Internet Tip of the Week: First Impressions

April 30th, 2008

First impressions are extremely important if you hope to do business on the Web. After you refine your ads, and if you make your pitch to a targeted group, you will start to get visitors to your web site. Here is where many would be entrepreneurs drop the ball.

Putting up a web site is not a difficult task, but designing a good one is, and if you don’t pay attention, it might be working against you. Think about it, the web site is not only the first impression of you and your business, it is crucial to your success or failure.

People don’t waste a whole lot of time when visiting a site. If it isn’t professional looking, they may just “click away”. While looks are important, you must spend time on developing good copy.
Copy written by affiliate programs has been seen over and over, and while it may have been effective at one time, it is so overused that people immediately recognize it for what it is.

In addition to good copy, which of course has no spelling, grammar or punctuation errors, it has to clearly state what you are offering. Many web sites offer a real challenge to try to figure out what they are trying to sell. The offer should be the first thing they see. The information must also flow logically, and not leave a lot of questions unanswered.

In addition to complete information on your offer, it must have a call to action, which entices the visitor to purchase from you.
It must also have an order form, or instructions that are easy to follow. It is also a real plus to let the prospect know a little bit about you. Your picture on the site can go a long way to help instill confidence.

There is some confusion on the value of links. Some advocate that a good web site should be divided into separate sections connected by links. Others feel that a single long web page will score higher in the search engine rankings.

There are basically two types of links. One goes to a completely separate web page, and is considered an external link. Another type is referred to as an internal link. These point to different “parts” within the same web page. Both have value, however internal links are a little friendlier. If someone clicks on one and the next “part” logically flows from the previous one, people will be more inclined to read on.

While it is a good idea to have your links on the side of the page, you should avoid the use of frames, which divides the page into two logical pieces that can be independently manipulated.
At the current time, sites constructed with frames are not search engine friendly, although this could change.

Links should be clear as to where they will take you. It is crucial that the titles of the links, not only make sense, but actually take someone to that information. Each site should have links that are unique, and it is not a good idea to have information in the target, that is not specified in the link.

If you have someone design the site for you, remember that their expertise is in web site design, and most likely they will know little, if anything, about what you are doing. They can construct the site and make it look good, but the copy and information flow is your responsibility. You should always take a break from the copy writing, and if at all possible, have someone else proof your work for grammar. Also you have to be careful of words that pass spell check, but are actually an error. Don’t confuse words like “there” and “their”.

Once you have the basic framework finished, it is now time to test it. Try to corral as many people as possible to review it.
Is it clear and an effective presentation? You should probably avoid friends unless you are sure they will give you an honest evaluation.

The first impression your web site makes is crucial to success.
If people have to “jump through hoops” to find out about your offer, or if it doesn’t portray a professional image, the odds are they won’t buy.

Did you know that subscribers to Bob Osgoodby’s Free Ezine the “Tip of the Day” get a Free Ad for their Business at his Web Site? Great Business and Computer Tips - Monday. Wednesday. and Friday. Instructions on how to place an ad are in the Newsletter.

Subscribe at: http://adv-marketing.com/business/subscribe2.htm.

Choosing a Scrapbooking Theme

April 30th, 2008

The scrapbooking industry has taken papercrafting to an entirely
new level in recent years, and that means there is an amazing
amount of tools, papers, textures, and embellishments to choose
from.

But all of these choices can make even the most inspired
scrapbooking artists feel a bit paralyzed.

It’s helpful to choose a theme for your albums and mini albums.
Doing so can help you stay focused, and it can help reduce the
tendency to buy more products than you’ll actually use.

Here are a variety of scrapbooking themes to choose from. Choose
one or two themes to work with at any given time, and enjoy the
process of preserving your memories for generations to come.

Annual Scrapbooks. Create one album each year, with one 2-page
spread for each month. This is a great way to stay up-to-date,
without feeling pressured to scrapbook every photograph.

Significant Life Events. Of course, you’ll want a wedding album,
as well as an album spotlighting your other shining moments.

Children. Have one album going for each child, starting with
those first ultrasound photographs. Don’t forget to record all
of the significant events, including a child’s first tooth,
first haircut, first day of school, etc.

Sports. If your child or other family member is particularly
interested in sports, have a running sports album going. Include
team photos, rosters, and significant achievements. Record your
children describing big games in their own words.

The Hero Scrapbook. This is the place for the certificates,
awards, and newspaper clippings for all members of your family.
You could also do an album along the theme of “Good Deeds We’ve
Done” and “Things We Are Grateful For.”

About Me album. Imagine the joy of future generations as they
learn about your favorite books, recipes, TV shows, hobbies, and
- most importantly - your life philosophy. Record all the things
that make you, you.

School Years Album. Create a new layout for each year of school.
Ask your children to sign their name each year and include a
photo taken on the first and last day of school. Also include a
copy of the child’s school schedule, a photo of their teacher
and significant achievements throughout the school year.

Holidays. Have an ongoing scrapbook for each holiday
celebration. Bring it out with your holiday decorations after
Thanksgiving and enjoy adding to it during the festivities. For
many families, scrapbooking is a fun family tradition in itself.

Scrapbooking club kits can also help you to work inside themes.
Some such clubs send pre-coordinated supplies according to new
themes each month, including patterned papers, cardstock,
ribbons, journaling prompts, stickers, and other fun
embellishments, which provides inspiration for some great
projects.

No matter what theme you are currently working on, the key to
keeping it fun is to remember that not every photo needs to be
scrapbooked. (That’s what photo albums are for, after all.)
Choose the events and photographs and stories that are
particularly significant and enjoy creating lasting memories for
generations to come.

After You Apply for a No Credit Credit Card, Use It Wisely: Here’s How

April 30th, 2008

When you are first establishing your credit, you can make a huge difference in the quality of your credit report with some seemingly insignificant actions. Your credit report contains information that is used to create your credit score. Companies use your credit score to decide if you qualify for loans, lines of credit, and other conveniences. It is also used to determine how high your interest rate is for these items. So use your first credit card wisely to save yourself headaches in the future. Here’s how:

Always pay your bills on time. You have probably heard this before, but did you know that as few as two late payments can adversely affect your credit score? Always pay your bill on time or early if possible.

Pay more than the minimum balance. In many cases, the minimum balance is only enough to cover the interest that the company has charged you for your balance. Too many people let their balance get out of hand because they only pay the minimum balance and interest continues to accumulate. So pay as much over this amount as you can, even if it is only five or ten dollars.

Use at least one third of your available credit. If you get your credit card and only spend fifty dollars, then the credit-reporting agency will not have enough information to create an accurate credit history. Therefore, your credit score will be lower than it should be based simply on lack of information. So if you have a six hundred dollar credit limit, spend at least two hundred dollars and pay it back faithfully and on time.

Avoid taking cash advances. Usually, cash advances are subject to a much higher interest rate than regular purchases. This can get you into trouble when trying to pay back your balance and result in late payments.

Use your card at least once every two weeks. This will help you to establish a credit payment history over the course of a few months. Without this payment history, the reporting agency has no way to know if you will pay any future debt on time.

Rebecca Spitzer recommends Find Credit Cards if you wish to apply for a no credit credit card. See www.findcreditcards.org/type/no-credit.php for more information.

The Wages of Science

April 29th, 2008

In the United States, Congress approved, In February 2003, increases in the 2003 budgets of both the National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation. America is not alone in - vainly - trying to compensate for imploding capital markets and risk-averse financiers.

In 1999, chancellor Gordon Brown inaugurated a $1.6 billion program of “upgrading British science” and commercializing its products. This was on top of $1 billion invested between 1998-2002. The budgets of the Medical Research Council and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council were quadrupled overnight.

The University Challenge Fund was set to provide $100 million in seed money to cover costs related to the hiring of managerial skills, securing intellectual property, constructing a prototype or preparing a business plan. Another $30 million went to start-up funding of high-tech, high-risk companies in the UK.

According to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the top 29 industrialized nations invest in R&D more than $600 billion a year. The bulk of this capital is provided by the private sector. In the United Kingdom, for instance, government funds are dwarfed by private financing, according to the British Venture Capital Association. More than $80 billion have been ploughed into 23,000 companies since 1983, about half of them in the hi-tech sector. Three million people are employed in these firms. Investments surged by 36 percent in 2001 to $18 billion.

But this British exuberance is a global exception.

Even the - white hot - life sciences field suffered an 11 percent drop in venture capital investments in 2002, reports the MoneyTree Survey. According to the Ernst & Young 2002 Alberta Technology Report released in March 2003, the Canadian hi-tech sector is languishing with less than $3 billion invested in 2002 in seed capital - this despite generous matching funds and tax credits proffered by many of the provinces as well as the federal government.

In Israel, venture capital plunged to $600 million in 2002 - one fifth its level in 2000. Aware of this cataclysmic reversal in investor sentiment, the Israeli government set up 24 hi-tech incubators. But these are able merely to partly cater to the pecuniary needs of less than 20 percent of the projects submitted.

As governments pick up the monumental slack created by the withdrawal of private funding, they attempt to rationalize and economize.

The New Jersey Commission of Health Science Education and Training recently proposed to merge the state’s three public research universities. Soaring federal and state budget deficits are likely to exert added pressure on the already strained relationship between academe and state - especially with regards to research priorities and the allocation of ever-scarcer resources.

This friction is inevitable because the interaction between technology and science is complex and ill-understood. Some technological advances spawn new scientific fields - the steel industry gave birth to metallurgy, computers to computer science and the transistor to solid state physics. The discoveries of science also lead, though usually circuitously, to technological breakthroughs - consider the examples of semiconductors and biotechnology.

Thus, it is safe to generalize and say that the technology sector is only the more visible and alluring tip of the drabber iceberg of research and development. The military, universities, institutes and industry all over the world plough hundreds of billions annually into both basic and applied studies. But governments are the most important sponsors of pure scientific pursuits by a long shot.

Science is widely perceived as a public good - its benefits are shared. Rational individuals would do well to sit back and copy the outcomes of research - rather than produce widely replicated discoveries themselves. The government has to step in to provide them with incentives to innovate.

Thus, in the minds of most laymen and many economists, science is associated exclusively with publicly-funded universities and the defense establishment. Inventions such as the jet aircraft and the Internet are often touted as examples of the civilian benefits of publicly funded military research. The pharmaceutical, biomedical, information technology and space industries, for instance - though largely private - rely heavily on the fruits of nonrivalrous (i.e. public domain) science sponsored by the state.

The majority of 501 corporations surveyed by the Department of Finance and Revenue Canada in 1995-6 reported that government funding improved their internal cash flow - an important consideration in the decision to undertake research and development. Most beneficiaries claimed the tax incentives for seven years and recorded employment growth.

In the absence of efficient capital markets and adventuresome capitalists, some developing countries have taken this propensity to extremes. In the Philippines, close to 100 percent of all R&D is government-financed. The meltdown of foreign direct investment flows - they declined by nearly three fifths since 2000 - only rendered state involvement more indispensable.

But this is not a universal trend. South Korea, for instance, effected a successful transition to private venture capital which now - even after the Asian turmoil of 1997 and the global downturn of 2001 - amounts to four fifths of all spending on R&D.

Thus, supporting ubiquitous government entanglement in science is overdoing it. Most applied R&D is still conducted by privately owned industrial outfits. Even “pure” science - unadulterated by greed and commerce - is sometimes bankrolled by private endowments and foundations.

Moreover, the conduits of government involvement in research, the universities, are only weakly correlated with growing prosperity. As Alison Wolf, professor of education at the University of London elucidates in her seminal tome “Does Education Matter? Myths about Education and Economic Growth”, published in 2002, extra years of schooling and wider access to university do not necessarily translate to enhanced growth (though technological innovation clearly does).

Terence Kealey, a clinical biochemist, vice-chancellor of the University of Buckingham in England and author of “The Economic Laws of Scientific Research”, is one of a growing band of scholars who dispute the intuitive linkage between state-propped science and economic progress. In an interview published in March 2003 by Scientific American, he recounted how he discovered that:

“Of all the lead industrial countries, Japan - the country investing least in science - was growing fastest. Japanese science grew spectacularly under laissez-faire. Its science was actually purer than that of the U.K. or the U.S. The countries with the next least investment were France and Germany, and were growing next fastest. And the countries with the maximum investment were the U.S., Canada and U.K., all of which were doing very badly at the time.”

The Economist concurs: “it is hard for governments to pick winners in technology.” Innovation and science sprout in - or migrate to - locations with tough laws regarding intellectual property rights, a functioning financial system, a culture of “thinking outside the box” and a tradition of excellence.

Government can only remove obstacles - especially red tape and trade tariffs - and nudge things in the right direction by investing in infrastructure and institutions. Tax incentives are essential initially. But if the authorities meddle, they are bound to ruin science and be rued by scientists.

Still, all forms of science funding - both public and private - are lacking.

State largesse is ideologically constrained, oft-misallocated, inefficient and erratic (the recent examples being stem-cell and cloning research in the USA). In the United States, mega projects, such as the Superconducting Super Collider, with billions already sunk in, have been abruptly discontinued as were numerous other defense-related schemes. Additionally, some knowledge gleaned in government-funded research is barred from the public domain.

But industrial money can be worse. It comes with strings attached. The commercially detrimental results of drug studies have been suppressed by corporate donors on more than one occasion, for instance. Commercial entities are unlikely to support basic research as a public good, ultimately made available to their competitors as a “spillover benefit”. This understandable reluctance stifles innovation.

There is no lack of suggestions on how to square this circle.

Quoted in the Philadelphia Business Journal, Donald Drakeman, CEO of the Princeton biotech company Medarex, proposed In February 2003 to encourage pharmaceutical companies to shed technologies they have chosen to shelve: “Just like you see little companies coming out of the research being conducted at Harvard and MIT in Massachusetts and Stanford and Berkley in California, we could do it out of Johnson & Johnson and Merck.”

This would be the corporate equivalent of the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980. The statute made both academic institutions and researchers the owners of inventions or discoveries financed by government agencies. This unleashed a wave of unprecedented self-financing entrepreneurship.

In the two decades that followed, the number of patents registered to universities increased tenfold and they spun off more than 2200 firms to commercialize the fruits of research. In the process, they generated $40 billion in gross national product and created 260,000 jobs.

None of this was government financed - though, according to The Economist’s Technology Quarterly, $1 in research usually requires up to $10,000 in capital to get to market. This suggests a clear and mutually profitable division of labor - governments should picks up the tab for basic research, private capital should do the rest, stimulated by the transfer of intellectual property from state to entrepreneurs.

But this raises a host of contentious issues.

Such a scheme may condition industry to depend on the state for advances in pure science, as a kind of hidden subsidy. Research priorities are bound to be politicized and lead to massive misallocation of scarce economic resources through pork barrel politics and the imposition of “national goals”. NASA, with its “let’s put a man on the moon (before the Soviets do)” and the inane International Space Station is a sad manifestation of such dangers.

Science is the only public good that is produced by individuals rather than collectives. This inner conflict is difficult to resolve. On the one hand, why should the public purse enrich entrepreneurs? On the other hand, profit-driven investors seek temporary monopolies in the form of intellectual property rights. Why would they share this cornucopia with others, as pure scientists are compelled to do?

The partnership between basic research and applied science has always been an uneasy one. It has grown more so as monetary returns on scientific insight have soared and as capital available for commercialization multiplied. The future of science itself is at stake.

Were governments to exit the field, basic research would likely crumble. Were they to micromanage it - applied science and entrepreneurship would suffer. It is a fine balancing act and, judging by the state of both universities and startups, a precarious one as well.

Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

Visit Sam’s Web site at samvak.tripod.com

Bullies on the Job

April 29th, 2008

What to do about bullies? Fortunately, they’re not much to worry about once we grow to be adults, right? Phwew. All that immature behavior gets left way back in the schoolyard, years ago. Now just courteous, respectful, and stimulating work alongside bright, mature colleagues, right?

Wrong, O Schoolyard Breath! Bullies it seems remain with us even after passing into adult status with all its presumed and concomitant “maturity.” You can even find numbers on the subject. According to The Campaign Against Workplace Bullying (CAWB), based in Benicia, California, one in six workers today have experienced some form of workplace bullying by a co-worker. Specific actions include screaming at an employee in front of co-workers and/or customers, general emotional and verbal abuse, even intentionally setting workers up to fail. Women, it’s claimed, stand the greatest chance of being targets of bullying, interestingly enough not just by men but by other women too.

Reports of bullying in the workplace are in fact rising, say self-proclaimed “bully busters” Gary and Ruth Namie, founders of CAWB. This may be due partially to expanded awareness of the issue as well as to the high competitive pressures of the contemporary marketplace. Worse still, the Namies say, cruel and uncouth behavior sometimes even results in getting “promoted for it.”

Should employers take notice? Is bullying something to create policies around? Should it be handled ad hoc?

How about lawsuits? Is the first major ruling against an employer just around the corner, perhaps for standing idly by and not extracting a bully from his/her work area? What about retaliatory actions by victims of bullying, in the form of quiet subversion, sabotage, or outright violence?

Certainly, we may hope that President George W. Bush’s inaugural call for a “return to civility” will send civility ripples through American society in general, and throughout our workplaces in particular. But for lasting and truly penetrating effects, let’s not hold our breath! Sadly, bullying has been around forever, solidly entrenched in the human condition. To protect ourselves, we can confront or ignore a workplace bully, file a grievance or lawsuit, avoid a bully if possible, or just up and leave altogether in search of a happier environment. None of these represent pleasant solutions… but they may very well be all we will ever have.

Ken Lizotte CMC is Chief Imaginative Officer (CIO) of emerson consulting group inc. (Concord, MA), which transforms consultants, law firms, executives and companies into “thoughtleaders.” This article is an excerpt from his newest book “Beyond Reason: Questioning Assumptions of Everyday Life”.

Visit ==>www.thoughtleading.com for more info.

3 Little Known Tips of Basketball Hoop Shopping

April 27th, 2008

I’ve got a confession to make. I play basketball. I play it
very poorly and can’t make very many of the shots that I shoot
at the basketball hoop. I have a feeling that I am not alone in
the world at being a rather poor basketball player. However, one
thing that I’m not bad at is comparison shopping. I’ve mastered
the ancient art of comparing prices between merchants and can
usually ferret out a fairly good deal with a little bit of leg
work. Basketball hoops are no different than other items when it
comes to shopping for them. There are some tips you should know
before embarking on your journey to shop for a basketball hoop.

1)New or Used. You really might consider buying a used
basketball hoop if you are interested in value. However, make
sure you are buying one that hasn’t been banged up too bad.
Years of basketball practice can only make your rim bent and
dirty. Ebay can be a great place to buy used equipment and
basketball hoops are regularly for sale on Ebay.

2)Do your homework by comparing different merchant offers on
different search engines and different websites. Just because
something is advertised for sale on Google doesn’t mean its also
advertised for sale on Yahoo. Some merchants advertise their
good strictly through the Amazon partners program and don’t do
any other advertising anywhere else. Price vary drastically and
the only way you will know that you are getting a good deal is
to examine what the different people are selling the same goods
for on different websites. Basketball hoops are no exception.

3)Learn about the different types and styles of basketball
hoops. Without the knowledge of what you are buying, points #1
and #2 are nearly worthless. Buy your hoop the right way and get
a great deal on one by being an informed consumer. Learn how to
buy a basketball hoop and you can guarantee that you got a
better deal than everyone else.

Boat Financing-Take the Helm

April 27th, 2008

Do you need boat financing for a new boat or a pre-owned boat? No matter if you want a yacht or a speed boat there are plenty of choices available for you. First time boat buyers may be curious about the whole boat financing process. If you have bought a boat in the past, financing options may have changed since you made that first boat purchase. The boat financing process is now easier than it ever was in the pastespecially with the internet options. There are tools resources and products that will help you along the way.

A boat loan calculator that you can commonly find on boat lending sites is a great way to get started. You can estimate your monthly payment within just a few seconds. If you know about how much you will need for your boat financing, you enter the total in the loan amount area. Then, you enter the length of financing. The current interest rates should be provided. You can continue to change the numbers until you get a good match for your budget.

After you have used the boat loan calculator, you should look around the boat financing site. The better sites have links to boat manufacturers and dealers as well as more information about financing to help you get the best loan. They should also have contact information about who you can talk to in order to get more information about boat financing.

The length of financing for a boat can range anywhere from 5 to 10 years to 25 to 30 years. The length will largely depend on the overall cost of the boat, your credit rating, the interest rate and the amount of down payment you are required to pay.

Getting pre-approval for your boat loan is a great step in the right direction. It only takes a little while to fill out and submit an online application and you will have an answer in as little as 24 hours. Then you can get right on to the fun part-shopping for your boat. Financing a boat is easier than ever. You can do it.

Julie Jacobs writes articles about Boats and RVs, and how to finance them. For more information about a boat financing visit drvfinancing.com.

Strategic Clarity for Communication Management

April 27th, 2008

Over the past few weeks I’ve been developing plans for a communication project, a media relations campaign.

That’s prompted me to reflect again on the communication management process by which we transform communication ideas into operational activities.

For me, the communication management process has four phases: conception (strategy); development (tactics); operations (execution); and review (evaluation).

Coming out of the conception or strategy phase, I think it’s essential to have strategic clarity, which means a clear, focused objective (or objectives) that serves our ends, the ends of our audience, and allows for effective development and operations.

For example when I first started publishing newsletters, I didn’t look or ask for strategic clarity from my clients. The result? Newsletters that faltered, sputtered, and eventually lapsed. Clients had wanted newsletters because they thought a newsletter would be a good idea. Communication is good, right? But, communication without a well-considered purpose is largely ineffective.

Other clients, though, did know what they wanted, both for themselves and for their readers. They turned out to be good clients with lots of staying power. And they had staying power because they clearly knew why they were communicating, and had some sense of the results, even if those results couldn’t be measured.

To get strategic clarity, we first need to step back and ask some important questions. What do we want for the time, money, and perhaps other resources we’re committing? What is the objective? Now, go one step further and articulate that objective in terms of reader response. Write down what they will do if you successfully communicate with them.

Next, write down why they would do what you’re asking of them. It’s one thing to have objectives, and it’s quite another to serve readers’ objectives as well as your own. And, what’s the connection between your needs and the needs of the audience?

Does this sound like a lot of work? Well, can be. But, ask yourself how much value you get if you rush off and do something without thinking it through.

I’ve published two newsletters for my own company. The first went ahead quickly, with little strategic planning. Instead, I concerned myself with matters like color, typefaces, and so on. That was a mistake; the newsletter died after perhaps six or eight issues, and accomplished little.

Before I started my second newsletter, I carefully worked through all the strategic issues. In fact, I started on the newsletter project in May and didn’t publish the first issue until September. Of course, I didn’t work at it full time, but still a lot of hours went into clarifying the strategy.

And, it worked. More than five years later, I’m still publishing it, every week, and the newsletter still does the job it was developed to do.

In summary, your communication project has a greater chance of success if you take time up front to identify and articulate your objectives, as well as the desired reader responses.

EzineArticles Expert Author Robert Abbott

Robert F. Abbott writes and publishes Abbott’s Communication Letter. Learn how you can use communication to help achieve your goals, by reading articles or subscribing to this ad-supported newsletter. An excellent resource for leaders and managers, at: http://www.communication-newsletter.com

You can’t go wrong if you decide

April 27th, 2008

You can’t go wrong if you decide to give your wedding guests edible wedding favors as these are always appreciated. Normally they are of the sweet variety but there is no reason why savory favors cannot be supplied. There is something quite special about a chocolate bar that has a wrapper designed to suit the special occasion. Of course hand made or fine quality chocolate will be received with greater enthusiasm than the regular type you might buy from the local store! Not only can the bride and groom have the wedding details printed on the candy wrapper but a special loving message can also be placed on there.

It is not unusual to see a picture of the happy couple on this sort of wrapper or even a presentation box. Other edible wedding favors can come in the form of small pieces of candy in tins. There is also typically the option of personalizing the tin by including the wedding date and the name of the bride and the groom. Tins are always useful so once the candy has been eaten, it can be used to store many small items that might be lost otherwise. Most people will tuck into an edible wedding favor even if they do not normally eat candy because the occasion makes them more susceptible.

One unique way to give out candy as wedding favors is to use large glass bowls as the centerpieces for the tables and fill the bowls with the bride and grooms’ favorite types of candy. An addition to this is to have special boxes made up for every guest with the details of the wedding and if you have decided on a theme of some kind then the box or container can match this. You can guarantee it won’t take long before the guests start filling their boxes with the candy. If you are looking for a different edible wedding favor idea then why not try arranging for the guests to have cookies instead of candy. By using plain cookies, it is easy to present them in a nice box with the bride and grooms names plus the date and location of the wedding.

CNC Router Buying Guide

April 26th, 2008

CNC router tables are used for cutting wood, plastic, or metal, depending on the machine. They can be used for sign making or general routing jobs. The router doubles as engraving equipment. This versatility allows you to get more from one machine.

The interest in these machines for home use and small shops has grown rapidly in recent years. As people become aware of the accuracy and versatility, this demand will surely increase. Many people are choosing used equipment in an effort to save money, while owning this machinery.

Although they are still expensive for most users, there are plans available on the internet to make your own table. These save money and allow you to choose sizes from 15 by 15 to 50 by 60 inches, according to your needs.

Uses of a CNC Router

With cnc routers, you can do projects that would otherwise take too much time or be too difficult to accomplish. This includes cutting elaborate designs and creating metal inlays in wood. Complex designs come out smooth and accurate. You can do things that you could never do by hand.

These machines are great for furniture making. You will get professional results every time. The software allows you to program the depth per pass for even better results. You can engrave anything from a large sign to very small lettering. These machines are versatile and easy to use, once you’ve been trained on the software.

Smaller machines work on 120 voltage and can be run on typical household current. These are the best choice for the home workshop. The motors are generally either one or two horsepower. These smaller, table top models are more affordable, costing about $7000 new, as opposed to $20,000 for a larger machine. A used machine is even more affordable, costing about $3500. This is still very expensive, but can be cost effective if you are making furniture that you will sell.

Buying a Used CNC Router

Purchasing a used cnc router is a great value for the money. You can save 50% or more compared to the cost of a new machine. Take your time when shopping. Do some research to find the best machine for your needs. Keep in mind that a used machine will probably not be as fast as brand new. However, in a small shop, this may not matter.

Many used machines have been reconditioned. The machine is inspected and any damaged parts are replaced. Ask about the work that was done to your router. Find out what was repaired or replaced. Ask about a warranty. Many come with a one year warranty, which is a big plus.

Find out about the support that is offered by the company. Many will offer help with installation and train you for using the software. This is important if you’ve never used one before. Look for professional advice and support. Whenever possible, choose a dealer that offers on going support. Make sure to get a manual for your router. You will need the information contained in the manual for operation and maintenance.

Ken Morris distributes lots of information to http://www.inside-woodworking.com a website with resources. The writer is writing on subjects such as cnc router.