GuideHotel's Blog

May 06, 2009


Keep your eye out for pop-up shipping container hotels! Foldable container shelters are cheap, recyclable, and incredibly popular around the world. Featured in the gallery is the 41 Berangan hotel in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It has 11 rooms, 9 of which are attached to a main complex, and two 20-foot shipping ‘courtyard rooms’ with garden views.

Guests sleep on recyclable paper pallet beds, they have Internet access and get a continental breakfast with their stay.

One of the reasons shipping container hotels like the foldable 41 Berangan are popular is because they are significantly cheaper to build, hence their cost per night is also much more affordable. With the global credit crunch, budget hotels have never been more popular.

Shipping container architecture was a booming building craze last year—we saw everything from shipping container condo lofts to makeshift schools made of old cargo crates. With the economy not having recovered yet, we expect shipping container architecture to continue to pop up.

 

Shipping Container Hotels Credit Crunch Travel

 

sb
April 30, 2009

We have murals on our walls and ceilings, so why not have floor murals? We’ve been blown away by optical illusion 3D chalk drawings in the past, but these intricately painted floor murals bring that trippy feel into your home.

This gallery includes creative floor murals from around the world, such as the gold fish pond floor by Michael V Las Casas, the swimming pool ad mural, the mosaic globe at the Denver Airport, floors with men climbing out of a grave, Grizzly Bear And Cub With Paw Prints floor by Samuel McPeek, Gears of War floor mural, random floor paintings, and a vintage photo of a man working a floor mural circa 1940.

 

More gallery

sb
April 23, 2009

The greasy burger images in the gallery above will either make you hungry, or than likely, kill your appetite. I do think it’s important to study the differences of what is on the poster and what is actually on your plate. Time to face Fast Food Reality, folks.

I have certainly felt really cheated after looking at a gorgeous menu with delicious pictures of fresh fast food, and your teeth are itching to bite into that burger, wrap or sandwich, only to be completely appalled by the sloppy chunk of fat you’re getting served.

Look for yourself - and think again before ordering your favorite burger. First up in the gallery, the McDonald’s Big Mac, then Burger King Enormous Omelet Sandwich, McDonald’s Sausage Breakfast Burrito, Wendy’s Chicken Club and las, but not least, the Burger King Whopper.

Anyone hungry? I’m not.

 

 

 

sb
April 18, 2009
Learn How to Find the Best

Have you ever wondered if what you know about is accurate? Consider the following paragraphs and compare what you know to the latest info on. If you base what you do on inaccurate information, you might be unpleasantly surprised by the consequences. Make sure you get the whole story from informed sources.

When you think about internet business training programs, what do you think of first? Which aspects of make money online fast are important, which are essential, and which ones can you take or leave? You be the judge.

So far, we've uncovered some interesting facts about internet business training programs. You may decide that the following information is even more interesting.

If you are like most people you are either currently trying or have tried some sort of work at home or internet business in the past. Don't get me wrong, I work on the internet and think it is absolutely the best job in the world, but there are a lot of people (most) who fail. Now why is that? Why do so many people fail to ever realize their dreams working from home or on the internet?

From my experience there are several factors that will contribute to success on the internet. The first is a decision and commitment to the business at hand. If you try to make a successful internet business half-heartidly, then you are already one foot out the door. Building a business online has just as many stumbling blocks as an offline business and if you quit at the first sign of trouble, then of course you will never see success. Internet businesses are not get rich quick schemes, or at least the legitimate ones. If someone is telling you that you can make 40k in a week and its so easy even their sister could to it, run for the hills.

The second factor is the training and mentoring you receive. This is hands down the most important part and the basis for this article. The problem with a lot of internet businesses, is that we see a lot of "the blind leading the blind." Brand new internet marketers are trying to teach and instruct other brand new internet marketers and they all end up failing. So how do you reduce your learning curve?

Simple. Partner only with those who are currently achieving the level of success you want and make sure that the compensation plan encourages mentor-ship. Be wary of any compensation plan where you are not encouraged to produce for your mentor/sponsor long term or any plan where you can actually pass your sponsor if you really take off. Both of these situations will not lead to long term training and development.

As for the actual training vehicles, your mentor will be key, however you also want to look for the size and depth of their back office. A good company will have countless hours of trainings and videos available and archived on specific marketing methods. They should be easy to access and chocked full of content. Ask to see samples of the training before you join to double check their claims.

These factors will be directly proportional to your success online, so be choosy and do your due diligence. Personally I would look for a program where you are in a direct override commission structure, in a business with massive back office training underneath of a solid and proven mentor.

As always, good luck out there!
sb
April 13, 2009

1. Provide valuable content.

You’ve heard it before: content is king. A gorgeous website will do you absolutely no good if your content is poorly written, irrelevant, or outdated. To this end:

* be sure to spellcheck, or have someone proofread your writing
* make sure to update your content regularly (a blog is good for this)
* use humour judiciously; keep your tone casual
* be sure to give some information about who you are in order to engender trust
* remember to KISS (Keep it simple, stupid)

Be aware that writing for the web is a whole different ballgame. Users are impatient, and nobody wants to skim through a dense chunk of text in order to find what they’re looking for. A few guidelines for writing web-specific content:

* pages should contain no more than two screenfuls of text
* articles can be longer, but should contain no more than seven screenfuls of text
* use short sentences
* break content up into small paragraphs, or make use of point form

You should also consider writing short articles about your area of expertise. This is a great way to provide valuable, relevant content for your website. For example, if you’re a tax specialist, write an article about how to use the quick method of accounting to file your GST/HST. If you’re a mechanic, write an article about how to do your monthly maintenance check. While you may think that you’d lose customers by providing this “inside information”, what you’re actually doing is establishing yourself as an expert in your field. Visitors will begin to see your site as a resource, not just an advertisement. You can also publish your articles elsewhere on the internet to drum up further interest in your site.
2. Don’t turn your visitor off.

Web surfers are a fickle breed. If a visitor arrives at your site to find anything he finds irritating, chances are good that he’ll leave immediately. You don’t want this to happen, so ensure that you don’t use any of the following elements on your site (in approximate order of Perceived Evilness):

* popup windows
* auto-loading sound
* frames or invasive Flash
* illegible text (whether due to blinking, scrolling, lack of contrast, line length, leading, or inability to resize)
* overuse of animation
* obnoxious use of advertising
* long load times

3. Make use of a statistics program.

A good statistics program is easy to install on your website, and will give you valuable information about your visitors. I’ve used dozen of different statistics programs over the years, and there’s a myriad of options. I use Google Analytics (google.com/analytics) on all of my clients’ sites: it’s easy to install, and gives a wide range of statistics.

Things you’ll find especially useful:

* bounce rate: Given as a percentage, this tells you the number of visitors who leave your site immediately after visiting the homepage. A high bounce rate most likely means that you’re either turning your visitors off, or not directing them to any content that’s of interest to them.
* most accessed pages: This will tell you what content is most interesting to your visitors, so than you can create more content in a similar vein.
* referring sites: This tells you what sites are linking to yours, and which ones bring in the most traffic.
* keywords: This tells you the search engine phrases that people have entered to find your site. My top three phrases, for example, are “livejournal templates”, “graphic designer”, and “triggers and sparks”. This gives you a better idea of what people are looking for when they visit your site, so that you can provide them more relevant content. (As a bonus, you also get some really random-seeming phrases, like “clementine boxes”, “something that eats platypus”, “grunt labourer services”, and “why don’t humans hibernate”.)

4. Organize and follow conventions.

If your visitors can’t find what they’re looking for, they’ll leave and find it elsewhere. If you structure your content well and follow the basic conventions that web users are accustomed to, it’ll be easier for you visitors to find your content.

* all content should be no more than two clicks away at any time
* provide a search bar if you’re managing a content-rich site
* menus should be in an easy-to-reach place (top or left is conventional), and should be consistent
* text that is not a link (or, in some cases, a header) should not be underlined
* links should be distinguished from text (using colour and, in some cases, an underline), and should change somehow (colour, background colour, underline) when you put your mouse over them
* do not use all caps (exceptions can be made for short headings that are all set this way; for emphasis instead use a bold or italic setting, but don’t overuse this!)
* make sure that it is easy for visitors to contact you at all times

5. Optimize for search engines, but don’t harass them.

This means: build your site so that search engines can index them properly, but don’t go overboard trying to use complicated Search Engine Optimization techniques. (Focus instead on building your valuable content!)

Tips:

* ask other sites to link to you (especially if you have linked to them!). Only request this of people you know. Building valuable content will make people link to you naturally.
* each page should have a different title, description and set of keywords (usually no more than 15 keywords are required; too many can cause you to be blacklisted)
* keywords should be repeated within the page content (but don’t force it; this should happen naturally)
* all images should have an ALT tag; avoid using images as headers or links
* submit your site to online directories (Yahoo, Open Directory, any local or business-related directory that accepts links)
* make sure your website has been semantically coded (separating content from presentation) and is standards-compliant

6. Make sure everyone knows about it.

If you’ve built a fantastic website, but nobody knows it’s there, it’s no good to you. Advertise your website address everywhere you go: use it as an email signature appended to all your emails, put it on your business card, use it as a signature if you post to online forums, paint it on your car, add it to your online profiles.

Make use of social networking sites and tactics:

* linkedin.com, facebook.com, myspace.com (in decreasing order of “professionalism”)
* create a Facebook Page for your business
* start a blog
* provide RSS feeds for your visitors, and integrate them with FB & the like
* use qassia.com to publish your articles and get quality links back to your site

And above all, remember: if you build it, they will come. Focus on making your website a source of valuable, well-written content that’s accessible and well-designed, and you’ll be in a better position to benefit from it.

 

 

sb
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