Archive for the ‘SEO Training’ Category

Launching an ecommerce business could be your next big move. Here is some helpful advice. – The Next Web

TLDR: This 11-course bundle of practical WordPress and WooCommerce knowledge can prime any new digital business for success.

Amid all the concern and darkness in a world fighting its way through a global pandemic, its important not to lose sight of some of the silver linings to be found in our collective new normal. With businesses closed and social distancing in effect, the world has finally complied with a request weve all uttered at some point.

Through the years, youve likely wanted this crazy planet to occasionally just slow down for a minute. Wellweve slowed. And while youve got this momentary pause to consider and reflect, maybe it could soon be time to launch the new online business youve been mulling over.

When youre ready to get started, the training available in The Build Your Own Business with WordPress and WooCommerce Bundle, now $39.99 from TNW Deals, might just help make the difference between that business success or failure.

Even if youve never built your own website before, courses like WordPress for Beginners, How to Make a Professional WordPress Website and WordPress Essentials Quick Start will get you started on the right path. Meanwhile, training in How to Make a Money-Making WordPress Website and How to Start a Profitable WordPress Blog can help you learn how to monetize those efforts.

Of course, the true engine for selling in WordPress is WooCommerce, the plug-in that sustains over 90 percent of all digital storefronts on the platform. Another handful of courses in this package deal directly in using WooCommerce as you learn how to set up shopping carts, create payment systems and stock your online store.

With those bases covered, additional training here will help optimize your efforts, including creating effective sales funnels with Elementor as well as how you can create text and even video content around your products to help build online interest and generate customers.

Finally, the SEO 2020: The Complete WordPress SEO Blueprint course attacks the single biggest obstacle to online success. The training explains how to find just the right keywords and other effective tactics to help make your site the no. 1 result in Google searches, the most important path to online success for any web business.

For $39.99, the 11-course package (usually priced at $2,200) can ensure youre in the best possible position to launch your new business.

Prices are subject to change.

Read next: Disney+ hits 50 million subscribers in just 5 months, giving traders hope

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For tips and tricks on working remotely, check out our Growth Quarters articles here or follow us on Twitter.

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Launching an ecommerce business could be your next big move. Here is some helpful advice. - The Next Web

Boston Market Has Closed Two Of Their Jersey Shore Locations – 943thepoint.com

Remember when we told you that is it SUPER important to support our local Jersey Shore businesses?

This is why.

The Boston Market stores in Howell and Middletown have now closed.

The large chain did reveal that it was nearly impossible to sustain these locations on take-out and delivery orders alone.

"Thank you for your support and patronage," read the signs posted at both locations. "It has been a privilege and honor to serve you. Unfortunately, this Boston Market restaurant is closing on April 3, 2020."

Leadership of Howell and Middletown Boston Market locations are encouraging residents to visit the Boston Market on Route 35 in Shrewsbury and on Route 37 in Toms River so these establishments do not suffer the same fate.

Continue to buy from local Jersey Shore businesses so we don't have more closures!

Take a look at the original article at APP.com.

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Boston Market Has Closed Two Of Their Jersey Shore Locations - 943thepoint.com

Working From Home Is A Pain In The Neck, Literally – wjimam.com

This has been my first full week of working from home. And just like you, I'm in front of my laptop a lot. In addition to my own stuff (Facebook, YouTube, etc), I am now doing a fair amount of my work, doing my on-air shows, making commercials, AND FOR THE LOVE OF GOD A BAZILLION VIDEO CONFERENCE CALLS (no disrespect Zoom and Microsoft Teams but I hate you lol).

And then the other day it happened. I went to turn my head and there was as soreness. Right in the back of my neck. I went to massage it and bam! Sharp shooting pain.

Working from home helps us flatten the curve and the fight against Covid-19. If you're not careful, your prolonged use of your computer, your screen placement, and your head and neck positioning could cause you some real pain. And this is true for you (us...I'm included) gamers as well. And people staring at their phones for long periods of time.

The average human head weighs almost 12 pounds (5.4 kilograms) the equivalent of a bowling ball! When your neck is bent to 45 degrees, your head exerts nearly 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of force on your neck. In addition to straining joints and muscles in your neck and shoulders, the pressure affects your breathing and mood. (Mayo Clinic)

Some quick and easy tips?

Raise or lower the monitor or your chair so your eyes are level with the top of the screen. If you wear bifocals, you may need to lower the monitor another 1 to 2 inches.

Raise or lower your chair so that you're not sitting straight up at a 90-degree angle, but rather with a slightly reclined posture of 100 to 110 degrees.

Set a timer and get up every 30 minutes.(Mayo Clinic)

I found some videos that will help you to take a look at your workspace, maybe raise the position of your monitor, some neck exercises, and more. Stay home, stay safe, and take care of yourself.

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Working From Home Is A Pain In The Neck, Literally - wjimam.com

Washington University comes together to support the St. Louis community – Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

As Washington University in St. Louis researchers and physicians join the fight to halt COVID-19s proliferation across the globe, our staff, students, doctors and alumni are working tirelessly to care for the St. Louis community we call home.

From the physicians on the frontlines to the researchers tracking the virus to the faculty members who are helping businesses and nonprofits stay afloat, our community is showing up every day with compassion, commitment and ingenuity, said Chancellor Andrew D. Martin. I am especially moved by the can-do spirit of our students who have launched organizations to tutor local students, deliver meals, provide child care and reach out to isolated seniors.

Caring for the sick, caring for one another

Washington Universitys effort to help the St. Louis community starts with the more than 1,700 primary care and specialist physicians of the School of Medicine. Many already are treating confirmed cases of COVID-19 while others are volunteering to take on new clinical roles as cases continue to mount.

We surveyed our faculty members and the response was breathtaking, with more than 700 faculty members willing to step outside their regular areas of practice to help where they are most needed, said David H. Perlmutter, MD, executive vice chancellor for medical affairs and the George and Carol Bauer Dean of the School of Medicine. Since then, he added, even more members of the faculty have stepped up, volunteering to potentially cover different units in the hospital, ambulatory clinics and/or the emergency department when needed.

Scores of students on the Washington University Medical Campus have mobilized to support their faculty mentors. They are reviewing emerging academic research on COVID-19 to save care providers valuable time; managing a coronavirus email hotline; and providing child care to health-care workers. They also have manufactured more than 1,600 face shields and soon will deliver meals to infected and at-risk community members through St. Louis Food Angels, an affiliate of Sling Health.

Haley Sherburne, a first-year medical student interested in pediatrics, is among the 170 students who have volunteered to provide child care.

Im just beginning my journey as a clinician and cannot actively participate in the treatment of those affected by COVID-19, said Sherburne, whose child-care experience includes working with terminally ill children as well as those with cognitive and physical disabilities. But I can help health-care workers serve the urgent needs of our patients, knowing that their children are safe and cared for by capable and compassionate volunteers.

The Danforth Campus Charles F. Knight Executive Education and Conference Center, which isnt open to regular guests at this time, is providing rooms and meals tohealth-care providers who dont want to return home between shifts, either to avoid the risk of spreading the virus to their families or due to travel distance.

One guest told us that he had been basically living in his garage to protect a child with an underlying health issue, said Peter Arscott, the general manager. These doctors and nurses are making incredible sacrifices to help our community. Were just grateful we can give back a little.

Supporting our local economy

Washington University also is finding ways to support the local economy as businesses shutter and jobs disappear. First and foremost, university leaders have kept all of the universitys 16,500 employees and contractors on the payroll and honored the contracts of all nonsalaried undergraduate, graduate and contract workers.

We understood that many businesses in our region would be forced to lay off workers and that those job cuts would ripple across the local economy, said Henry S. Webber, executive vice chancellor and chief administrative officer. We continue to do all we can to support our employees and their families.

University faculty also are reaching out to help local organizations. For instance, Brown School faculty and staff are providing free professional development opportunities to local nonprofits.

In addition, the university donated $100,000 to the St. Louis Community Foundation, including $50,000 for the Regional Response Fund in support of local nonprofit organizations delivering services to people affected by the virus; and another $50,000 for the Gateway Resiliency Fund, which provides short-term monetary relief to employees and owners of businesses that are affected by closures and other circumstances related to COVID-19.

And Peter Boumgarden, professor of practice, strategy and organizations at Olin Business School, is helping restaurant owners understand the federal stimulus package.

And then there are the burgers. Washington University is purchasing more than 1,500 meals every week from gastro pubs, sandwich shops and ethnic eateries in the Delmar Loop and Central West End for employees at the School of Medicine, Facilities, Information Technology and the Washington University Police Department.

St. Louis restaurants are among the best in the nation, and were doing our part to help them survive one to-go order at a time, said Jodie Lloyd, senior analyst in the executive vice chancellor for administrations office.

Keeping our community safe

When Washington University infectious disease and public health experts speak, regional leaders listen, especially Chancellor Martin. Washington University was among the first local institutions to institute remote working in mid-March and implement strict social distancing policies for those employees still deployed on campus.

The universitys Institute for Public Health also has been a vital resource for local officials as they try to make data-informed decisions about the regions health. Researchers have developed a model to forecast the growth of cases and are studying the possible impacts of shelter-in-place policies on individuals vulnerable to domestic violence.

In addition, the Center for Community Health Partnership and Research is working with the St. Louis Department of Health, Immigrant Service Providers Network and BJC HealthCare to help immigrants understand and cope with the COVID-19 pandemic. Christopher Prater, MD, assistant professor of medicine and of pediatrics, said many immigrants have witnessed epidemics in their home countries to which St. Louisans can only now relate.

It is very likely that their fear may be escalated because they have seen the disastrous effects of outbreaks in settings of limited medical resources, said Prater, who has been a primary care physician for St. Louis immigrants and refugees for three years. We cannot forget that many of our immigrant neighbors have seen deaths from diarrhea outbreaks, multi-drug resistant tuberculosis and measles.

But worse yet, Prater said, they have perhaps seen loved ones die from pneumonia and lower respiratory tract infections, a leading cause of death globally, and the very reason why COVID-19 is causing mortality in 2020 in even the most heavily resourced medical systems.

Helping where needed

Washington University senior Han Ju Seo cant treat COVID-19 patients or model the spread of the virus or write a big check to a local food pantry. But she can operate a sewing machine. So Seo bought fabric and thread and got to work sewing 1,000 masks for the St. Louis community.

There was a moment when I decided that I could either eat ice cream and be sad that graduation was canceled or I could do something to help, said Seo, who is majoring in psychology in Arts & Sciences. Seo said she was inspired by studies in positive psychology with Tim Bono, a lecturer in psychological and brain sciences and an assistant dean in Arts & Sciences.

Seo is just one of many students and alumni who have stepped up to serve the St. Louis community. Other students are helping St. Louis children as well as food-insecure and isolated seniors.

Lily Xu, a senior studying biomedical engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering, and Alex Hu, a senior studying chemistry in Arts & Sciences, leveraged their experience with the Campus Y to launch Learning Lodge, which is offering online tutoring to local elementary and high school students. So far, some 70 Washington University undergraduates have joined their effort.

St. Louis-based alumni businesses also are serving local students. Varsity Tutors, founded by alumnus Chuck Cohn (BSBA 08), launched a new service called Virtual School Day, which offers more than 20 hours of live, online classes across a variety of core subjects for K-12 students. And Gateway to the Great Outdoors (GGO), founded by WashU alumni Nadav Sprague (AB 17, MPH 20) and Ben Aiken (AB 16), is providing free education kits consisting of urban agriculture and art-in-nature lesson plans.

And Harsh Moolani, who graduated in December with a degree in neuroscience in Arts & Sciences, is currently training 190 volunteers, including 80 Washington University students, through his platform Students to Seniors to conduct virtual visits via phone and computer tablets with residents of Friendship Village of Chesterfield, Sunrise of Chesterfield and Tower Grove Manor.

As an undergraduate, Moolani founded Create Circles, a nonprofit organization that strives to reduce social isolation and cognitive decay by pairing young volunteers with older adults in long-term care facilities to produce creative projects such as articles, videos and podcasts.

We must protect the health and safety of older adults, but we must also guard their humanity and dignity, Moolani said. When you cant eat with others, when everyone who you are in contact with is wearing a mask, when you cant visit with your family and loved ones that takes an enormous toll.

Moolani tells his volunteers not to think of themselves as do-gooders offering companionship, but as pupils gaining wisdom and perspective.

I encourage our volunteers to ask for advice and learn about their experiences, Moolani said. We live in a culture where our older adults are not valued, but now, more than ever, we all can benefit from their wisdom.

Kristina Sauerwein, senior medical science writer, and Kelly Wiese Niemeyer, Record editor, contributed to this report.

WashU Response to COVID-19Visit coronavirus.wustl.edu for the latest information about WashU updates and policies. See all stories related to COVID-19.

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Washington University comes together to support the St. Louis community - Washington University in St. Louis Newsroom

Looking to become a software engineer? Then you need to check out this all-in-one training – Boing Boing

If you're looking to become a software engineer or it's an idea you've tossed around half-seriously, there may be no better time than now to take the leap. It's one of the fastest-growing, most in-demand roles already. And in the midst of the pandemic, between the extra hours you likely have in your day, and the added value of possessing a skill that can be utilized from anywhere in the world, remotely, it's not hard to see the benefit of diving in.

The Complete Introduction to Software Engineering Bundle is beginner-friendly, yet comprehensive. Over 24 hours, 13 courses, and 219 lessons, you'll learn the basics of programming, app development, electronics, and SEO to name a few.

Areas covered include Java, Ruby, Perl, Rust, the powerful JavaScript engine NodeJS, JavaScript framework library AngularJS, Google Go (the open-source language developed at Google to simplify programming tasks), an introduction to electronics for makers, building Private Blog Networks, making your first mobile app with PhoneGap dev framework, Lua programming for game modding, scripting, or library writing, building user interfaces with React Native, developing interactive sites that adapt to any device, and more.

Each course is created by an expert developer and a trained mentor in that area of expertise. And the entire bundle is produced by EDUmobile Academy, which was founded by Vishal Lamba, a mathematics and computer science graduate with experience in multiple areas of digital design, mobile development and design, web technologies and digital marketing. These are high-quality video training courses that offer real education. Take a look at what students are saying:

"This was an excellent course, it gave a very good overview of what was going on with each of the components, and gave the necessary math to make the understanding possible." Bobby Claude

"Absolutely great starter video series for beginners just to start and feel comfortable! Thank you very much for this course! Gene Chechel

"He did use code run examples and they were good. I enjoyed the course and must now get into the additional resources that were indicated so I can further my LUA education!" Tom Carroll

"Very easy to follow along. Clear concise explanations about how things fit together and flow." Stephanie Robinson

This Complete Introduction to Software Engineering Bundle truly covers all you need to get started on a new career path and is available now at a savings of 95% for $59.99.

Hackers tried to break into the World Health Organization earlier in March, as the COVID-19 pandemic spread, Reuters reports. Security experts blame an advanced cyber-espionage hacker group known as DarkHotel. A senior agency official says the WHO has been facing a more than two-fold increase in cyberattacks since the coronavirus pandemic began.

Additional $15M will go to third parties and nonprofits

The death toll in Italys coronavirus outbreak today passed 1,000. Schools throughout Italy are completely shut down, which is reportedly driving a surge in internet traffic as bored kids forced to stay indoors turn to online games.

Whether youre looking to create perfect portraits or amazing artwork, if your medium is digital, you know you absolutely must have Photoshop to do your best making. So if youve been putting off really mastering the various techniques, tools, and styles it offers for your craft, now is a great time to make it happen. []

There are few things more satisfying than the clickety-clack of an old keyboard. So old, in fact, that its really more of a typewriter sound and feel than that of a keyboard. But if you want to enjoy the benefits of both, check out this Rymek Retro Bluetooth 3.0 Mechanical Keyboard. Bringing you an impressive []

There are plenty of productive ways to spend time while stuck indoors. While its undoubtedly fun to binge all 15 seasons of Supernatural or sink days of playtime into an Overwatch campaign, learning something new is definitely a more meaningful and long-term beneficial use of open hours. And if youre going to invest time in []

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Looking to become a software engineer? Then you need to check out this all-in-one training - Boing Boing