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My name is Timothy L. Drobnick Sr.
Please
Call this 24 hour toll free recorded message about legitimate
internet business opportunities.
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misconception #1: My friends all recommended this opportunity so it must be good.
Answer: Possibly, but that alone is not enough to determine if the opportunity
is a good one. You should remember that your friends are probably
basing their opinion on the fact that their friends told them the same thing.
To be an astute business person you must not take just the recommendation
of a friend, you must do your own research.

misconception #2: The website is very professional so it must be a good opportunity.
Answer: Although most opportunities that are legitimate try to make sure their
websites look professional, this is not proof that it is a good business
to work with.
It is quite easy to get templates that make your websites look very
professional for a small amount of money. There are a lot of people
that can quickly put up a website that looks very professional and are
also the owners or working as a partner for the business opportunity.
Just because someone has the ability to make a good looking website
does not mean that they have the skills to operate an opportunity
with sound business principles. It does not even mean that
they are honest.
However, a professional looking website is definitely a plus, and you should
count it as a pro, not a con, but only 1 of many, and not the only deciding
factor of working with that company.

misconception #3: The website is very sloppy so it must be a scam.
Answer: If a company has a sloppy or very unprofessional website, it could be a
reflection of the company itself, sloppy and unprofessional.
It also could be that the company put it's website on a very low priority
and a high priority on good business principals.
There are very good companies with very amateurish looking websites.
However, with the importance of image the company really should work
to update their website.
Do not write off a company just because the website is sloppy, but I would
proceed with caution and make sure to do your research.

misconception #4: You can get rich by doing little to nothing overnight.
Answer: There are people that get rich overnight. They fit into these categories:
1. They won the lottery.
2. They worked on a plan for a long period of time and when it finally all
came together they got rich overnight.
3. A fluke.
If you look at history, there really is no such thing as getting rich overnight,
getting rich doing nothing, or something for nothing.
90% of all businesses fail within 5 years. The 10% that make it almost always
are hard working entrepreneurs, often working 100 hours a week, and many times
do not even make a profit for their first 5 years.
If you want to get rich overnight, you might as well just play the lottery
because the odds are probably better. Or better yet, take your investment
to Vegas and have some fun while you lose your money.
People who have obtained wealth in a legal and ethical manner, which by
the way represents at least 90% of the wealthy, obtained their wealth
by providing services or products to society that was worth more than
the compensation they received for it.
Your wealth is in direct proportion to the services or products you can
provide. The more value you are to society, the more rewards you have
coming back to you.
If anyone on the internet, or anywhere else for that matter, offers you
a get rich quick plan, they are likely playing on your greed. The very
best of us can give in to greed and this can even blind our good judgment.
Greed will cause us to ignore red flags because we want to believe we can get rich so
easy.
Anyone in America with a good sound mind and a willingness to work
and learn and take some calculated risk can become rich if they are
persistent and consistent and have a good plan.
And yes, you can get rich quite quickly in America.
If someone offers you a get rich quick plan, look at the value that
is being offered to the customer. Is the value of the product or
service worth more than what they are paying? Does it make sense
to you that someone would want to buy these services?
If the plan offered is a multi level marketing or network marketing
plan, ask yourself if a customer would want to purchase the
services if it was not attached to a compensation plan?
If the answer is no, stay away from it. If the answer is yes,
you have only just begun your research.

misconception #5: If the company is a member of the BBB they must be a good company.
Answer: Many people do not realize that the Better Business Bureau is a private company
and not a government agency. Not all companies choose to work with the BBB,
and instead choose to work with their local Chamber of Commerce, or other
organizations such as Angie's List.
Companies can be honest or dishonest and still be a member of the BBB,
as well as the local Chamber of Commerce, and other organizations. Normally
all that is required to be a member is to pay the fee.
If someone has a complaint listed with them at the BBB, you must ask if
the complaint would have been dealt with by the BBB in the same manner
if the business was or was not a BBB member.
You should also consider that some companies have thousands, if not
hundreds of thousands of customers, so if they have a handful of complaints
that would really be a very good record. No company can make every customer
happy, and there are some people who just get joy out of reporting
companies when they really should not be.
If you are investigating a business opportunity on the internet, go
to Google.com or Yahoo.com and type in the business name and try to
find customers. By searching the internet yourself you can find people with
pros and cons about the business and a pretty balanced and honest
take on the business.
Remember, even the very best companies will have some complaints
from customers. You must use your judgment to determine if the
complaints are a true reflection of the company.

misconception #6: All internet business opportunities are a scam.
Answer: Although the internet certainly has a lot of scams, it also has thousands
of good opportunities. The internet is really no different than
finding an opportunity in a magazine, newspaper, radio, or late night
infomercial. It is just another medium to advertise and provide information.
Many businesses on the internet are thriving. Think of Google, Yahoo,
Amazon, and Ebay. This year retail has increased 20% over last year
on the internet and more and more good companies are establishing an
internet presence.
You will find all ranges of businesses on the internet, small, large,
private, public, legal, and illegal.

misconception #7: There is no way for you to really know if a business opportunity
is legitimate.
Answer:
If you do your homework, you can be reasonably sure if a company
or opportunity on the internet, or anywhere, is operating with
good sound business principals.
Here is a checklist you should use to investigate a business
opportunity.
1. Is the company a corporation or a sole proprietorship. A sole
proprietorship simply means the person is operating the business
as themselves. The owner and the business are the same person
A corporation is a legal entity that must be set up with the local
state. The corporation is viewed as it's own self, not the same
entity as the person or persons that own it.
2. If the business is incorporated, is it public or private?
Public means that you could go to a stock broker and buy stock
in that company. Private means you could only buy stock if
the company allows you to purchase stock.
3. If the business is a publicly held corporation, you can much
more easily review their books as it is law that they must be made
available to you. You can request that the company send you a
copy of their quarterly report.
4. If the business is private, or even if it is public, you can
get good information about over 20,000 businesses on a website
called www.hoovers.com/free/
If you do not find information on them there, search their website
for reports, or go to Yahoo.com or Google.com and type in the
company name to see if you can find any records available from
the SEC or local governments about the business.
Another good website to visit for researching corporations is
www.corp-research.org
Also look up the website for the secretary of state office for the
state the company resides in. If they are a corporation they must
file papers and you can usually see these papers online.
If you want to find websites with public records, you can find
most of them by going to www.brbpub.com/pubrecsites.asp
5. If the company is a private corporation, ask who are the
stock holders and who are the officers. No matter if it is
private or public, you should ask for the business history
and experience of each of the corporate officers, especially
the President and/or CEO.
6. Once you have been told the history of the officers, you
must then do your best to verify their experience and history.
7. If the company owns a website, do a whois on the domain name
to see who really owns the website. This will also tell you
more information about the company, such as the address and
contact telephone number. To do a whois go to www.internic.net
and type in the domain name.
If the domain name is not owned by the corporation, and the
business relies upon that website, they are at risk of losing
their website to whoever the owner is. The corporation should
also be the admin and technical contact for the domain. Any
one who is the admin or tech contact can grab control of the
domain and bring the business to it's knees.
8. If the company uses computers or software for their business,
get the descriptions and have an outside party, such as a friend
that is knowledgeable on the subject to review and verify if
it will handle the company's needs.
For example I examined a company that had millions of dollar
for start up, but when I flew out to examine their offices
I was horrified when I saw the underpowered and outdated
computer and servers. On top of that their technical people
in charge seemed to have no idea what they were doing and
the employees were working in an overheated office. No one
will be happy and stay with a company in conditions such
as that.
9. If at all possible try to talk with any employees of the
company directly and see if they seem to be happy working
for the company. Employees can give you a lot of inside
information. When Warren Buffet was investigating Geico,
he went to their building on a weekend and was let in the
door by a Janitor. By wandering around and looking at the
workspaces of the employees and speaking with the Janitors,
he gained a lot of useful information as to if the company
was being managed properly. Employees can provide very good
insight.
10. Does their product or service make sense. Would you use it if
there was no incentive to earn money using it? Ask people you know
what they think about the product or service and would they use
it and pay the asking price?
11. Run the numbers. Sit down and calculate what the product costs
minus commissions and overhead. If you do not know how to do this
ask a friend in business or an accountant to help you with this.
If the numbers don't make sense so that the company can make a profit,
don't expect them to stay in business.
12. 90% of all businesses fail within the first 5 years. If the business
you are looking at is less than 5 years old, remember there is only a
10% chance it will survive.
13. If at all possible visit the company office or at the very least have
a conversation with the CEO or President or Owner via telephone. You should
ONLY do this after you have done MOST of your research and have some
intelligent concerns to present to the CEO.
During your conversation with the CEO keep your ears open. Does the CEO
seem to have a passion for the company? Does the CEO seem intelligent
and have a plan he/she is following?
14. Read the labels on any products being sold by the company. Read
any contracts or agreements or disclosures. Read everything. You may
be surprised what you find or don't find.
15. If the company uses affiliates, search the internet for some and
have a conversation with them. Ask how they are treated, if they are
paid on time, etc.
16. Look to see who the competition of the company is. How is the
competition doing? Does it seem there are too many competitors and
will make it too difficult for you to establish your own clients with
the new business opportunity?
17. Talk to the vendors of the company. This would be other businesses
that the company you are investigating purchases supplies and services
from. You may have to do some research to find who they are, but it
can be very revealing to talk with the vendors. If you are friendly
and get someone on the phone that will talk with you, they may
talk about how great the company is, or if they are not getting
paid on time, they will probably be more than happy to let you
know and blow off some steam.
18. What are the company's plans if the owners become unable to
operate the business? Will the business just fail or is there a
plan in place to help it continue?
19. If the business does fail is there a way to keep your customers and
move them to another support system?
20. Are you allowed to have all contact information of the customers
you bring into the company? This is very important so you can
develop a relationship with them.

misconception #8: If you put up a website everyone will come to it.
Answer: On the internet there are millions of websites. The odds of someone finding your
website are very slim to none unless you somehow advertise your website. If
a business opportunity offers you an affiliate website with the promise that
people will flock to it and purchase products from you, ask yourself why they
need you when they could just put up their own website?
There is nothing wrong with a business opportunity providing an affiliate
website for you, but they should let you know it will take work and
advertising on your part to get people to the website.

misconception #9: If you start an internet business you must do it alone.
Answer: The internet is like the wild wild west from the 1800's in that you never
know what changes are coming next and it seems sometimes that everyone is
out to k i l l your business in order to survive.
However, there are many good support groups for some business opportunities
on the internet. Check to see if the business opportunity you are looking
at has what is called a forum. A forum is like a bulletin board where
affiliates or participants can read at their leisure and post answers to
other questions from other members or ask your own questions.
Forums usually are broken down into different subjects. It may seem that
a forum is something daunting to learn at first, however all it really is,
is a website.
There will be a link or website address provided to you for the forum. Type
in the website address, often called a URL, into your browser address bar
at the top. Once you are at the website, many times you will be required to
read the rules and get a username and password the first time you are
visiting. Most forums have a link at the top that say "register" just click
that and follow the steps. This is only a one time process.
Once you have your username and password, you can then participate in the
forum.
Again, just go to the website address or the URL for the forum and you
will see it on your browser, just like any other website. You should
see different subjects, just click on the one that interests you.
After you click on the subject you may see more subjects to choose, or
you may see notes from other people. You can click on the notes and
read what that person has said.
After you read the note, there is usually an option to go to the next note
or to the previous note or to reply. If you want to reply to ask a question
about that particular subject, or just to add your input, click the
reply button, type your note, and then type submit.
Your note will then be added to the end of that "string".
Think of it like a bulletin board at the local grocery store. Someone
puts a note at the top of the bulletin with a comment about street
cleaning. You read the note, and then you write a new note about it
and post your paper below that note. Someone else comes along,
reads both notes, and posts their note below, and so on.
Be sure to follow the rules of the forum, and be sure to stay on
topic. Many times if you cannot find a topic you want to participate
in, you can find a button that says "new topic" to create your own.
Business opportunities that use forums can add a lot of personal
support for you and help you along the way in building your own
business.

misconception #10: Nobody Makes Money On The Internet.
Answer:
Many people think only gigantic corporations are the only ones able to make
money with the internet and there is no way for the small business person to
profit. But this is not true. Although it can be very difficult to make
money without a good plan, those entrepreneurs who have a good plan put
together are making a very good income on the internet today.
Many people do this by simply selling products over ebay, a very lucrative
way to make money. I personally know people that make over $5000 per month
doing this.
Many people make very good money as affiliates for good businesses, and
many more people make very good money hosting Google.com adsense advertisements
on their websites once they develop traffic to their websites.
The possibilities are unlimited and there are many thousands of small
entrepreneurs today making money on the internet. This does not mean
that everyone is profiting, as I am sure for every person that is making
a profit, there are many dozens who are not.
Find a business that has proven they can show you how to make a profit
on the internet and if that plan excites you, work with them assuming
you have checked them out as a business with sound business principals.

misconception #11: Web hosting business opportunities only work if you sell your
websites for the least.
Answer: One of the major opportunities on the internet that is still wide
open is web hosting. Although there is a major market for very
cheap websites on the internet, there is a market that is barely
tapped that is willing to pay much more, and frankly is not even
interested in having a cheap website.
Less than 20% of small businesses today have
a website. When surveyed small businesses that do not have
websites reply that they cannot afford a website, they are afraid they
will be taken advantage of because they do not understand the process
of setting up a website, and they just don't have the time to work
with it.
This creates a great opportunity for entrepreneurs that would like
to approach local small businesses in a low key manner with a low
risk and low headache website for these businesses.
There are many good companies to work with on the internet that allow
you to resell their services so you can provide web hosting as a business
opportunity. You can even choose to get your own software and server
and go it alone.
Although the price of web hosting has dropped lower and lower to sometimes as
low as $5 per month, there are many people profiting with happy healthy client
bases charging much more than that.
You must remember that not everyone always wants the cheapest option available.
For example, most small business owners really understand you get what you
pay for. They are not going to waste their money by over paying, but they
usually know that unless they are going to put a lot of their own time into
their website, the $5 per month sites are not a bargain.
They realize that a $5 site will require them to hire their own webmaster
and that if they need service for the $5 site it either is not available
or it will be available at high hourly tech rates, in effect costing them
hundreds of dollars per month in costs either for their own webmaster or
to contract out the services needed.
If you as an entrepreneur seek out small businesses and offer to become
their webmaster for a total fee of $50 to $100 per month, or even more including
the hosting and maintenance of their website, you will find this price
range is acceptable by many small businesses.
If you offer a price that is too small, the business owner being wise in
the ways of profit and loss, will be skeptical as they know there must
be hidden costs knowing that you will not work for free.
If you offer a price that is too high, the business owner will feel you
are taking advantage of him/her, and being wise in keeping costs under
control will refuse to do business with you.
You will need to find a comfortable price range that assures you will
have enough profit for the time you invest into being a webmaster for
that business, and reasonable enough that the business owner will
consider it to be a fair deal.
We have found over the years at YOBISC, that a price range for $50 to
$100 per month for most small businesses usually fits that price
range assuming you explain to the business owner that you are going
to design and setup a website for them, host it, maintain it, and
give them a cell phone or pager number where they can contact you
in case of emergencies or questions.
You will find that once you have your clients "trained" you will get
very few calls from them and after a period of time you will need
to initiate a call to them at least monthly to assure they are happy
with the service level.
If you are not technically savvy enough to be a webmaster, you can find
companies such as ours at YOBISC that will provide you with easy
software that allows you to show your client 60 designs, and then
simply type the information they want on their website into the
design.
Most good companies will provide training for you to use their
software such as we do at YOBISC in our ISP university, at ISPuniversity.com
YOBISC software is very simple to use and if you understand enough
to send email and browse the internet you can easily use our
software and become a webmaster overnight.
Your costs for hosting each client at YOBISC is only a few dollars
per month, which you pay as a wholesale cost to us. Your clients
pay you directly, and will not know who YOBISC is. Everything
is branded with your business name, you can even use your own
name servers. This is a business you have 100% control over, and
100% branding.
Because of the additional services YOBISC allows you to give your
clients which include, advanced simple to use control panels,
dozens of popular software programs you install with the touch of a button,
and much more, your client's will feel that the fee you charge them
of $50 to $100 per month or even more is quite fair.

misconception #12: There is no way to keep your income if the business
opportunity goes out of business.
Answer: Unfortunately this is true with most business opportunities. If the company you
are working with goes out of business, normally you lose your customer base
and your income.
However, there are ways to control your destiny in such an event if you choose
the appropriate business opportunities to work with in the beginning.
Here are the things to look for in seeking an opportunity:
1. Make sure that you can find another supplier of the products or
services you are providing your clients in the event the business
opportunity goes bankrupt or closes their doors.
2. Make sure you have the full contact information for your clients
as well as the full rights to them. In the event you need to switch
to a new provider, you should be able to continue to provide the
service product without an interruption in services.
There are some exceptions to this, as the service may not be switchable
or the products may be proprietary. If this is the case you should
really consider if you want to invest your life into building a business
that is totally at the mercy of another business, your providers.
At YOBISC you can provide web hosting with no experience and little
investment and retain control over your company. Your clients deal
only with you, and if you use the free nameserver service provided by
US you can easily move all your clients to another server with another
hosting company in the event that YOBISC would go out of business.
You may consider that YOBISC is owned and operated by P.E.E.L. Inc.
which is in it's 13th year of business and was one of the pioneers of
business on the internet starting in 1995. With 9 years of experience
navigating the internet, you should have a long existing provider with
YOBISC, but you have the ability to move your clients if the events
require you to do so.

misconception #13: You need to have a big advertising budget to be successful on
the internet.
Answer: It is a big misconception that you must have a lot of money for advertising
to be successful on the internet. Although there are companies that have
spent a lot of money for advertising to build their internet businesses, the
largest businesses on the internet today spent hardly a dime.
For example, Amazon.com built their business solely on word of mouth, allowing
people to put links on their websites and paying them a small portion of revenue
from any traffic referred to them.
Even today, Google.com with a value of over 30 billion dollars releases new services
by simply letting word of mouth get around or letting people find new links
on the google.com website to the new services, such as the recent release of
their news service.
With the internet word of mouth is the best advertising you can get, and it
can spread quickly. This does not mean, however, that you can simply put
up a website and people will flock to it.
Probably the best thing a small entrepreneur can do is to put up a website
that will be of benefit to local small businesses and then visit each
business in person and ask them to visit their website at their leisure,
leaving the website address or URL and keeping notes to follow up at a
later time.
As an example, if you provide web hosting to small businesses using
YOBISC, you will get a very professional website that gives the
appearance that you spent thousands of dollars setting up your business,
yet your cost is under $40. By visiting the local businesses in person
and making appointments to see the owners, you can start to build up
a base of clients by simply showing them your website and explaining
the benefits they receive by letting you become their webmaster.
If you go over and above what is expected in service and attitude, you
can be sure your business friends will recommend you to their other
business friends, often times without even asking them to do so.
By keeping notes on everyone you visit, following up, keeping a friendly
and low key approach, you will eventually have more clients than
you every dreamed possible who are willing to pay a premium price for
you if you are perceived to be the best web host provider locally.
Your cost to develop a business such as this is nominal, requiring mostly
an investment of your time only.

misconception #14: Starting your own web hosting business opportunity is expensive
and no one will train you to do it.
Answer: It is true that web hosting is a very competitive business and those
that really understand the business are not willing to share their
secrets to help you become their competitor, making the availability
of training hard to find.
Starting your very own web hosting business can be very expensive. To
get at least a t-1 costs hundreds to thousands of dollars per month,
to install back up power, redundant off site back up of the hard drives,
purchasing servers, firewalls, and maintenance by a programmer for
the servers are all very expensive propositions.
However, there are better and less expensive ways to start your own
web hosting internet business. You can look for companies that
are in the business of reselling their services. These companies
have already invested large sums of money into their offices,
equipment, connections to the internet, and training their personnel
and are in the business of selling small "chunks" of their networks
to small entrepreneurs just starting their web hosting business.
Since these companies have a vested interest in your success they
many times will have training available at a nominal cost or even
sometimes for free.
At YOBISC you can get access to a server to install your web
hosting clients, value added services to offer your clients,
software to help you service your client, and training in our
forum and at our ISP university with a total start up cost of
under $40 for your first month's service.
You can continue to operate your first business and get your
first 9 clients at a total cost to you of $39.97 per month.
If the business does not work out for you, you can simply cancel
this service and walk away without any commitments.
YOBISC servers are hosted on an internet hub with an OC192
connection, the fastest available on the internet and serviced
24 hours a day 7 days a week by a team of professionals. It would
cost you $100,000 per month or more to maintain a system like
this if you were not buying a small "chunk" of it to use for
yourself.

misconception #15: All back end providers for web hosting business opportunities
are the same.
Answer: There is a big range of quality and service among back end providers for
web hosting businesses. These are the companies behind the scene that
This is part 3 for "17 common misconceptions of internet business opportunities."
This is part 3 for "17 common misconceptions of internet business opportunities."
provide the wholesale servers, internet connections, bandwidth, software
and other services required by entrepreneurs providing retail web hosting.
Here is where you really need to do some homework. There are yet today
providers of web hosting services with servers in their living room
or small office that is connected to the internet on a feed that is
not much larger than a home connection.
You have to know who is watching those servers if they are corrupted,
hacked, or the power goes out. Who is watching them when the owner
is out on the town or going to a movie?
You really need to make sure you have a professional company that is
maintaining your servers and backing them up for you. You also want
to make sure the provider has a large enough connection to not
have traffic from the servers "bottleneck" which means too much
bandwidth or visits from internet surfers trying to get to the
servers at the same time.
Here is an explanation of bandwidth. Bandwidth is the electricity
created by people surfing the internet going over the wires from the internet
to the server. Once the
traffic gets to the company with the servers that host your websites,
it is down to a single "pipe".
Let's imagine that bandwidth is water going thru a pipe and that you have
a fairly fast 56K connection from your house to the internet. Let's imagine
that the 56K connection from your home computer is a water pipe 1/4" thick.
Now, some providers actually use a connection similar to a cable or dsl connection
that about 30% of users have in their home. Cable or DSL is about
256K so that would be a water pipe about 1 inch thick.
There are many many ISPs that brag they have T-1's installed in their offices
to serve your websites on. A T-1 would be a water pipe about 7 inches thick.
Then there are ISPs that spend upwards of $10,000 to $50,000 per month to
have an OC3 connection for their web hosting clients. The OC3 would be
a water pipe about 58 feet thick. This is indeed a gigantic difference
from ISPs that brag about T-1s. A water pipe laying on the ground 58 feet
thick would be as high as a 6 story building.
But even so with the millions of people visiting websites on the internet
today, even an OC3 can get bogged down if they have too many clients and
start to "bottleneck"
Then again there are ISPs with connections of OC12, OC48, and even
OC192.
An OC192 water pipe would be 3741 feet thick! If you were to see a
water pipe stretching across the land 3741 feet thick, it would be
so high that there would have to be lights on it for aircraft to
avoid it.
You could take the Empire State Building, stack it on top of the
Chicago Sears Tower, stack the Chrysler Building in New York on
top of that, then crawl to the very top of the heap and be
within 5 feet of the top of the OC192 water pipe laying on the ground
Yes, there is a GIGANTIC difference between ISP backend providers.
As far as technical support, many ISPs do not even have around
the clock live people watching their network. When they close
down the office at 5 PM, no one is left in the office.
Servers theoretically should run fine without someone watching
them, but the fact is they do go down occasionally, and the
more servers a company has the more chances there are of
problems.
After all, servers have hard drives, ram, and are connected to the
internet and at risk from viruses and hackers and surges in
website traffic.
You should make sure the company providing your servers for web hosting
have 24 hours 7 day per week live technicians monitoring the server
network.
Next you need to find out how far away from the backbone your backend
provider is. The backbone is one of the main lines on the internet.
Imagine that the internet is a tree. The trunk of the tree would be
gigantic providers of telephone lines such as sprint, MCI, AT&T, UUnet,
and others.
These companies sell branches off to large ISP resellers who in turn
sell of small branches to smaller ISP resellers and so on until the
very small ends of the branches reaches your home.
If your back end provider is a very small branch, they are a long
distance from the trunk. This means your traffic for your email and
website server must first find its way back up the small branches
to the main tree trunk and then again back down the branches to
the person you are trying to reach.
If you were directly connected to the tree trunk your email and
website traffic would have much less distance to travel. This distance
is measured in POPs. Each time a branch breaks down to a smaller branch
that is called one POP. Many ISPs brag that they are only 2 or 3 pops from
the backbone, but you should try to find a backend provider that is
connected directly to the backbone.
At YOBISC you can purchase wholesale web hosting services that
are on an OC192 connection, with 24 hour 7 day per week on site live
humans watching the network, and directly on an internet hub, or
directly connected to the backbone in Columbus, Ohio.

misconception #16: You must be a programmer to provide webmaster services
for clients in your own web hosting business.
There are services available now from YOBISC that allow you to easily
build and maintain simple websites for small businesses with no knowledge
of HTML programming.
When you get your YOBISC web hosting account, you are provided templates called
EasySites that come with 60 different designs for you client to choose from.
These designs are loaded onto your personal customized website with your
company name. You show your client your website, let them browse thru the
design examples and select one.
You then go back to your home or office and with a few easy steps you have
installed your client's domain on your server, and then installed the
design of their choice.
You then type the information your client wants to have on their website.
Our EasySite! also lets you help your client optimize their website for
Search Engine traffic, and you can even provide a free service that links
their website to a website that is spidered by Google and Yahoo on a daily
basis. This assures that Google and Yahoo will spider your client's
website also.
You can add payment acceptance forms on your client's website, you can
add links, and you are protected from theft if your client decides to
take their website to another web host, just turn off their license
and the files they download via ftp will not work, no matter where
on the internet they are hosted.

misconception #17: You need to be a Linux or Windows expert to manager
your own servers for your own web hosting business.
Answer: This is no longer true thanks to YOBISC. When you set up an account
with us to provide web hosting for your clients you are given a very simple
control panel that lets you control your server. Its as easy as going
to a website we give you and with the click of a mouse you can add
hosting accounts, add email addresses, ftp accounts, mysql, postgresql,
and so much more.
There are even dozens of very popular programs your customers may like
to have, and you can easily install these for your clients with just a
click of a button.
Your client will never know you are NOT a Linux expert.
This consumer warning was written by:
Timothy L. Drobnick sr.
136 N Hamilton Road
Gahanna, Ohio 43230
1(614)939-9524
Visit with Tim here:
http://internet-marketing-forum.com
Internet business opportunities owned by Tim:
YOBISC Start your own web hosting company.
BYOAOL Start your own internet connection dialup company.
Internet business opportunities promoted by Tim:
Free Store Club
Copyrighted 2005 Timothy L. Drobnick Sr. All rights reserved. No one has permission
to copy this article without express written permission of Timothy L. Drobnick Sr.
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