| By Kevin Benedict | Article Rating: |
|
| November 19, 2009 01:45 AM EST | Reads: |
4,572 |
I read an article by an author on Ulitzer.com and was amazed at the professional image it provided him. I immediately researched Ulitzer to see if there was yet hope for me.
I am a technology blogger on the subject of mobile computing strategies. As I was doing research I came across the author Ian Thain, a fellow mobile computing blogger, who had a very professional website on Ulitzer (www.ulitzer.com).
Professional envy motivated me to investigate this thing called Ulitzer.
Ian's website looked like he had spent a great deal of time and money on it - all things I am short on.

I carefully studied Ian's website to see how it was set up. It looked like an expensive industry portal with colorful graphics, animation and industry news.
It had tabs that filtered articles, by most popular, by date, etc. I have blogged for over 5 years so I know those features are not easy to develop.
I opened my old blog site, and in the light of Ulitzer, it looked amateurish and pathetic. I went back to the Ulitizer website and read all about it.
The ability to be syndicated across multiple topic websites and to look professional was very appealing. The next day I registered and began utilizing Ulitzer.
Now I too look professional, at least online.
Published November 19, 2009 Reads 4,572
Copyright © 2009 Ulitzer, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
Related Stories
More Stories By Kevin Benedict
Kevin Benedict is an independent mobility consultant, Wireless Industry Analyst and Web 2.0 marketing expert. He has over 21 years of experience in the enterprise applications market with specialties in enterprise mobility and Web 2.0 marketing strateiges and SAP. He was the recent recipient of two 2009 Top Contributor Awards by SAP in the categories of Mobile Infrastructure and NetWeaver Platform.
- Scott Brown to Win Senate Race by a Landslide
- Six Enterprise Megatrends to Watch in 2010
- Cloud Expo New York, Prague, and San Francisco Sponsors
- How do I tweet? Let me count the ways...
- How Passionate and Excited Are You?
- Four Common Sense Social Media Tips for PR and Marketing Pros
- iPad New Media Topic Launched on Ulitzer
- Building a Social Site with Ruby and Rails
- Ten Tips for Promoting your Employer with Personal Social Media
- Survey Says: IT Budgets in 2010 To Be at 2005 Levels
- Wilson Kerr Launches "Location Based Services" Topic on Ulitzer
- iPhone Apps "New Media" Topic Launched on Ulitzer
- Cloud Computing Expo New York to Attract More Than 5,000 Delegates in New York City
- Scott Brown to Win Senate Race by a Landslide
- Six Enterprise Megatrends to Watch in 2010
- Cloud Expo New York, Prague, and San Francisco Sponsors
- Government Social Media & Cloud Computing
- Cloud Computing Was the Big News of 2009
- 2010 Annual Predictions Bonanza
- How do I tweet? Let me count the ways...
- How Passionate and Excited Are You?
- Four Common Sense Social Media Tips for PR and Marketing Pros
- Behind the Scenes, SANta Claus Global Cloud Story
- Six Reasons to Embrace Social Media Today
- Success, Arrogance, Rise and Fall
- Web 2.0 Is Hot in Japan...But Nobody Knows MySpace
- Kindle 2 vs Nook
- What is Web 3.0?
- Web 2.0 Needs a "Confusion Solution"
- The i-Technology Deal of 2006: The Google/YouTube Deal
- The Business Value of Web 2.0 for Enterprises
- Steve Maryka to Present at "iPhone Developer Summit"
- Social Computing Will Turn the Web World Upside Down
- "Web 2.0 Over and Out" - What Are You Smoking?
- Alfresco Gets Terribly, Terribly Social
- Ulitzer’s Amazing First 30 Days in Public Beta
































Ulitzer content is offered under Creative Commons "Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives" License.
For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work.
The best way to do this is with a link to this web page.
Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get written permission from Ulitzer, Inc., the copyright holder.
Nothing in this license impairs or restricts the author's moral rights.