical/business aspects of this. Feel free to get as technical as you like as I am intimately familiar with all aspects of this stuff.<br><br>close this windowyou'll need to login or register to do thatcreate a new accountall it takes is a username and password. | I am the creator of ThisIsWhyImBroke<br><br>Wordpress. We done lots of tweaking to Wordpress, but by far the biggest performance booster was cutting the site down to the bare minimum for plugins, and the plugins that are used are all designed specifically for less clutter (such as Gregg High Performance SEO, Hypercache, etc). I also got a customized version of the infinite scrolling plugin running to drastically cut down the server load.<br><br>Before this was your full time job did you work at a design or digital shop?<br><br>I had actually landed a semi comfy job with a Groupon like website a little bit before the site took off and I was doing low level web design stuff with a little bit of database work involved as well,Galaxy S4 Cases.<br><br>Any advice for a web developer who is looking to generate side income from a website that collects ad dollars or similar<br><br>Think of an idea for a website that people genuinely want to visit and share with their friends, and the rest should come relatively easy.<br><br>Do you have a portfolio of your other work?<br><br>I do, but it not worth mentioning. I wish you luck.<br><br>I asked elsewhere what theme you used, but in general, can you speak to what is involved with adding new products? Ie. what the work flow like? Do you just make a new post in Wordpress, upload an image and BAM new item is added?<br><br>From a marketing standpoint, can you give some of the story as to how you got your traffic in the beginning, what worked/didn work, and what source you find most successful (if you don mind sharing)?<br><br>I manage about 8 figures in digital media spend at a top paid search agency and am an affiliate on the side (although no Amazon since I in Illinois thank you affiliate tax) so really curious as to the technical/business aspects of this. Feel free to get as technical as you like as I am intimately familiar with all aspects of this stuff.<br><br>close this windowyou'll need to login or register to do thatcreate a new accountall it takes is a username and password. | ||
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+ | In favor of a leg<br><br>The story of "material progress," he writes, "is one of both growth and inequality."<br><br>It is thus hardly surprising that inequality within societies, as well as between them, has become one of the most pressing issues of our time.<br><br>Many in the United States fear that we are developing the social structure of much of Latin America, with a small, fabulously rich elite facing off against the masses, hundreds of millions of people who see no ladder into the middle class.<br><br>And we seem to be facing a future of factories in which the work is done by robots and computers, with only a few highly skilled humans to make sure everything is running properly; of Downton Abbey redux where the highly pampered fortunate few employ an army of retainers to care for themselves and their property.<br><br>The jobs that created and sustained the middle class in the United States, at least, are nowhere in sight.<br><br>Buffeted by these forces, can capitalism itself survive?<br><br>That question was the theme of the 2013 World Economic Forum. Klaus Schwab summarized the results of that discussion in a blog post, declaring that "capitalism" is due to be replaced by "talentism."<br><br>He pointed out that capitalism is not an ideology of free markets and individual responsibility, but rather an economic system in which capital is the most important factor of production, requiring an infrastructure that allows it to be amassed and invested easily.<br><br>That economic system was a product of the industrial revolution,chanel ipad mini leather case, creating an economy driven by investment in large enterprises. Today, however, "capital is being superseded by creativity and the ability to innovate and therefore by human talents as the most important factors of production."<br><br>Geoff Mulgan, former economic adviser to Tony Blair, sees capitalism a little differently. He argues that it has always been two faced in that it rewards not only "creators, makers, and providers" on the one hand, but also "takers and predators" on the other.<br><br>Our current system of capitalism has indeed never been more creative, but also never more predatory. Going forward, we must design rules to reward the creators and discourage the predators.<br><br>That is a lovely vision, at least for everyone who feels talented and creative. Certainly technology puts more at the fingertips of the world's creators, innovators, inventors and entrepreneurs than ever before.<br><br>We can start a business from our laps: Creating a website, hiring and communicating with employees, assembling services from accounting to payroll to marketing all on line.<br><br>Technologists at the New America Foundation have developed a wireless mesh communication system that can be downloaded and installed by any community seeking to create a fast and effective intranet, for free.<br><br>The sharing economy allows individuals to make money out of renting rooms, cars, power mowers and snow blowers, and anything else they want to pass on to others, changing the underlying concept of what it means to "own" something in the first place.<br><br>Still, all creators are still riding on the backs of investors public investors.<br><br>Mariana Mazzucato, an economics professor at Sussex University, has just made a powerful case that new technologies from the iPhone to the GPS to immunizations have all been initially funded and incubated by government investment. Incubation is a nursery image, enabling an infant to survive and thrive.<br><br>States invest in their societies the way parents invest in children, not to create dependence but to enable independence.<br><br>A successful, competitive state recognizes the underlying social contract between citizens who pay taxes and governments that invest in the physical and legal infrastructure necessary for businesses to flourish, from roads to regulations.<br><br>Elizabeth Warren was right when she said that nobody in the United States "got rich on their own." They depended on roads, bridges, police forces, educated workers, and the other appurtenances of a modern industrialized state.<br><br>Ask anyone in a developing country without decent roads, much less enforceable rules. Or anyone riding the trains in the United States and contending with the continual delays, breakdowns, and speeds far slower than in Europe or Asia. Or passengers jouncing over the rutted streets of even Mayor Michael Bloomberg's New York.<br><br>But we don't just need a physical infrastructure. We need an infrastructure of care that invests in human capital.<br><br>Instead of the "nanny state," taking care of citizens from cradle to grave, we need both public and private investment to allow us to take much better care of each other.<br><br>Call it the "leg up state," enabling parents to nurture the talent and potential of their children without taking their own talent and potential out of the economy. Supporting children as they work to help their parents remain independent, healthy, and productive for as long as possible at the other end of life. |