Adding Video to your WordPress Website

Adding video from YouTube, Vimeo and other media sites to your WordPress website enhances the overall aesthetics and feel of your posts and pages.  Understanding how to manipulate the embedded code further changes the dynamics and can increase user interaction and length of time on your website.

Let’s get started…

1.  You want to make sure that you have the “HTML” tab open before inserting the embedded code.

2.  Go to YouTube and find the video that you want to include in your post and website.  Once you have the selected video you will see an <Embed> button below the player.  Click on this button.

3.  The <Embed> button will open up below the video and will show adjustments that can be made to the videos size, quality and color.  Once you have made the necessary changes you want to copy the code that is highlighted in yellow.

4.  Go back to your website and paste the code in the HTML tab and click Publish.

The code will look like this:

<object width=”1280″ height=”745″><param name=”movie” value=”http://www.youtube.com/v/Aj-MpP5n3uE?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0″></param><param name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true”></param><param name=”allowscriptaccess” value=”always”></param><embed src=”http://www.youtube.com/v/Aj-MpP5n3uE?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowscriptaccess=”always” allowfullscreen=”true” width=”1280″ height=”745″></embed></object>

5.  View your post and see if any necessary adjustments need to be made.  You can make them by adjusting the videos width and height.  You want to make sure that you adjust both areas in the embedded code for width and height.

<object width=”1280” height=”745“><param name=”movie” value=”http://www.youtube.com/v/Aj-MpP5n3uE?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0″></param><param name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true”></param><param name=”allowscriptaccess” value=”always”></param><embed src=”http://www.youtube.com/v/Aj-MpP5n3uE?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowscriptaccess=”always” allowfullscreen=”true” width=”1280” height=”745“></embed></object>

6. If you would like your video to auto play on load simply insert the code &autoplay=1 at the end of the video ID within the embedded code as shown below.

<object width=”1280″ height=”745″><param name=”movie” value=”http://www.youtube.com/v/Aj-MpP5n3uE&autoplay=1?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0″></param><param name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true”></param><param name=”allowscriptaccess” value=”always”></param><embed src=”http://www.youtube.com/v/Aj-MpP5n3uE&autoplay=1?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US&amp;rel=0″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowscriptaccess=”always” allowfullscreen=”true” width=”1280″ height=”745″></embed></object>

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2 Steps to Recovering that Closed Tab in Google Chrome

At first I had a hard time gravitating to Google Chrome from other web browsers such as Firefox and Internet Explorer but once I became familiar with the overall structure I’m glad that I made the change.

With all the advantages that Chrome offers such as page load time, bookmark hierarchy, and most visited sites in an easy to navigate thumbnail layout it does have one disadvantage and that is accidentally closing a tab when you have multiple tabs open.

If you are like me you most likely will have several websites open at the same time.  As you are moving through and navigating these sites it is easy to accidentally shut one of them down by hitting that dreaded x.

Here I will show you two quick steps to getting that site back in your browser.

1.  Click on the plus symbol at the top of your Chrome browser to open a new window.

2.  In the new Google Chrome browser navigate to the “Recently closed” and then click on the tab.

Click on Image for Picture Tutorial

It is that simple!

Thank you  for sharing your comments below…

5 Easy Steps to Adding Google Analytics to Your Facebook Fan Page

You already have Google Analytics installed on your website and blog; now it’s time to get it installed in your Facebook Fan Page.  This post will show you how to install the Google Analytics code into your Fan Page so that you can start tracking user footprints.

1.  Go to http://www.google.com/analytics and login to your analytics account.  If you haven’t already set one up, it only take a few minutes.

2. Once you have logged into your Google Analytics account your want to click on the “Add New Profile” button.

3.  Go back to your Facebook Fanpage  and copy the URL.  Go back to your Google Analytics page and select “Add a Profile for a new domain” and then paste the URL in the area that says “Please prvide the URL of the site that you like to track“.  Make sure to remove any excess http:// and then click continue.

4. Google Analytics will then take you to another page and provide you with a “Web Property ID”.  You will need to copy this ID to insert into your Facebook Fanpage FBML page.



5.  Take your Web Property ID “UA-99999999-9″ and paste it into the Facebook Analytics tracking HTML code and paste it in the bottom of your FBML editing box.  It is that simple!

<fb:google-analytics uacct=”UA-9999999-99″ />

Comment below on how it went adding Google Analytics to your Facebook Fan Page…and don’t forget to share this post!

Utah – the Mecca of Entrepreneurs

A corporate-relocation expert has ranked Utah as one of the top pro-business states for the second year in a row.  Utah Governor Gary Herbert joined Varney & Co. this morning to tell us why big names in tech like Twitter, e-Bay, Electronic Arts, and Adobe are leaving California and setting up shop in his state.

“We have a great labor force here,” said Gov. Herbert. “Our median age in Utah is only 28.8 years of age so we’re young, energetic, high tech-savvy, and bilingual.”

In addition to a younger population, the California-based companies look to Utah for its lower business and living costs. “There’s a lot we have to offer in the labor force and we have lower taxes,” said Gov. Herbert. “We’ve reduced our income tax rate from seven to five so there’s some incentive for people to relocate, or at least to expand their business operations in a place like Utah.”

San Jose-based Adobe Systems Inc. is the latest to announce its expansion to Utah. The software company plans to build a $100 million campus and add 1,000 jobs. “We’re trying to make sure Utah is a fertile field for business, and whether we’re stealing them from California or from any other place in the West or across the country, we’re just trying to make sure there’s a business friendly environment here in Utah that improves your bottom line,” said Gov. Herbert.

Utah isn’t only focusing on California-based companies. Gov. Herbert hopes to attract businesses from around the country. “It’s not just California,” said Gov. Herbert. “We first are trying to grow from within. We have a lot of new entrepreneurial spirit here in Utah.”

Source: FOX BUSINESS

Overcoming Obstacles – The Story of Erik Weihenmayer

“When someone describes a beautiful scene to me I can translate that into a sense of beauty. What I like is that somebody took the time to describe what’s moved them, and I feel a great connection to that person then…Just because you lose your sight, doesn’t mean you lose your vision” – Blind climber Erik Weihenmayer

On May 25, 2001, Erik Weihenmayer became the first blind man in history to reach the summit of Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak. And on September 5, 2002, when he stood on top of Mt. Kosciusko in Australia, Weihenmayer completed his 7-year quest to climb the Seven Summits – the highest mountains on each of the seven continents, joining only 150 mountaineers ever to do so, all of them sighted.
Shortly after losing his sight at the age of twelve, Erik lost his mother in a tragic car accident. In an effort to strengthen the family during this difficult time, Erik’s father, an ex-Marine, took his three teenage sons on climbing trips to the far reaches of the globe including South America, India and Nepal. While awkward at first, Erik persevered and has emerged today as one of the most exciting and respected athletes in the world. In addition to climbing, Erik is also an acrobatic skydiver, long distance cyclist, snow skier, para-glider and marathon runner

Erik’s extraordinary accomplishments have gained him abundant press coverage including repeated visits to NBC’s Today Show and Nightly News, Oprah, Good Morning America, and the Tonight Show. He has also been featured on the cover of Time magazine and in Sports Illustrated, People, and Men’s Journal.

Erik has won a wide variety of prestigious awards and has been responsible for raising millions of dollars for blind organizations and other worthy causes in the United States and around the world. In a recent poll, Erik was named as one of the 20 most inspirational people in America.

Frustrated or Fueled – 3 Tips to Keep the Fire Burning

Click here to discover how 2 guys figured out how to market any business on the Internet while also putting 15K into their pockets in 90 Days!

Josh James

Recently I was reading an article on Josh James, to a colleague, in the March 2010 issue of Inc. magazine.  For those who may have been living under a rock for the past year, and don’t know who Josh James is, he started a web analytic and online marketing company in Orem Utah called Omniture.

On his 33rd birthday he took the company public and in October 2009 sold it to Adobe for $1.6 billion with a ‘B’.

After reading the article, to my colleague, I was a little shocked by her response.  She basically said, “That kind of stuff just frustrates me”.

Here is what I read in Josh’s own words:

“On the first day of info systems class, this kid corrected the teacher three times.  I said, I have to get to know that kid.  His name was John Pestana, and we became friends.  One day, he said, ‘Why don’t you make webpages with me?’ I said, ‘Okay; sounds fun. Sure.’  We ended up charging $125 per hour.

About a year later, I remember sitting in Advance Finance, and the professor was saying, ‘This is the difference between an LLC and a C corporation.’  I’m like, ‘That class just cost me $125.  I’m out.’  That’s when I quit school.”

To my friends credit she has had some financial downturns…but who hasn’t had to pull back the belt a little in today’s economy?  In my eyes that story fuels me while others it may frustrate.  Why is that?

I know that Josh James is an anomaly; just like Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook or  Larry Page and Sergey Brin of Google; but needless to say, they accomplished something that should inspire everyone.  In Mike Michalowicz book, The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur, he refers to these moguls as “Media Darlings”.

Ironically, we don’t hear about the obstacles that everyone of them had to go over, around or under as their ideas and vision went from a napkin in a coffee shop through the four phases of a business cycle.

How does all this relate to you, your idea and your burning desire for an entrepreneurial adventure?  When you are in the middle of complete despair and failure seems to be the only option, what can you do to pull through?  As Mike Michalowicz poetically put it:

“Have you ever been doing your business with your pants hugging your ankles and, when you are ready to wrap things up, notice that you are extremely low on toilet paper?  Don’t deny it!  You know exactly what I am talking about.  Three tattered sheets of TP hang off the edge of the cardboard roll, mocking you.”

Here are three simple truths that can take any entrepreneur from staring hopelessly at three mocking sheets of paper to a full blown, double papered embroidered roll.

 

Follow Your Passion

Far too many listen to their heads and not to their hearts.  They begin to view things logically and completely neglect their inner voice.  “People whose whole objective is making money, usually don’t,” says Jerry White, professor of entrepreneurial studies at the University of Toronto, Canada.  Jerry White should know.  He has made it his business to study successful entrepreneurs and then to share his findings.  Throughout his research one message has come through: Find a product or service that you believe in and are passionate about.  Without passion you will surely fail.  “In your haste to make a living don’t forget to make a life.”  “Your whole physical being knows that this”, Joseph Campbell said of passion, “is the way to be alive in this world and the way to give to the world the very best that you have to offer. There is a track just waiting there for each of us, and once on it, doors will open that were not open before and would not open for anyone else.”

Keep Your Eye on the Goal

It’s important to set weekly, monthly, quarterly and annual goals.  They need to cause you to stretch but at the same time be attainable.  When a goal is not achieved analyze why and what you could have done better.  Then get to work doing.   “Hang on the walls of your mind the memory of your successes. Take counsel of your strength, not your weakness.” Said Sterling W. Sill “Think of the good jobs you have done. Think of the times when you rose above your average level of performance and carried out an idea or a dream or a desire for which you had deeply longed. Hang these pictures on the walls of your mind and look at them as you travel the roadway of life.”

Work, Work, Work

I love the quote by Gordon B Hinckley when he said, “…work, work, work is the key to getting things done, the key to success in life. There is no substitute for work, for getting up in the morning and getting at it and staying with it to get the job done. I don’t know of a greater asset for whatever lies ahead in life than the capacity to discipline oneself to work.”  If you are not thriving you are dying.  Nothing will extinguish a flame and kill a business faster then doing nothing.

That basically sums it up.  Nothing that was ever great, worthwhile or momentous was ever accomplished without passion, vision and sweat from the brow.

I would love to hear your thoughts and exactly what has gotten you through the refiners finer…and thanks in advance for sharing.

Crossing the Rubicon

Pompey the Great was ruler of the Roman Empire.  His most important field general was Julius Caesar. Caesar had some differences with Pompey, and was considering marching on the capital to take matters into his own hands. In 49 B.C. Caesar came to the Rubicon, a small river in Northern Italy that served as his territorial boundary line. It was the line across which no general was ever allowed to pass without special permission from the Senate. If Caesar crossed the Rubicon it would be with the idea of making the entire Roman Empire subject to his will.

That was a momentous decision. It would immediately precipitate a civil war and divide the world between Pompey and Caesar. Caesar knew what the consequences would be if he tried and failed. He knew that many lives would be lost, in any event. Surely he must have hesitated before arriving at so great a decision, for he knew there could be no hesitation after the decision was made. Caesar carefully considered every angle. He explored every possible option. He reflected on every possible alternative. Then he made up his mind. He would march on Rome.

One part of Caesars power came from his ability to analyze a situation; another part came because of his habit to always finish what he started. Caesar said, “The die is cast.” That expression marked the point where deliberation ended and action began. There would be no turning back. Then Caesar threw himself into the waters of the Rubicon at the head of his legion and the whole history of the world was changed.

Lesson Learned…

Once we make a solid decision every contrary thought should be banished. No energy should then be wasted in doubts, fears, or reconsideration’s, and nothing should then be left undone which would otherwise help to bring about the projected accomplishment. Far too many of us are guilty and affiliated with the trait of making partial decisions; doing things “half ass”.  Until a firm resolve has been reached very little progress is made.  As David Glasgow Farragut (July 5, 1801 – August 14, 1870) is so well remembered for saying “Damn the torpedoes; full steam ahead“.

The Power of Responsibility

What we are today is a direct result of the extent to which we accept responsibility.

“It’s been said that the line between childhood and adulthood is crossed when we move from saying “It got lost” to “I lost it.” Indeed, being accountable – and understanding and accepting the role our choices play in the things that happen – are crucial signs of emotional and moral maturity. That’s why responsibility is one of the main pillars of good character.

Many people have been seduced by the Peter Pan philosophy of refusing to grow up and avoiding the burdens implied in being accountable. Yes, responsibility sometimes requires us to do things that are unpleasant or even frightening. It asks us to carry our own weight, prepare and set goals, and exercise the discipline to reach our aspirations.

But the benefits of accepting responsibility far outweigh the short-lived advantages of refusing to do so. No one makes his or her life better by avoiding responsibility. In fact, irresponsibility is a form of self-imposed servitude – to circumstances and to other people.

Responsibility is about our ability to respond to circumstances and to choose the attitudes, actions, and reactions that shape our lives. It is a concept of power that puts us in the driver’s seat. The grand panorama of the potential of our lives can only be appreciated when we begin to be accountable and self-reliant.

Responsible people not only depend on themselves, but show others that they can be depended on. This breeds trust, and trust is a key that opens many doors.

If you want more control over your life and the pleasures, prerogatives, and power of freedom and independence, all you have to do is be responsible.”

-Michael Josephson

Warren Buffett’s 7 Secrets for Living a Happy and Simple Life

Click here to discover how 2 guys figured out how to market any business on the Internet while also putting 15K into their pockets in 90 Days!

Secret #1: Happiness comes from within.
“In my adult business life I have never had to make a choice of trading between professional and personal. I tap-dance to work, and when I get there it’s tremendous fun.” — Warren Buffett
If you do what you love and love what you do, you’ll naturally be productive.

Secret #2: Find happiness in simple pleasures.
“I have simple pleasures. I play bridge online for 12 hours a week.” Warren Buffett
You can also learn to be happy with the simple pleasures of playing cards with friends, playing with your children or taking a walk in the wilderness.

Secret #3: Live a simple life.
“I just naturally want to do things that make sense. In my personal life too, I don’t care what other rich people are doing. I don’t want a 405 foot boat just because someone else has a 400 foot boat.”  Warren Buffett

Secret #4: Think Simply.
“I want to be able to explain my mistakes. This means I do only the things I completely understand.”  Warren Buffett

Secret #5: Invest Simply.
“The best way to own common stocks is through an index fund.” Warren Buffett

Secret #6: Have a mentor in life.
“I was lucky to have the right heroes. Tell me who your heroes are and I’ll tell you how you’ll turn out to be. The qualities of the one you admire are the traits that you, with a little practice, can make your own, and that, if practiced, will become habit-forming.”  Warren Buffett
Having a mentor is as important as having a purpose in your life, but having a wrong mentor is as devastating as having a wrong purpose in your life. The mentor has to be someone you can trust. You’ll find that person in your inner circle if you think hard enough.

Secret #7: Making money isn’t the backbone of your guiding purpose; making money is the by-product of your guiding purpose.
“If you’re doing something you love, you’re more likely to put your all into it, and that generally equates to making money.”  Warren Buffett
Money should never become the object and end all of your motivation.

What are some beliefs or traditions you live by that promote happiness.  Please comment and share.

If You Get Bucked Off; Get Back On

Click here to discover how 2 guys figured out how to market any business on the Internet while also putting 15K into their pockets in 90 Days!

Growing up on a small farm had a lot of advantages.  Living with my grandparents through my high-school years, in Snowflake, AZ, also had its privileges.  In addition to learning the fastest way to clean stalls filled with horse manure (my grandpa always told me that you can learn a lot from the end of a shovel) and how to mend a broken fence I was privileged to learn from a generation removed and learn, to some degree, how things were done in the “old days”.

My grandpa, Glen Stratton, had a way of teaching things using analogies and with sayings of his that we frequently called “Glenisms”.  One of his most popular sayings was, “I wouldn’t throw stones at your outhouse like that”.  I’ll let you figure out that one.  I’m not sure if he purposely meant for his instructions in one area of life to be applied to several areas of life, but they did leave lasting impressions.

My grandpa taught me to have a love of horses and also taught me how to team rope.  In learning how to ride horses and to rope there was always a guarantee that at some point you were going to be bucked off.  With that guarantee there was also a guarantee that no matter how small you were or how big the horse was you ALWAYS got back on.  This was not negotiable.  In fact, if you didn’t get back on it taught the horse a bad lesson; that it could buck someone off and be okay with it.  Try being the next rider on the horse after it’s formed this bad habit.

Isn’t this the same with life?  At some point we are guaranteed to be bucked off and if we don’t get back on what have we taught ourselves or learned from the lesson?  In fact isn’t getting back on an empowering action that strengthens us while if we were to stay off it would be a disempowering action that would weaken us.

There is a favorite poem that I have framed, hanging in my bedroom, entitled “Don’t Quit”.

Don’t Quit

When things go wrong as they sometimes will, when the road your trudging seam all uphill.

When the funds are low and the debts are high, and you want to smile but you have to sigh.

When care is pressing you down a bit, rest if you must but do not quit.

Life is queer with its twists and turns, every one of us sometimes learns.

And many a failure turns about, when you might have won had you stuck it out.

Don’t give up, though the pace seams slow; you may succeed with another blow.

Success is failure turned inside out; the silver tint of the clouds of doubt.

And you never can tell how close you are; it may be near when it seems so far.

So stick to the fight when your heart is hit; it’s when things seem worst that you must not quit.

I would like to hear about your greatest triumph and the feeling that came from conquering.

And as always, if you enjoyed it, please share it, digg it, stumble it and retweet it…