Our skin, the largest organ in the body and its first line of defense against infection, can present a supreme paradox of conflicting issues. While the skin is often viewed as a barrier, it really acts more like a sponge, absorbing a multitude of common chemicals we're exposed to daily. We're talking here about inadvertent and undeliberate exposure.
Then we add the deliberate stuff. The average woman, in her lifetime, will ingest about four pounds of lipstick. We're not going to horrify you with the details of how it's made, and of what. No one really knows for certain how many chemicals affect us over time, or how they react in our bodies in combination with each other. There are some well known dangers and these chemicals are to be avoided.
Phthalates, for example, are a class of hormone disrupter that no woman of child bearing age should ingest. They're commonly found in artificial fragrances and they cause birth defects, sperm damage, and the feminization of baby boys. That's what is known about them at this time
The USFDA has a list of some 10,500 cosmetic and skin care ingredients in common use by the cosmetics industry. Almost 90% of these skincare products have never been evaluated for safety by the FDA; not by the Cosmetic Ingredient Review Board, or by any publicly accountable institution.
Well, of course manufacturers of cosmetics and skincare products are hardly interested in depleting their customer base by plying us with harmful and destructive skincare products. But complex chemicals in cosmetics, with potential unknown side effects, should really lead us to follow the Precautionary Principle; that is, if you won't eat it, don't put it on your skin!
The European Union is light years ahead of us on this one.They have banned the use of more than a thousand personal and skincare product ingredients for use in cosmetics and skincare products, and they aren't done yet. Anything they suspect may cause cancer, birth defects, reproductive ills, or other serious health issues gets red lined. By contrast, our own USFDA has banned only ten of these ingredients for skincare products.
Here in the U.S., the majority of skin care products are hurried to market in response to our unrelenting pursuit of perfection and demand for improvement on the products that have gone before and failed to deliver as promised. Hope springs eternal and most of us will pay any amount within reach for the blessing of flawless skin. And the cosmetics and skincare products manufacturers are eager to accommodate us. With promises.
Now consider this: Most of a cosmetic manufacture's costs are in the packaging of the product and in bringing it to market. Nearly always, the cost of the packaging exceeds the cost of the ingredients by far. Add to that the advertising expense and all ancillary marketing costs, and you can easily see that there is little money in the package for the cost of the ingredients. So they take shortcuts. Lots of them. And the consumer pays.
That seems to leave us with three choices. One: We can continue to hope for the best and keep on buying the stuff on the strength of a marketing firm's high powered presentation of the allegedly fabulous results obtainable with this brand new and improved elixer of beauty. Two: We can learn to make our own natural skin care products, emulating the high priced salons that do just that. Doing this can save us a bundle and it isn't all that difficult. And three: We can do our homework and dig out the one or two manufacturers of skincare products that actually do produce safe, naturally derived, and effective solutions to our skin problems; all at a realistic cost.
So what is it going to be? The answer to that seems to lie in how much time, money, or both, we're willing to invest.
Anyone interested can find a really good eBook on Natural Skincare Recipes by clicking here. Or if you're feeling flush, (no need to be TOO flush), you can find the world's premiere holistic supplement laboratory, with a direct link to their superb line of skincare products by clicking here.
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Thursday, April 28, 2011
Friday, April 1, 2011
The One Affiliate Marketing Program You Can't Afford to Ignore
Before you can attempt to redefine something, you must first be an expert in the subject. Commission Overload redefines affiliate marketing because Tim Atkinson is an expert in that field. Let us first look at what affiliate marketing was, what it is, and what it will be after Commission Overload gets introduced to the masses.
At it’s core, affiliate marketing is basically a person who has a product to sell using affiliates to generate leads. This has been going on forever, since the dawn of mankind. For instance, thousands of years ago there was this one in particular neanderthal who was the best spear maker in all the land, he had figured out how to make spears that wouldn’t constantly break when hunting, and they were sharper too! He was so busy creating his spears that he didn’t have time to go out and sell them, so he had other neanderthals do it for him. And for every sale that one of his workers made, the worker would get a percentage of the profits. The worker had to go out and talk to every person he saw to try and convince that person of the quality of the amazing spear. I call this caveman marketing. Caveman marketing is going person to person trying to sell something to receive a commission off of it. It started with the first cavemen and was the dominant form of selling up until the internet came along. Caveman marketing is not what commission overload is.
Once the internet came along, everything changed. All of a sudden, you could get information to the entire world with a few keystrokes and a click of the mouse. And when you’re able to reach millions and millions of people at once, obviously this is going to be where people start selling stuff. Thus dawned the age of Internet Marketing. No longer did people have to go door to door selling stuff, or spend countless millions on print ads to distribute to millions of people. Not only did the internet make things easier for the people trying to sell their products, it made it easier for people trying to buy products. With it now being so easy to buy, people started buying more and more. The internet is probably the single greatest thing to ever happen to commerce. Commission Overload is not solely internet marketing either.
So if Commission Overload isn’t just internet marketing, and isn’t just caveman marketing, what is it? It is the perfect hybrid of both. It teaches you how to take the best of both types of marketing, to achieve true commission overload. The key principles you learn teach you how to apply your online marketing to the offline crowd, and how to apply your offline marketing to the online crowd. It’s a two for one punch that perfectly blends the strengths of both into a super marketing method that will do nothing short of create you a ton of commission overload. Welcome to the new era of affiliate marketing. Get more info about it here.
At it’s core, affiliate marketing is basically a person who has a product to sell using affiliates to generate leads. This has been going on forever, since the dawn of mankind. For instance, thousands of years ago there was this one in particular neanderthal who was the best spear maker in all the land, he had figured out how to make spears that wouldn’t constantly break when hunting, and they were sharper too! He was so busy creating his spears that he didn’t have time to go out and sell them, so he had other neanderthals do it for him. And for every sale that one of his workers made, the worker would get a percentage of the profits. The worker had to go out and talk to every person he saw to try and convince that person of the quality of the amazing spear. I call this caveman marketing. Caveman marketing is going person to person trying to sell something to receive a commission off of it. It started with the first cavemen and was the dominant form of selling up until the internet came along. Caveman marketing is not what commission overload is.
Once the internet came along, everything changed. All of a sudden, you could get information to the entire world with a few keystrokes and a click of the mouse. And when you’re able to reach millions and millions of people at once, obviously this is going to be where people start selling stuff. Thus dawned the age of Internet Marketing. No longer did people have to go door to door selling stuff, or spend countless millions on print ads to distribute to millions of people. Not only did the internet make things easier for the people trying to sell their products, it made it easier for people trying to buy products. With it now being so easy to buy, people started buying more and more. The internet is probably the single greatest thing to ever happen to commerce. Commission Overload is not solely internet marketing either.
So if Commission Overload isn’t just internet marketing, and isn’t just caveman marketing, what is it? It is the perfect hybrid of both. It teaches you how to take the best of both types of marketing, to achieve true commission overload. The key principles you learn teach you how to apply your online marketing to the offline crowd, and how to apply your offline marketing to the online crowd. It’s a two for one punch that perfectly blends the strengths of both into a super marketing method that will do nothing short of create you a ton of commission overload. Welcome to the new era of affiliate marketing. Get more info about it here.
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