Duplicate Content Hurts Your SEO Efforts

by Jay Fleischman | May 13th, 2008

There’s been a constant battle among search engine optimization folks about whether duplicate content hurts your rankings with search engines. I’m talking about two or more web sites or pages that have the exact same content on it.

For example, if 1000 people all had a page on their website that quoted the entire US Bankruptcy Code, would Google penalize everyone, some people, or nobody at all?

The answer is clear - one person gets the benefit, everyone else gets the short end of the stick.

For a detailed review of the problem go to this post on SEOmoz, which clarifies it once and for all.

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Special Discount From Bankruptcy Abstracts Available Only To My Readers!

by Jay Fleischman | May 13th, 2008

For the past few months I’ve been reading the well-written Bankruptcy Abstracts (previously called BAPCPA Abstracts). Filled with well-written summaries of significant written opinions recently released in Chapter 7 and 13 consumer bankruptcy cases, this semi-monthly newsletter collects cases on a wide range of issues important to consumer bankruptcy practitioners.

The newsletter discusses both published and unpublished opinions, including many not available on commercial databases. The full text of each abstracted opinion may be downloaded from the newsletter website in PDF format.

So I dropped an email to Robin Miller, the editor, asking her if she would be willing to work out a deal for my readers. To my surprise, she agreed. So here it is.

The regular price is $250 per year. But if you click the button below, you’ll be taken to a PayPal page that will give you a full jam-packed year for the sum of $225 - that’s 10% off the regular price.

It’s your choice, folks - either pay full price or pay this discounted price. But do not even consider going one more day in your consumer bankruptcy practice without this invaluable newsletter.


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SimulScribe (now PhoneTag) Now Works With GrandCentral

by Jay Fleischman | May 13th, 2008

A few months ago I wrote about SimulScribe, a great service that transcribes your voice mail messages at such an absurdly low cost that I am left to wonder how they turn a profit. The company has since re-branded as PhoneTag and answered the most pressing question - can it work with Google’s GrandCentral?

The answer is - finally - a resounding YES! Check out the post from Mashable and get these services immediately. If you don’t, you’re wasting your money and your time.

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What Is Twitter, And Why Do You Care?

by Jay Fleischman | May 13th, 2008

If you follow social media you know about Twitter - but many of my readers don’t follow social media and don’t really care to do so. Hence, this post.

Twitter is like e-mail, only more immediate and closed. It gives you a way to follow someone around and find out all the cool stuff they’re doing (and the mundane stuff as well). What are they finding out online, what new cases have they uncovered, what tips and tricks are in their toolboxes . . . it’s all there for you.

All you need to do sign up for a Twitter account (it’s free) and tell the system who you want to follow. From then on, every time that person sends a message it gets broadcast to you (as well as to all the other people following him or her).

I’m on Twitter, sending out updates that don’t make it onto this site. Tips, tools, and a few special offers that I run across on a daily basis as I sit in front of my keyboard. Just go to Twitter.com and sign up, then search for me (my username is JayFleischman) and follow me.

For a video that shows how easy it is, click below.

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How To Manage Your Email More Effectively

by Jay Fleischman | May 12th, 2008

Email is a huge time-saver, helping us to communicate instantaneously without picking up a phone. We can trade short messages, long ones, avoid voice mail hell, and generally accomplish more in less time than ever before.

That’s the party line, at least.

In my experience, email is just the opposite. It’s a time-suck, drawing us in an wasting hours each day as we obsessively check and re-check our growing in-box until the wee hours of the morning.

The trick to making email productive is to keep it in check, balancing the needs of your business with the need to actually get stuff done. But how to do it?

Here, then, are my top ten ways to keep email at bay:

1. Stop Checking Email: You heard me right, stop checking it. At least, not all the time. Rather than keeping your email program up on your screen all the time, plan to open it only at set intervals. For example, make “Email Time” at 11:00am, 1:00pm, and 4:00pm. By doing so, you force yourself to concentrate on other matters rather than using email as a way to avoid work.

It’s really not necessary to check email constantly throughout the day, and doing so will regularly interrupt more important tasks.

Make it once or twice a day, and try to get your inbox down to zero. This will allow you to plow through the rest of your productive tasks without constant interruption.

2. Don’t Check Email First Thing In The Morning: If the first thing you do in the morning is fire up the email, resist the urge. When you check your email on beginning your day, you will get sucked into responding and dealing with new items before your real deadlines and to-do list.

3. Filter, Filter, Filter: By using the filters inherent in your email program (or in Gmail, if that’s what you use) you will be able to handle each item more efficiently. Put your listserv emails into one folder, court notices somewhere else, and client emails in another plan altogether. Organizing makes you more productive.

4. Respond When You Read: When you see an email, answer it immediately. Why? Because if you don’t, it will get pushed down the list of important things to handle. Once they are marked as “read” on your inbox, they will get mixed with all the others. In addition, this process will take up less time so you don’t need to read each email a second time before remembering what you will need to say in the reply.

5. Keep It Short and Sweet: Just because you can type a long-winded response does not mean you need to do so. If it takes more than 5 lines, pick up the phone - it will take less time, and you can ramble on a voice mail message without needing to take up your valuable typing time.

6. Have Multiple Accounts: Your friend needs to ask you a question, you mother sends one of those, “Why don’t you call as often as you should?” messages, and your opposing counsel sends a stipulation for your review. If you have one email address they all get lumped together, creating havoc and disorganization. But when you keep multiple addresses, personal stuff stays personal and business remains business. There are tons of free email services out there, but you can also do it with your own domain email if you host your own server.

How do you manage your email clutter to increase productivity?  Add a comment and let me know!

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