The Kid Casino


April 4, 2009

Short Format Video Commercials Can Be Very Beneficial when Marketing Your Company

Filed under: Living With Publishers, Video Center, World Of Marketing — admin @ 6:59 am

Nowadays, as lots of organisations and managers are looking towards web video sites as a marvellous place to post content to grab the notice of their potential customers, it’s vital to identify the main principles of utilising online video marketing channels.

Here are some crucial bits & pieces you ought to know prior to you starting to circulate professional videos on online video portals.

Constantly endeavour to use professional videos that give worthwhile content to your customers - Countless business people mistakenly believe you can simply place any variety of advertisement on a video site, but nothing could be any closer from the truth. Each and every video ought to give some value added info to the target market, if not then at least topic of discussion.

Undertake some brand of market research on the video channels previous to you adding your very 1st video - it is a brilliant suggestion to provide some considerable time putting your market’s main keywords into the search engine on the site, in an effort to find out what other corporate videos are currently there. Then jot down the profile names of the most key businesses in your sector. Possibly afterwards you can make a joint venture or have some type of partnership with these users.

Keep in mind that each & every video website has a society built into it - You are recommended to value the other members & it’s suggested that you post positive annotations to your rivals’ videos. Essentially you must be a member of the society, offering comment, ideas etc. And only then must you think of being a marketer and start to distribute your own videos & products.

Commit yourself to developing numerous professional videos - You should have a clear strategy for producing & circulating quite a few promotional videos. If not, your company’s page on the video channels will appear blank if it simply has one solitary video to see. As a result, allocate extra time organising the manufacturing of a series of short videos, rather than only one very long video. If you are searching for a business that dedicates itself to corporate video production in London then Vidify is the company you need.

Internet video marketing is one of the most efficient and fastest ways of promoting your business today.

March 2, 2009

Video Commercials Can Be Beneficial to a Organisations Proceeds

Filed under: Living With Publishers, Video Center, World Of Marketing — admin @ 2:11 am

You probably know how significant uploading your businesses Internet video is. For a company’s marketing director, Internet video is a useful medium that can help to capture your potential audiences’ attention & considerably boost the overall amount of visits to your businesses site. Online video clips are exceedingly good in attaining the target consumers’ short attention. Furthermore, if codes are built-in & online video sharing is encouraged, short format promotional videos can be a fantastic way to get one-way incoming links and in so doing positively affect your web site’s rankings on Google.

If truth behold, professional videos have turned out to be a good medium for business or self promotion. The following are numerous tips to circulating your own Internet video clips.

Firstly, you can post your online videos on your own company website; however this would require you to find your own video hosting arrangements. Instead, ask your online hosting solutions company if video downloading or video streaming options are supported.

Video downloading is where your viewers are required to download your Web video to their hard disk. They need to save the online video to their own computers before they can play it using their personal computers video player or a downloadable video player device. There are lots of video downloading service providers that cost not much. There is also a progressive downloading mechanism where your viewers can play the Internet videos at the same time as downloading them. Vidify can work effectively to deliver white-label online video production and publishing solutions.

Video sharing streaming on the other hand entirely does away with the demand to download the Web video clips and lets instant playback so it offers the most worth to your web viewers. For sure, getting a video hosting supplier that supports video streaming can cost you a pretty penny.

And finally, the more fashionable way to distribute Internet videos is posting your sites to video distribution websites which have their own video hosting infrastructure. These sites cost you nothing to log on and will at times give you money upload video content. They also have a huge audience base and grasp; for example, YouTube obtains in the region of seventeen million Web visitors each & every month.

January 25, 2009

Expose Your Organisation’s Products and Services with Internet Videos

Filed under: Living With Publishers, Video Center, World Of Marketing — admin @ 3:30 am

Online videos are a fantastic tool to promote your organisation’s services. There is no doubt that there are lots of other kinds of marketing strategies available from content writing to blogging, from PR to RSS. Nevertheless, nothing says “cool, connection, and creativity” like a video commercial.

More and more firms of different sizes are creating professional videos about their products. They are not only adding them on their business websites, but they are adding them to their own blogs. To gain universal twenty four seven exposure, professional videos are being added to numerous video-sharing websites like YouTube and Google Videos. And why not ? it is very inexpensive, easy-to-do, & can have a significant impact, in a number of cases, on the traffic it drives to your companies website.

There are various other reasons why video commercials are a good way to market your firm.

Professional videos enjoy a wide distribution channel: Videos by their own nature are straightforward to “package” which makes them perfect to fit into a series of different distribution channels. You can add them on your businesses site or blog, you can put them onto your notebook and show them time after time at a business show event. You can post them to lots of Internet video-sharing social media sites. You can burn them onto CDs & give them away or sell them. You can even distribute them via email.

Commercial videos are a good way to communicate. As our knowledge of technology evolves, so do the ways in which individuals like to interact with others. Most individuals are visually oriented meaning that is how they best understand and cooperate with their world. This makes videos on the Web the ideal marketing strategy to speak with today’s customers.

These are just a handful of the many reasons why short format videos might be a terrific way to advertise your company’s products & services. Learn more about this area to see how you could make use of your precious time, funds, and energy to communicate with your target market in a ground-breaking and attractive way. Vidify is one of the best video production companies around that produce cost-effective short format online videos for local businesses.

June 8, 2008

Where Do Writers’ Ideas Come From?

Filed under: Living With Publishers — admin @ 10:19 pm

To those who are not writers, artists, or composers the creative
process seems an elusive mystical gift bestowed upon a fortunate
few who are held in awe by the general population. When asked
“where do you get your ideas” or “how do you do it”, many cannot
answer the question because the creative process is often not
understood even by those who create. Writers sometimes remark
about “inspiration” which does nothing to explain the creative
process, but don’t be hard on them. When writers block hits it’s very
easy to imagine creativity to be a gift of inspiration — and who but an
inspired person will sit for hours, days, and months pounding the
keyboard into pulp, right?

One day in college I was walking with a friend after spending hours
trying to come up with a suitable idea for a writing assignment. She
asked me how I come up with my ideas. Astounded, I turned to her
and replied, “if I knew that, I’d be sitting at my typewriter instead of
walking around out here in the rain like a moron.” That was when it
struck me that I was approaching writing from the wrong angle. I was
already able to get my ideas down on paper in a semi-cohesive
manner. The problem was to get the ideas to put on paper at all.

That day I decided to turn my attention to learning everything I could
learn about the creative process. What I found was that creativity is
easily obtainable, works according to certain principles, and can be
called upon whenever the urge or need arises, and - here’s a bonus.
It gets easier with practice. If you write every day you probably
observe many of the steps I have outlined below without even
realizing it. If you have not used these methods, you are in for
pleasantly surprising experimentation.

The first step may seem silly but should be taken seriously. The first
thing you have to do is decide whether you are a writer or you are
not. Writing is a glamourous occupation and draws the attention of
many who are interested in that glamour but not in the actual work.
Writing is work. If you are suited for it, it’s entertaining work, but
work none the less. Just as there are people who are meant to be
doctors, lawyers, and accountants, there are people who are meant
to be writers. If it drives you crazy to filter through piles of literature
for facts and ideas, or to sit at a keyboard for hours at a time and
every day of your life, you are not a writer. If you are slammed into
inertia by rejection, you are not a writer. If your grammar skills are
lacking you may be a writer, but you need to learn the language you
intend to wield in your craft before you inflict poorly executed
manuscripts on the rest of the world. If you don’t love it enough to
spend quantities of time on it, find another field more suitable for you.

Now, if you’ve decided you are, in fact, a writer at heart, the second
step is to find out what kind of writer you naturally seem to be. Are
you journalistic? Are you a story teller? Are you good at persuasion,
advertisement writing? The easiest start for any writer is to develop
the area of writing that comes most naturally to you first, then branch
out from there. For years I have written letters for people with deep
feelings and no idea of how to express them. I write the most tear
jerking apology and love letters you’ve ever read. From there I
branched into life biographies for people who wanted to leave more
to their grandchildren than a bare branched, factual family tree. Then
I moved on to other areas from there. It is only recently that I have
moved into other realms and I am now enjoying writing styles that
previously would have been frustrating for me. I experience none of
the writer’s block that I experienced as a college student and that I
hear others complain so bitterly about. Developing your writing skills
in a way natural to you will aide your creative development, but is not
a guaranteed freedom from writer’s block or lack of subject ideas.

The rest of the steps are those taken to keep the ideas flowing freely
no matter what area of writing you have decided to devote your
attention to.

This is the last thing many of you are going to want to hear, but it is
much easier to deal with than it sounds. The number one cause of
writer’s block is poor physical condition. Dieters often waste money
for the “quick fix” instead of applying themselves to a healthy lifestyle.
These people wind up in an endless quest for the right pill, and an
endless struggle with weight, never finding success Sorry, there is
no effective quick fix for the writer, either. It was no accident that
Plato, the walking philosopher, developed his most profound ideas,
and did most of his teaching, on foot. The body must be operating
well and blood must be pumping oxygen and nutrients to the brain for
it to function well. The best way to avoid writer’s block is to eat
healthy foods and to live an active lifestyle. Take note, I did not say
get an exercise program. People quit programs. People put off
programs. Programs are a miserable form of work. You need to
adopt an active lifestyle. This doesn’t mean sit ups in the living
room.

My lifestyle includes walking my dog everyday and going rock
hunting as often as possible, so I am in the mountains, streams, and
canyons, walking, climbing, breathing fresh air. Besides clearing my
head and keeping my body in shape, this also gives my mind plenty
of time to wander and play. It burns out all the stress that cuts off the
free flow of ideas. Rarely, if ever, do I come home from a day of
hiking without new ideas that were not worked at, but came to me
naturally and on their own. So find your own nitch. Roller skate,
walk, run, bike, climb, dance. Do what ever comes most naturally
and is most fun for you. The more fun and interesting exercise is, the
easier it is to keep it in your lifestyle. The less it feels like work that
has to be done the better. If you’re skeptical, get up and take a mile
walk today, right now, then again each day for a couple of days. You
will be amazed at the difference in your thought processes just a few
days of exercise will make. You will soon find the exercise is
something you actually look forward to.

Now that you’ve put your mind in shape it’s time to train it to be
creative. Thinking and creating are simply a matter of focusing
energy. You have all heard spiritual leaders, healers, and the like
attesting to focusing energy. They can all describe how they do this.
Writers focus energy, too, but for some reason are speechless when
asked how they do this, even though you probably experience it
everyday. The key word is ritual. Ritual is well known throughout the
spiritual kingdom.

The practice of donning specific clothing, chanting specific phrases,
and using specific props and specific action sequences are all
recognizable forms of ritual. Those preforming the rituals know that
the ritual itself works no mystical wonders. The ritual is merely a
procedure that, step by step, prepares the mind to call upon and
focus it’s energy on spirituality and enlightenment.

Ritual also prepares the mind to focus on being creative. Of course,
not many of us will go through rituals resembling a spiritual gathering
when we prepare to write, but if you stop and think about what you do
before you write successfully, you will probably notice that you do, in
fact, preform specific procedures before you sit down at the
computer. My rituals are very specific. Before sitting down to write I
do an hour or so of housework (I find it difficult to concentrate with
clutter around me), then I do a few minutes of stretching, fix a pot of
coffee, put on a white collared shirt and jeans, then I sit down to
write. My mind knows when I preform these procedures that I am
getting ready to create. By the time I change my clothes and sit
down to write I am completely focused on the task at hand. My mind
has been cued and given time to finish what it’s doing and focus it’s
energy to creating writing for me.

Writing rituals are a personal matter and what works for one person
won’t have any effect on another. Perhaps you need to heat a
potpourri (aroma does trigger some people). Maybe you need a
certain beverage, or like particular clothing. Maybe you need to
organize your papers and desk in a certain fashion. Whatever you
notice a preference for doing while getting ready to write, you can
incorporate into a before writing ritual. The trick is to use whatever
works for you each time you intend to sit down to write. You will be
amazed at how well this works. Soon you will never be at a loss to
answer any question about how you do it.

Practice is the next key to creativity. If you are going to play piano,
you know it takes plenty of practice to do so fluently. Just so, if you
are going to write well and fluently, you need to practice every day,
without fail. Keeping a daily journal is a good way to keep in
practice. Daily entries not only keep your skills in practice, but also
provide you a sounding board from which you can pull ideas for
future articles and stories. I recommend keeping a journal even if
you’re job already entails daily writing. The journal will let you
explore subjects and alternative forms of writing that you are not
involved with on a daily basis.

So what happens if you have followed every step here and still
experience a bout of writer’s block? Learn to talk through it. Writing
is not an innate ability. Many societies have functioned quite nicely
with no written language. Verbal communication, however, is
instinctual and any time two humans are raised together they will
develop a means to communicate verbally. I could not have made a
living writing letters if everyone who had feelings they could express
to me verbally were also able to get those down into written form. So
talk it out. Listen to your conversations when you talk with others. A
normal conversation will jump from subject to subject via free
association, that is, one subject will bring attention to the next much
like a keyword in a computer will bring up lists of url’s of related
information. Somewhere in all those key subjects covered within
your conversations with others may lie your next writing topic, so
listen carefully.

Perhaps you are wanting to write something fictional about a topic
that you have discussed with someone. For instance, say you were
talking to a friend about a woman you saw on television who was
talking about how to keep your spouse faithful. You are wondering
how to turn it into a fictional piece. Start asking yourself questions
out loud (your answers will come quicker) about what you heard. Ask
yourself things such as, “what would happen if they found out this
woman’s husband, or she herself was having a affair” or “what if she
was asking women to write to her for information so she could send
information privately about a brainwashing technique”. The more
“what ifs” you can think of, the more subjects you have for your story.
After you find your subject, if you are a little stuck on which way to go
with it or where to start, do some more talking. Bring the subject up
purposely in conversation and see what others have to say. What do
they already know or think about it? What questions and opinions do
they have or wonder about? There is your starting point. You
already have an audience viewpoint. If one person is wondering
about something or holds a particular opinion, it’s a safe bet others
have the same questions or point of view.

Vocalizing also works well while you are actually writing and get
blocked about what to say or how to word something. Just start
talking out loud to yourself. Start with a line or two that you have just
written and start talking. Just pretend you are talking to another
person. Talk to your pet, they love the attention. Talk to your
computer, the walls. If sitting and talking isn’t helping, take a walk
and talk out loud to yourself as you walk. You will appear mad as a
hatter to anyone who sees you but your ideas will be flowing freely in
no time.

If you have tried everything and still have had no success at
retrieving an idea or two you can still do two more things to help the
situation out. The first is to do some more research on the topic. As
you go over material that is already available you can find areas that
could use more information or a different point of view. The more
you know about a subject, the easier it is to write about.

The second means is to just leave it all alone for a while. Once you
have chosen a topic to write about your mind will keep working on the
topic even after you quit paying attention to it. This can also
sometimes result in having an idea come to you at some
inconvenient time such as the middle of the night when you are
sleeping nice and comfy, but at least it will come to you. It’s no
wonder that creativity seems like it just descends upon us from the
heavens sometimes.

Now that you know how to trigger the free flow of ideas, creativity will
no longer seem like the allusive gift bestowed upon the few and
fortunate. Don’t let that bring you down, though. You are still in an
elite class, because, as mentioned before, writing just isn’t for
everyone. Besides, most other people will still regard creativity as a
gift to the few - and there’s no reason you have to tell them any
different!

©2005 Sally Taylor: Sal is an avid gem and treasure hunter, explorer, writer, and is the owner of http://www.rockhoundstation1.com

June 3, 2008

Submit Your Articles from the Editor’s Perspective

Filed under: Living With Publishers — admin @ 7:45 pm

Let’s say you’re the editor of a magazine called “Sex Under the Fir Trees” and you receive an unsolicited manuscript titled “How to Get Barnacles off Your Boat,” what are you going to do?

Whether you laugh, cry, or use industrial-strength profanity, the result’s the same for the writer: a form rejection slip.

The writing guidelines for most publications advise prospective contributors to read the publication first and learn about its style, focus, viewpoint, and previously covered topics before sending in an unsolicited article.

Many writers skip this step. It takes time. Copies of the publication cost money or require an online registration. It delays completion of the article the writer wants to write.

Haste makes waste.

If it looks like you don’t even know what kinds of articles a magazine (or Ezine) uses, then the editor is not only going to reject your work out of hand, but he’ll also wonder if you know what you’re talking about.

Generally speaking, most novice writers don’t sell many articles without demonstrating that they: (a) know the publication, (b) know the subject, and (c) are willing to pitch an article idea to the editor rather than sending it in blindly.

Knowing a Publication

Volumes can be written about this. What does a typical issue include? What have they already covered? Do they have theme issues each year that dictate what some or all of the articles are going to be about? Do they have an editorial calendar that maps out plans for the upcoming 6-12 months? Do they use long, serious articles or do they use light, how-to articles, or both? Do they use freelancers?

Knowing the Subject

Let’s suppose you’ve read every issue of Sex Under the Fir Trees and know their style, focus and requirements pretty well. You decide to submit an article called “Subalpine Firs and Grand Firs in Glacier National Park.”

Assuming that the editor doesn’t think this is too narrow (or too obscure) a focus for his magazine, he’s still going to ask: WHAT ARE YOUR QUALIFICATIONS FOR WRITING THIS ARTICLE?

Do you have a degree in forestry? Do you work for the National Park Service at Glacier as a ranger, forest management specialist or in a related field? Have you developed an expertise in the subject through years or research and personal experience?

If not, why should the editor publish your article? Why would the readers want to read it, much less trust it?
Whether you send an article in blind or whether you pitch the idea first, demonstrating your credentials is always priority number one.

Asking for an Assignment

Most editors depend on a trusted, dependable group of staff writers, guest experts, and often-used freelancers for most of their material. They don’t sit around waiting for somebody they’ve never heard of to send in exactly the thing they are looking for at the exact moment they need it.

If you are psychic or if you have planted a bug in the magazine’s office, you might know months in advance that the editor of Sex Under the Fir Trees wants to publish an article later this year about the identification of flat needle conifers.

If you’re not psychic, not adept at wiretapping, and have no credentials in the world of needles and cones, you’re either not going to know what the editor wants, or knowing it isn’t going to help you.

Once you know a publication that fits into your areas of expertise and experience, pitch your article idea to the editor rather than writing something up and sending it in.

First, when you pitch (propose) an article idea to an editor, s/he immediately sees that: (a) you’re approaching the magazine as a professional, (b) you aren’t wasting your valuable time researching and writing something the s/he may not use, (c) you’re asking the editor “what do YOU want in your magazine” rather than assuming s/he will like something randomly sent in.

Next, let’s say you’ve sent the editor a well-written cover letter that demonstrates why your proposed article is vital or interesting, how you will approach the topic, and why the magazine’s readers might use or enjoy such an article. And let’s say that you’ve included a writing sample and some great information about your expertise and experience, now what?

You want the editor to say, “yes, write the article.” But you also hope the editor will offer valuable guidance that helps ensure the article really will meet the magazine’s needs.

Perhaps you’ve proposed an article about pine needles AND pine cones: the editor might say, leave out the pine cones, we’re already working on that one. The editor also might suggest a slightly different focus or a longer article than you initially planned. Show your openness to the editor’s ideas in your cover letter.

The first time an editor says, “yes, send me your article,” s/he will probably stipulate that you are sending it in on speculation, that is, without a guarantee that it will be used. Once an article or two is published, the editor will see that you can deliver what s/he wants. Then, the next pitched article may result in a more formal assignment.

In time, the editor might start pitching ideas to you: “Bob, we need an article about the Douglas-fir. How would you like to send us about 2,000 words on the largest examples of this tree in Oregon and Washington?”

Now you’re where you want to be.

Malcolm R. Campbell, a former college journalism instructor and corporate communications director, is the author of the mountain adventure novel “The Sun Singer.” His writing tips are posted regularly on Writing, Montana & More.

May 3, 2008

6 Tips to a Healthy Memory

Filed under: Living With Publishers — admin @ 12:22 am

October 2005

There a number of basic things that you probably do each day to
help extend the life of the valuable tool called your memory.
The following are a few practical suggestions for you if you
have not already done them. These are techniques that have been
used successfully by the author.

In a nutshell they are: Eat well, build your future, reduce
stress, exercise, use food supplements or vitamins and do memory
recovery drills.

1. Eat Well - The USA Today reported on June 20, 2005 that fruit
and vegetable juices and clean gums can defend against disease.
Also getting regular exercise and even brushing you teeth could
offer protection against Alzheimer’s. Eat greens of all kinds
like spinach and broccoli daily along with high protein foods
like eggs, cheeses and peanut butter. Do not starve the body as
that starves the brain. Eat salads and proteins throughout the
day.

2. Build Your Future — Everyone needs to have plans for the
future whether you are in your teens or 105 years old. Building
and creating your future is what keeps you alive. It could be
something as simple as painting your bedroom over, going to see
your favorite baseball team play or creating a new twist to the
same dish you have been serving for years. It is the maintaining
of interest in life that keeps us alive.

3. REDUCE STRESS — Stress of any kind chews up the mental
energy you have. it is often compensated by alcohol, overeating,
extramarital affairs, gambling, drugs or just pure disinterest
in others in life. But the actual cause of stress needs to be
located and handled. There are many ways to spot this through
just having a conversation with a close friend or trying
Dianetic auditing that gets to the root of stress.

4. EXERCISE– Daily exercise of the cardiovascular type can
release valuable endorphins that feed the brain and rest the
nervous system. These natural hormones tend to purge the body
and augment circulation to the brain. As the body tightens up
walks, massages or biking can be very helpful. Swimming is a
premier exercise for the complete body without stress on the
joints

5. USE FOOD SUPPLEMENTS OR VITAMINS–There are numerous food
supplements and many vitamins that aid in the continuous blood
flow to the brain and the nervous system. Gingko biloba or ginko
improves the circulation to the brain,. This allows more oxygen
to reach the brain which helps in short and long term memory,
energy and concentration. Ginkgo biloba leaf extract is the most
widely sold plant medicine in Europe, where it is used to treat
the symptoms of early-stage Alzheimer’s disease and dementia . A
June 2002 Study by the Journal of the Medical Association
suggests that foods rich in Vitamin E may help protect some
people from Alzheimer’s Disease. To purchase high quality
vitamins like vitamin e or the extract gingko go to
www.pezze.usana.com and click on products and type in vitamin e
or gingko in the search box.

6. RECOVER YOUR MEMORY–Reading, working on crossword puzzles,
writing, doing jigsaw puzzles and playing any kind game or
learning something new will keep your mind sharp and recover
words and ideas from the past. For more on more intense recovery
follow the memory techniques in the book Self Analysis.

For more information visit www.healthymemory.net Thanks!

April 13, 2008

Oh It’s Amazing

Filed under: Living With Publishers — admin @ 10:22 pm

How Amazing You Are

Love is just there and I don’t really care
The way you express is extraordinary
Things would come along my way fixed
I just don’t see how amazing you are

I don’t look when you look at straight to my eyeball
Don’t even want to stare at you most of the times
Keep this as a secret that i really know
How amazing you are!

How amazing are the stars that bow on you
How amazing are the eyes that stares on your own beauty
How amazing you are whom I love
How amazing you are, how amazing you are.

About the Author: Writers Rocksz

Source: www.isnare.com

April 3, 2008

Rambling Thoughts on Trusting Our Readers

Filed under: Living With Publishers — admin @ 2:55 pm

I’ve been thinking lately of trust. All of us presumably join a
writer’s group such as http://www.Writing.Com/ to mingle with
other writers and share thoughts on our work. We want to read
and be read. We want to share our excitement when a piece is
picked up and published, no matter how small the publisher may
be. We want to be told when something isn’t working in our
latest piece and we want to trust our readers to tell us the
truth.

Do we trust our readers to tell us the truth as well as they
can? Do we trust them when they say, “Your work is good,” but
not when they say, “Your work needs work.” Or vice-versa.

I once gave a perfect rate and a ribbon to a piece I thought
deserved it. To my mind, it was very good, finished and I would
buy it. The author didn’t trust my opinion and so took away the
joy I felt. My ego was hurt, but I think I understand,
I’m trying to anyway. He didn’t respond so I have to guess. I
came up with two possible reasons.

1. He felt I was giving a fluff review. Maybe he has
received so many of these that he didn’t trust any reader who
told him he was a good writer.

2. He has received some very harsh comments with no
explanations or encouragement to sooth his self-esteem. And he
believes them.

Many writers, who are convinced their work stinks, choose to
trust only the negative comments. Some, who are convinced their
work is always perfect, choose to not trust a reader who says
otherwise.

A writer’s self-confidence partially depends on being able to
trust the readers of his group to tell him what they think -
truthfully, gently and with encouragement. But, to depend on or
blame readers for the state of our own confidence is placing an
impossible burden on them.

Find a writers group who you can trust to tell you the truth.
They should be able to do it constructively so it doesn’t hurt
too much. Search the web or better yet, come and look over
Http://www.Writing.Com It’s a community of writers who know how
it feels to be on the receiving end of the deadly red pen, and
they try very hard to soften the blows. They really do. You can
trust them to be honest and gentle.

Above all, enjoy your journey and have fun learning. Always
Write On!