Step-by-Step Guide Getting Into e-Business Working on your e-Business Telling the World about your e-Business Maintaining and Monitoring your e-Business
 










Step 1: Getting into e-Business






Welcome to the Land of the Free

 

I don't think there is any other place in the world where you can get so much stuff for free.

 

Free email, free web space, free design software, free domain name, free programs, free news feeds,  free credits, free press release, etc. 

 

Why do you think everyone is offering something for Free.  Because Free is the magnet in the Internet. There are now over a billion pages in the Web that competition for viewership has become so tight. So, as in the offline word, Free is king.

 

How then can you make money in this environment where everything is Free? 

 

If you are totally new to Internet Marketing, you might find this question the BIG question.  Fortunately, there are many ways by which you can still find money-making opportunities in the Web.

 

The fact is, you can start an Internet Business, totally Free. But as with anything in life, you get what you pay for. And if you are serious in making a living from the Internet, be prepared to make a little investment in order to have a more professional presence.

 

This course will discuss the different revenue models that you can work on. And if you already have an existing business, you will learn different methods by which you can increase the profitability of your Internet presence.

 

If you are a total newbie, I suggest you go through the course step-by-step.

 

If you are an advanced user, or simply wish to fast-track your learning process, I suggest you take a tour of the really successful websites or  view Warp-Speed Wealth. You can also see how you can make money out of blogging, if you are already a blogger.

 

Brief History of the Internet


The Internet was initially used by scientists at only a few large academic institutions.  This was made possible through a grant made by the Advanced Research Projects Agency of the Pentagon.  Through the 1970s and the 80s, the use of the Internet was adopted by more academic institutions in the United States.  In the 1990s, the Pentagon passed the baton to the National Science Foundation. And in the 1990s, the NSF passed the control of the Internet to the Private Sector.

 

The turning point for the Internet being made widely available to businesses and individuals was when Tim Berners-Lee invented the client-server system known as the World Wide Web or Web as we now know.  Berners-Lee also invented the hypertext transfer protocol (http) which specifies how a Web client, which we more commonly refer to as browser, should ask for a page and how this page will be sent to the browser. Berners-Lee is also credited for creating the idea of URL (Uniform Resource Locator), which we more commonly refer as Web address or Website. He also invented the html, (hypertext markup language), the language used to create web pages.

 


Whichever state you are in, I am sure you will find something useful in this site.

 

Click here to continue.

 



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