Step 12. Get Some Publicity

Let the world know you are here!

One very effective marketing technique that is often overlooked is the press release. If you want a publisher to give your press release even a second glance, it is going to have to be written correctly, be interesting, and extremely newsworthy. Before you even begin writing your press release you must begin to think about it from the publisher’s perspective. They are looking for news. They are not looking for your product or service - they are looking for interesting and relevant news items that are linked to current affairs and trends.

How to write the press release

The secret is to keep it short whilst providing just the right amount of information in getting your message across in the most effective and interesting way. Its very important that the press release is interesting enough to catch the attention of the reporter. After all, who want to read anything that is not interesting In the upper left hand corner of every press release, write the words “FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE” unless there is time sensitive material involved. The upper right hand corner of the press release should contain your contact information and should always contain your name and telephone number which must be a valid number that is not going to be left unanswered. If a reporter cannot contact you then the article is not going to get printed.

The headline

A major part of the press release will be the title which should grab the attention of the reader and entice to read on. If the headline is not interesting or is irrelevant to the rest of the article then it will not be used. The headline is extremely important and will be the main reason why the release is published so concentrate on an eye-catching phrase that will stop the reader in their tracks and will invoke curiosity to continue reading the article. If the headline is exciting and newsworthy, you will start getting calls. If it isn’t, then most publishers will never get past it

The body

The body contains three major sections:

Summary: This should be a continuation of the headline and should tell the entire story in one short paragraph. Let them know the who, what, when, where, and why so that they would understand the release without having to read any further.

Credentials: The credentials section will involve giving your credentials and/or showing a quote which enforces the power behind the story that you are giving out. In most successful press releases, this section is based on a quote about the story inside of quotation marks. Then, the name and the credentials of the person giving the quote are listed. Make sure that this quote is extremely professional and specific (just as if you were using a testimonial inside of a sales letter).

For example you could write in the third person and quote yourself. You could say: Colin Hartness - Director of Web-At-Work Ltd says ” The new control panel that was introduced will provide clients with Total Domain Control etc……”

Closing Statements: In the last section, you will want to close the sale. The closing statements will advise the reader how to obtain further information but will not try to make a direct sale. The statements will provide enough intrigue and create sufficient interest to provide a follow-up and then hopefully a sale. In other words, don’t tell them how much your product or service costs in this section. You just want to get them to call you or visit your website for more information.

Then, in the center of the page at the bottom of the press release, include the symbol “###” which means that this is the end.

If the press release has been written and created correctly then you are now ready to send your message to the media. TrafficZilla offer a range of media blasters within their members section, one of which is the press release blaster. Simply enter your press release in the box provided and choose the type of recipient that would be interested by category, and submit to a full of potential publishers. Use the Media Blaster to blast your press release to 1,935 Radio stations, over 1000 Cable & TV Stations, over 100 News Syndicates, over 3,000 Newspapers and over 1200 Magazines! If you don’t already have a press release written, you can use the templates provided.

To sign-up to TrafficZilla - Click Here

How Much Money Can You Make

Here are some examples of successful affiliate marketers… Remember, these are ordinary people, just like you and me.

Cashring is the affiliate program for the I Want U online dating service. Their top affiliate earns an astounding 5000 per month, each and every month, and JUST from that one program! I’ve also heard that the top iFriends affiliate earns over $80,000 per month. My guess is that figure is LOW by a long shot, as iFriends pays up to $70 per free signup to their program, which is an adult web chat service.

Matt Haller is a young man who signed up for my Net Profits Coach newsletter, bought Ken Evoy’s Site Build it! ecommerce package and then started an affiliate site promoting hip hop items. Six months after he started, he sent me an email thanking me for helping to change his life. Why? Because he was already earning 10 grand per month!

Deborah Casey is another student of mine, a 53 year old disabled lady living in Seattle. Within eight months of starting her affiliate business she was making 8 grand a month, and she’s now up to $15,000 per month!

Jim Cockrum is an affiliate of mine who sells my ebook, the Super Affiliate Handbook. One day, every time I checked stats for my book sales, I was floored by how many orders Jim was generating. In a little under 24 hours, he’d made $1000 just by sending out an endorsement to his mailing list.

Oh ya, and yours truly, Rosalind Gardner… THAT’s why I wrote the “The Super Affiliate Handbook: How I Made $436,797 Last Year Selling Other People’s Stuff Online”. I wanted EVERYONE who was interested in making money online to know what possibilities exist for people with no experience. Because, I had absolutely no business background, no selling experience and actually some disdain for sales people as a group, I’m proof positive that ANYONE can earn money as an affiliate.

Setting Up A Simple Web Server

You don’t need to set up a web server in order to automate the delivery of your information products. This section is for people who don’t want to pay a cent for hosting their downloadable information products and web sites. Hosting your own web pages gives you much more hard drive space and easier control of your HTML documents. This section will also go over typical issues when setting up a web server and a solution for each issue.

Internet Service Providers (ISP’s)

Here is a little information on most Internet Service Providers (ISP’s). If you’re on a basic ADSL or Cable package, then chances are you have some restrictions on your Internet account. Common limitations are certain port blockages, and IP address assignment process. First, let’s look at ports.

Ports

Ports are used for communication on the Internet. There are a lot of them, and knowing what they all do is not important for this document. What is important is that your ISP may be blocking you from accepting requests on port 80, which is the HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) port. HTTP allows you to surf the Internet. If you look at the address bar on your browser, you will always see “HTTP”. This means that you can access the Internet on an outgoing basis, but you can’t accept incoming HTTP connections. Why? Think of your ISP as doing you a favor. By blocking port 80, they are eliminating the chance of your computer from ACCEPTING viruses, spyware, and all sorts of other malicious activity. The problem is, this also blocks your ability of accepting other HTTP (port 80) requests, therefore preventing you from being a web server. To find out if your port 80 is blocked, you will either have to go to your ISP’s web site and find your license agreement, or call their technical support line and ask. Either way, this problem is easily solved in the next few pages. We will now move on to the next issue, IP Address Assignment.

IP Address Assignment

An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique identifier that gives your computer a “home” on the World Wide Web. Most basic Internet packages, including all dial-up connections, work on a dynamic IP address assignment process. The problem this causes is that if your IP address is always changing, how is anyone supposed to find your “home”? It would be like you lived in your house for 5 hours, and then left. Even your trusty mailman would get confused! One solution is to call your ISP and get your Internet package upgraded to a business plan, which will change your IP from dynamic to static, but at an extra cost. The other is to use a great free tool that we will explain in the next section.

To find out your IP address, click “Start”, then Run, type “Command”, click “OK”. When the black window, known as the “Command” window opens, type “ipconfig /all”. This will yield your current IP configuration. If you see a line that says “Lease Expires”, and it’s soon, then you definitely have a dynamic IP. Don’t worry if it expires soon, you’ll get a new one as soon as it does. You will also notice a 4-octet number, seperated by 3 periods next to its appropriate description, “IP Address”. This is your IP address.

No-IP.com

Who is No-IP?

These guys are great!

Before we get into it, lets define what a domain name is. A domain name is a alphanumeric representation of your IP address. In other words, any “www” name you enter into your address bar actually reflects an IP address. If you open up your command window again and type “ping www.articleautomate.com”, you will notice there is an IP
address in square brackets next to my domain name in the results.

Now, let’s move on.

First, No-IP will give you a web name and you don’t even have to pay for it! That means you don’t have to purchase a domain name. Any “www” address you see in your address bar is a domain name. When you use No-IP.com, you will receive a domain name that looks like www.yourname.no-ip.com. Notice the “no-IP” part. Since No-IP.com is a free service, they add that to your “www” name. This is fine because the purpose of your site is to serve your articles to your customers through your eBay and Paypal “Instant Purchase” sales, although you can also serve web pages. Your domain name also remains easy to remember.

Second, your dynamic IP address issue simply disappears. No-IP.com has developed a free piece of software that you download from them and install on your PC. What it does is monitor your IP address, and when your IP changes, it tells the No- IP.com server, which updates your “www” name to reflect your new IP address.

No-IP.com Registration

Now that you understand what No-IP is, you are ready to go out and get registered. Click the link below, find their “Sign-up Free” link, and fill in the blanks.

www.articleautomate.com/no-ip

Once you have fully registered, you will receive a confirmation email. Follow the directions on the email. Next, log into your No-IP.com account, and click on the “Add” link under the “Hosts/Redirects” header.

The “Hostname” textbox is where you will enter your “www” name, and the dropdown is the No-IP.com extension of your choice.

If your ISP does not block port 80 then you don’t need to do any port redirecting. Just click the “Create Host” button at the bottom of the page.

If your ISP does block port 80 then click on the “Port 80 Redirect”. A new page will load, but will look almost the same. For the “Port”, enter 8000. Click the “Create Port Redirect” at the bottom of the page.

Registration is complete – on to the software!

Click on the “Downloads” tab at the top and then click “Windows” on the left column. Click on the No-IP DUC v x.x.x link. (x.x.x because the version is always changing)

Follow the wizard to install the program. Once installation is complete, you will be prompted for the email address and password you entered during registration. After entering this, the console will open. Turn to the next page to see what your console will look like.

console

Notice the smiley face. That means the No-IP.com server has been updated with your current IP address.

Now that you have your domain name set up, you have to start hosting your pages! The next section will introduce you to an excellent program called Abyss Web Server by Aprelium.

Abyss Web Server

What is Abyss?

Simply put, Abyss is a free personal web server for Windows, MacOS X, Linux, and FreeBSD. Abyss is just a web server, and does not allow for any FTP protocol. You can access your console remotely to update directory and user settings, but you can’t upload any files unless you are at the computer running the web server.

Installation

Click on the following link:
www.articleautomate.com\abyss

Find the “Download” link under the “Software Resources” header near the bottom of the page. Click on the “Download Abyss Web Server X1 for Windows” link and install the software.

Once the installation is complete, you will be asked for a username and a password. This identifier will then be your login to your web server. You will also see the Abyss icon in your system tray. After entering your login info, you will be prompted again for a username and password. You will always be prompted for your login information with this screen whenever you start your console.

You should get a console that looks something like this:

console

Do not change the “Server Root”. This is where your web server runs.

Change your “Documents Path” to the path you wish to host your pages from. For this book, I will use “c:\article”.

If your “Port” isn’t already set to 8000, do that now.

Any changes that you make will require a server restart, which is nothing more than clicking a button when you are prompted.

If you ever need to access your console again, right click on the Abyss icon in the system tray, and select “Show Console”. Please take into consideration that we have only skimmed the surface with Abyss Web Server and that there is much more to learn about it, such as setting up directory and user permissions, and your access statistics.

We will now move on to a “suggested” method of setting up your web server directory.

Directory Structure

Before you start creating HTML and putting your article online, you may want to look at how you want your web server’s file system to be set up. I have found that it is easier to maintain when you have the following setup: For this example, I have set my “Documents Path” to c:\article. To create a directory, read “Directory Creation”.

Take a look at the image below:

console

You will notice that we are in the article directory, and there is an index.htm file. This file will be your website’s home page. Next, you will see an images folder and a widgets folder. You will store all of your website’s images in the image folder. The widgets folder will contain another “index.html” file, which will contain the download link to your article.

Directory Creation

To create your “article” directory:

1. Right-Click the “Start” menu.
2. Click on “Explore”.
3. Navigate through the tree until you find “C:” and click on it.
4. In the right window pane, right-click on some white-space, and select “New”, then “Folder”.
5. Name your folder “article”.

Follow this process to create your “images” and “widgets” directory. We will look at creating your “index.html” file in Section 4 or this article.

Test Your Server

Next, test your server. Run the “ipconfig” command, and write down your IP address. Open a new web browser and in the address bar type: yo.ur.ip.addy:8000/

If you get the Paypal button you created and tested earlier, you have correctly installed Abyss. Notice the “8000”. This directs the website to your port 8000. If you decide to run your server on a different port, you will need to change this figure to be the same.

Now try your No-IP domain name “http://yourname.no-ip.com”. Notice that your address bar changes to your IP address?

If you don’t want the address to change to your IP, then you will have to log into your No-IP account and edit your Host settings from “Port 80 Redirect” to “DNS Host,” but the difference will be that your domain will look like www.yourname.no-ip.com:8000.

Troubleshooting

If you experience problems, such as “error 404 - Page cannot be found”, then try some of these suggestions:

1. Make sure there is an “index.html” file in your “c:\article” directory.
2. Make sure your “Documents Path” is set to “c:\article”
3. Make sure you see the following icons in your system tray (bottom right):
4. Make sure your web address DOES NOT contain a “WWW” in it. It should follow this exact protocol: yourname.no-ip.com.

If all none of these suggesstions work, the following link:
www.articleautomate.com/serverhelp

General Guidelines

Offer congratulations on past achievements, being as specific as possible.

State any plan of action specifically.

Generate enthusiasm with tangible or intangible incentives.

Challenge the sales reps to emulate the results of the most successful among them.

Express confidence in the audience’s future successes.

Motivate your listeners to take action immediately.

Keep the tone upbeat and informal.

Introduction of a New Product or Service

Overview the benefits of the new product or service.

Tell how it differs from what else is on the market.

Prepare the sales reps to answer any objections from customers.

Explain ways customers can investigate, sample, or see the product or service demonstrated.

Mention any sales aids (such as ads, displays, samples, articles, research information or other literature) that management can provide to support their individual efforts.

Speeches Of Motivation To Improve Service

Audience: employees
Message: You each represent our company to the customer; you have the power to win or lose customers for us.
Tone: motivational, light
Timing: 23-25 minutes

You may have seen this advertisement used by a training consulting firm: Two colleagues are talking about a particular company and one says, “Their product is fine, but their customer service is a joke.” The second person responds, “Oh. Well, then, who would you recommend?”

The implication? Good product is not enough. Customer service is what people are buying. And anyone who thinks customers aren’t important should try doing without them for a period of 90 days. When someone says to you that pleasing a customer is hard, ask them, “Compared to what?” To having to find new ones? Believe me, it’s a lot harder to get new customers than to treat the ones we have right.

And we’ve all read a lot about that lately. From Tom Peters, from Lee Iacocca, from Buck Rogers. But let me get a little more personal. I want to tell you a true story about two friends of mine who recently moved. A rather long story. But I think you’ll identify with it.

Like the proverbial average family which moves every five years, Mike and Marsha got the itch to mow a new lawn. Finding the house of their dreams, they applied for a loan with Mortgage Company X, which guaranteed in-house loan approval within 30-45 days.

“Will I need a CPA-prepared financial-worth statement since I’m self-employed?” Mike asked. “If so, I want to get it now rather than slow up the process somewhere down the line.”

“No problem,” the loan officer answered. “If you keep your own books, your statement is good enough.”

A few days later, the loan officer called to say she had lost the VA eligibility certificate. Could Mike and Marsha supply another? They did. A few days later the loan officer phoned to say that they would, after all, need their CPA to prepare a statement. He did. Mike and Marsha waited.

Finally approval came. But two hours before closing, their realtor called to say there would be no closing. Without notice, the mortgage company had decided to renege on their interest-rate commitments not yet in writing and “to relieve from duty” all loan officers at that location. Others were flying in shortly from headquarters to hear customer complaints. But no one there thought to call Mike and Marsha to let them know the closing had been canceled. A couple of days later they “permitted” Mike and Marsha to quietly take their loan package to another institution. They ran.

But that was just the beginning of their experience with customer service—or lack of it. They pulled out the home-furnishings catalogs. Custom window covering came from Department Store A. The master bedroom woven-wood was two inches too short and two inches too narrow. Someone didn’t measure or record the dimensions correctly. Would Marsha mind if the designer just sprayed a chemical treatment and “yanked” the window covering down? Mike and Marsha agreed. It didn’t work. The department store refunded the money and my friends were only out the four-week delay.

They called Store B. Humming to herself while the installer hung the second woven woods, Marsha dreamed of privacy in the bedroom. But the installer came down the hall shaking his head. “You wanted a double-pull wood, Ma’am? I’m afraid the factory made a mistake. Or someone copied down your order wrong. I’m going to have to send this back.”

On Store B’s second delivery, Marsha was afraid to look. “Ma’am,” the installer said, “you’re not going to believe this, but they made the same mistake. It’s the same one we sent back.” They got the correct window covering six weeks later.

Store C delivered a brass bed for their daughter’s room. One hole for the frame was drilled higher than the other. “But it is a $34 special,” the salesclerk reminded Mike on the phone. Mike drilled a lower hole.

The master bedroom brass headboard, a more expensive variety, Mike and Marsha didn’t dare leave for a delivery truck. The salesman promised to send it to Package Pickup while they pulled the car around. He did and they did.

In the bedroom light, after Mike and Marsha had unloaded the headboard with (literally) gloved hands, they saw the scratches. Headboard to footboard. Yes, the salesman said on the phone, they could return it if they brought it back immediately. The sales clerk “had a feeling” Package Pickup would be careless with it. “They do it all the time,” the clerk assured them. It was the only headboard of its kind in stock.

The following Saturday Store D delivered the new washer; the old one, in its 12th year, had washed its last load a week earlier. On its first spin cycle, a smoky scent filled the house. The repairman said it couldn’t possibly have a burned-out motor. It did.

After only two tries, Store E delivered the fireplace screen (without the screws) and a dinette. They had delivered both to the old billing address rather than the one carefully printed on the contract under “Deliver To.”

“Be glad to give you a refund on the fireplace screen if you want to bring it back,” the clerk said. Was it worth the 45-minute trip across town? Mike found the screws at the corner hardware store and made do.

The garage-door opener they bought as an unassembled do-it-yourself kit. After installation the remote controls didn’t control. The store owner promised to have the manufacturer send new ones. They came ten days later, COD for $62. After refusing the delivery, Mike phoned the store again. Ownership had changed hands, and the assistant office manager “didn’t know” about honoring the old guarantee. Old guarantee? Eleven days? Mike took the opener off the garage door and returned it anyway. How could they refuse eyeball to eyeball? They did.

“If you’ll come back tomorrow when the repairman will be around to see that you haven’t damaged the controls when you installed it, we’ll see about a replacement,” the new owner offered. After they made a second 45-mile trip the following day, the repairman verified that the remote controls never controlled. Their refund was uncheerfully given.

Now you’re asking: Had my friends been singled out for this persecution? Believe me, they’d begun to wonder. Was the rest of the world faring any better? Not even their daily newspaper could tell them; the assistant who took the address change by phone argued that their street was non-existent. Four days and two lengthy direction sessions later, they got a paper at their new address.

So much for the outside world. But could they make contact? Now, Mike and Marsha had always been ones to get mail. But the second week after their move when mail dwindled to “Dear Occupant” circulars, a trip to the old address produced approximately an eight-inch stack of first-class mail.

Yes, various clerks responded, the Post Office did still have the change-of-address notice on file. But frequently a sub was on the route and possibly nobody had told him to forward the mail. The supervisor promised to “take care of it personally.” Four months and numerous phone calls later, Mike resorted to removing the mailbox from the pole.

But anticipating such “disruption of service,” they had planned early phone installation: One month before M-Day, they called to have telephone service transferred and asked for a cost estimate. A “marketing specialist” promised to call back because their order was quite “complicated.” After hearing nothing for two weeks, Marsha phoned again. The representative apologized for the delay and promised to give the order “her personal attention.”

Marsha asked if the phone rep could give them an assigned number. Which she did, insisting, of course, that the number couldn’t be guaranteed until installation. Relying on the “96 percent chance” that the number would work, Mike used the number in a national ad for his consulting business. The next day, the phone rep called back to explain that she’d made a mistake in assigning the number and figuring the charges. So much for an ad that reached the public.

Four weeks later, the installer phoned. He wanted to know where Marsha was. The installer was at the new residence to hook up the phone and the house was empty. Marsha told him about the reschedule due to Mortgage Company X’s shenanigans, giving him name, date and hour of rescheduling. The installer had never gotten the word, he insisted. According to his assessment of the situation, “Somebody” fouled up. Marsha rescheduled installation for a week later.

Marsha waited in the new, cold, empty house for the installer to arrive between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. At 4:55, he showed up. The phone worked, but the answering service would take another five days. Thank goodness for at least one inefficiency; the phone company had failed to put the transfer tape on their old number. We, in the outside world, could still contact them.

Fifty-four days after their original order request, my friends had a working telephone. Rejoicing, they phoned us with the correct new number. But when Mike tried to dial the downtown library, he couldn’t. Had the phone company done what he suspected? Yes. The operator verified that they had indeed installed a limited suburban line instead of the metro service Marsha had ordered.

Two days later, the phone bill arrived for one month’s service. Since the phone had been working for only 46 hours, Mike called to complain. “Not to worry,” the assistant told him. She would adjust the bill and send a corrected copy.

A week later Customer Relations called to ask about “the manner in which their recent order had been handled.” Was it worth 15 minutes to tell her? Marsha decided that it was, giving the Customer Relations rep names and dates. “This is my job,” she gushed, “to catch problems like this. I’m going to give this to my supervisor for his personal attention and he’ll get back to you immediately.”

A disruption-of-service notice arrived. Marsha phoned to say that she had never received a corrected bill. “We’ll make a note not to disconnect, then,” the representative promised, “so don’t worry.” They did.

Two days later, the phone wasn’t working; their line was crossed with another number. The phone company corrected that problem 12 days later.

And no one ever called back from Customer Relations….

You’re smiling. No, I take that back. Some of you are crying. It’s all too familiar, isn’t it? The frustration of getting products that don’t work,… of getting poor service,… of telling people who don’t listen,… of telling companies that don’t care.

And in most cases, the problem is not the problem. It’s one’s attitude about the problem. Well, whatever it takes to make the customer happy, our attitude at (company) is going to be to get it done.

We don’t want to be one of those companies Mike and Marsha dealt with. We’ve got to learn from the mistakes of others—we can’t stay in business long enough to make them all ourselves.

We’re not going to be one of those companies that think selling is enough.

Starting today, (date), I want to go on record with my number-one priority: customer service.

We don’t want a customer to walk out of here mumbling: “This isn’t really the color I wanted.” Or: “This really will be difficult to use.” Or: “I wonder if that sales rep’s going to be here if I have to return this thing.” Or: “I paid enough for this (product); you’d think they could at least help me get it to the car.” Or: “The salesperson didn’t have the foggiest idea how this works.”

Never do we want to hear our customers mumble something like that. Or even think it.

So how can we achieve that goal? I can’t. Oh, I’ll do my part by setting policy that supports you all the way. But the key to our success will be you. Each of you individually.

In the moving fiasco of my friends, any one employee who cared could have turned the tide.

What if the loan officer had gotten around to putting the interest rate in writing, as she’d promised? Or had bothered to phone to say that the house closing had been canceled?

What if the drapery designer had taken correct measurements?

What if the rep in Package Pickup hadn’t banged the brass headboard around?

What if the inspector had noticed the fireplace screen was missing screws?

What if the new manager where they bought the garage door opener had gladly offered a refund without Mike having to make two trips across town to prove his point?

What if the newspaper rep who handled new subscribers had asked for directions?

What if the mail carrier had cared enough to check out the situation when mail remained in a residence box for four months?

What if the telephone installer had double-checked his installation orders and given the customer a clue about when he would arrive?

What if the customer service supervisor had cared enough to follow up when the rep discovered Mike and Marsha’s phone horror stories?

What if…?

What if…?

What if businesses saw themselves as the candidate and the customers as the voters? In a real sense, that’s the situation. Customers vote with their dollars.

Mike and Marsha shouldn’t have had to go through a nightmare to move into their dream house.

Our customers shouldn’t have to be hassled to get what they need when they phone us or walk into our place of business.

You are on the front lines. You see fiascoes like Mike and Marsha’s waiting to happen. Today, I’m asking you to become the customer’s advocate. You, as a (company) employee, practice the golden rule: If you wouldn’t want it done to you, don’t do it to our customers. Take the initiative; go the second mile. If that means making an extra phone call or two, do it. If that means replacing the product, do it. If that means working overtime, do it.

You know, as John McCaffrey observed, “The mechanics of running a business are really not very complicated when you get down to the essentials. You have to make some stuff and sell it to somebody for more than it cost you. That’s about all there is to it, except for a few million details.”

Those “few million details” are in your hands.

Customer service is an idea whose time has come. Customer service keeps us in business. Our attitude isn’t going to be the problem. Your attitude—those of you who are on the front lines with customer contact—your attitude toward the customer will be our key to success. That’s what our market is buying. That’s what we’re selling.

Save Windows XP Updates

Savin’ Windows XP updates on your computer

1) Go to de Windows Update web site.
2 )In de left pane, under Oder Options, select “Personalize Windows Update”.
3) Under “Set Options for Windows Update”, select de checkbox for “Display de Link to Windows Update Catalog under ‘See Also’”, den click “Save Settin’s”.
4) Go back to de Windows Update web site.
5) In de left pane, under “See Also”, select “Windows Update Catalog”.
6) Select “Find Updates for Microsoft Operatin’ Systems”.
7) Select de operatin’ system and lan’uage of your choice.
8) Select “Critical Updates and Service Packs”.
9) Select all of de patches you’d like to download, den click on “Go to download basket” to download them.

Change Windows XP Serial Number

Step 1

Open Start/Run… and type de command:
regedit and click “OK” (or press ENTER).

Go to HKey_Local_Machine\Software\Microsoft\WindowsNT\Current Version\WPAEvents,
on de right double click on “oobetimer” and change at least one digit of this value to deactivate windows.

Click “OK” and close de Registry Editor.

Step 2

Open Start/Run… and type de command:
%systemroot%\system32\oobe\msoobe.exe /a and click “OK” (or press ENTER).

This will brin’ up de “Activate Windows” window.

Check de option for “Yes, I want to telephone a customer service representative to activate Windows” and click “Next”

Step 3

Then click “Change Product Key” (don’t enter any information on that screen)

Step 4

Type in de new key and click “Update”

The activate Windows by phone window will reappear at this point, just close it by clickin’ de X in de upper right hand corner

Step 5

Reboot your system and Open Start/Run… and type de command:
%systemroot%\system32\oobe\msoobe.exe /a and click “OK” (or press ENTER).

If you see “Windows is already activated” den everythin’ is OK.

Slipstreaming Service Pack 2

Note: All images are hosted with ImageShack.

This guide will allow you to sucsessfully install Service Pack 2 on de original (gold) code of Microsoft Windows XP.
The version of Windows you have purchased/downloaded does not matter as far as slipstreamin’ (dey’re all de same anyway).

Thin’s you need:
Microsoft Windows XP
Service Pack 2:

URL download.microsoft.com/download/1/6/5/165b076b-aaa9-443d-84f0-73cf11fdcdf8/WindowsXP-KB835935-SP2-ENU.exe

• Windows XP Boot sector:

www.neowin.net/downloads/xpboot.bin

• Nero Burnin’ Rom (find it on SoD)

Step One
Insert de Microsoft Windows XP CD into your CD-ROM drive, and create a new folder on your hard-drive labelled “CD”. Copy all of de files from de Windows XP CD to de “CD” folder.

Step Two
Download Service Pack 2 and place it within de root of your hard-drive.
Ex: C:\ D:\ etc..

Step Three
Go to Start -> Run and type in “F:\WindowsXP-KB835935-SP2-ENU.exe -s:F:\CD” (dependin’ on where you put de folder)
The actual command is -s:drive:\folder

Step Four
The Service Pack 2 updater will automatically slipstream Service Pack 2 into your “CD” folder.

Step Five
If you browse back to de CD folder, you’ll notice that new folders and files appeared from de SP2 update. At this point, you can include any software you wish onto this CD, but make sure that de size of de folder does not exceed de media you are burnin’ on. If you’re not sure, a regular CD is 700 megabytes.

Step Six
Go to Start and Search for files and folders. Go to all files and folders, and type in “wpa.dbl”. This is de activation file for your current installed version of XP. Make a copy of de file and paste it into your CD folder.

Step Seven
Open up Nero Smartstart, and click on de icon that looks like two people. This turns de program into “professional mode”. Search for create a bootable CD. Click on it, and make sure that your settin’s agree with de followin’ picture; also make sure that you downloaded de Windows XP boot sector.

Step Eight
Continue onto de next tab, and make sure that your settin’s agree with de picture:

Step Nine
In this step, you can label your CD whatever de hell you want. I recommend WXPSP2_EN.

Step Ten
Go to “new” and locate your CD folder. Drag all of de files in de CD folder to de compilation window on de right, and nero will calculate how much disk space was used. If it exceeds 700 MB, get rid of some programs that you added to de CD. If you didn’t add anythin’; just push burn.

Step Eleven
Make sure that your settin’s check with de picture:

Step Twelve
Just push burn, and that’s it! Con’radulations, you just made a bootable Win XP CD with SP2 slipstreamed!