Blogging the American Dream: Happy Independence Day

by Michael Martine on July 4, 2009 · 0 comments

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July 4 is the day America celebrates its independence and its establishment as a democratic republic. Paradoxically, the same systems and forces put in place by our Founding Fathers to grant us freedom also allows people to behave in ways which, over time, have systematically constricted our freedom in subtly destructive ways.

How many of you living in America feel that the ideal of the American Dream is what it once was? Every business interest in the nation has taken over every aspect of that dream and twisted it around into a way to blackmail your paycheck and your sense of security: the health care industry, the financial industry, the insurance industry, and consumer products and services. At times they hardly seem better than legal organized crime (I mean, really, have you ever even seen a good bank?).

And yet…

And yet, along with this long-term evolutionary perversion, the same freedoms and technologies also empower us as individuals or groups to make a go of it doing our own thing. Entrepreneurialism is alive and well. And it is the new creatives, the tech-savvy businesspeople of today who are rewriting what the American Dream means.

Many of us are rewriting the dream on our blogs, with each post.

Thanks to the democratizing power of the web, anyone can learn to earn an income online. In some ways, it’s easier than you think; in other ways, it’s harder, but anything worth doing with a possibility for high rewards is never easy—or everyone would be doing it. If you have access to the right information, you can have it easier than others do.

I hope I can be part of that for you, and make it easier for you to help us keep rewriting the American Dream, one blog post (and tweet) at a time.

Happy Independence Day, America.

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How to Get More Time to Blog

by Michael Martine on June 30, 2009 · 33 comments

How to Get More Time to Blog

Do you have hardly any time to write for your blog? Most people feel as you, so at least you’re not alone. But let me tell you something which may surprise you.

For a new project I’m doing with Grant Griffiths (sorry, can’t tell you what it is, yet), we recently conducted a blogging survey in which people gave some puzzling and conflicting answers. One question on the survey asked: why do you have a blog? Out of the possible choices, the number one answer was: to get more customers for my business.

Another question was: what’s the biggest problem you have with blogging? This question wasn’t multiple choice, it was a short answer essay. People could’ve written anything they wanted; there were no choices to influence their answers one way or another. And do you know what the most common answer was? I’m sure you’ve guessed based on the headline for this post. Most of the respondents said their biggest problem with blog marketing was not having enough time to devote to it.

Let me see if I have this straight:

  • Method for acquiring customers: blog marketing.
  • Activity there’s no time for: blog marketing!

So, um, yeah: that’s a problem.

If you don’t take the time to market your business, you will eventually no longer have a business to market.

Feast-or-famine is no way to run a business. Since without customers you have no business in the first place, it’s a little disingenuous to say you have no time for activities which generate leads and convert them into customers (marketing and selling). If you have no time to blog and use email and social media to acquire new customers and stay in touch with existing ones, then your activities are critically unbalanced and unsustainable. You need to steady things out. Here’s how you can make your wobbly life a little more even:

Create an Editorial Calendar for Your Blog

A blog editorial calendar is when you plan out your post topics in advance, even specifying the dates your posts will be published. This gives you plenty of time to plan ahead and get good posts written on time. You won’t have to waste time just sitting there racking your brains for a post topic, because you already figured that out and all you have to do is write the post (or, better yet, finish writing it if you’ve already started).

You cannot create and work with an editorial calendar unless you regularly set aside time to work on it. By definition, you cannot “wing” a preplanned calendar. Preparing in advance, rather than hurriedly putting out flames which suddenly sprang up (ZOMG, I forgot to write a blog post today! Quick: what can I write about?) is much calmer and leads to far better content. Better content has incredibly better long-term benefits all-around for your business.

Batch Your Blogging Tasks for Greater Efficiency and Less Gear-Shifting

Batching is when you perform related tasks in one block of time, rather than dealing them as they come up or as the mood strikes you. It takes time to mentally “shift gears” when we have to move from one kind of task to another. If you’ve ever been in the middle of a writing a blog post and allowed yourself to be distracted by television, Twitter, Facebook, or whatever, and then tried to get back in your writing groove, you know what I mean.

Back when I was posting here every day (more on that below), I would write as many posts as I could during the weekends, and I would write them all in one sitting. This was tremendously productive and efficient, because I didn’t have to keep mentally shifting gears. I closed my email, closed TweetDeck, turned off my phone, and wrote, wrote, wrote.

Batching your blog tasks is a sure-fire way to make more time out of thin air.

Share the Burden of Content Creation

One way to quickly create content for your blog with less effort is to not do it all yourself. And one way to not do it all yourself is to team up with someone else:

  • Guest posts: You can solicit guest posts for your blog, especially from bloggers looking to establish themselves. Guest posts from experienced, more well-known bloggers are easier to get than you might think (simply ask).

    In addition to saving you time, guest posts get you more traffic and strengthen your relationship with the guest poster, which is always good for business down the road.

  • Interviews: A fantastic way to distribute the burden of content creation is interviewing another expert. What’s really super time-efficient about this is that you can do it by email. You make contact with an expert and present your case for an interview. Most people will grant an interview for the sheer ego boost of it, but you can always indicate what the benefits will be for the interviewee. Then you send your interview questions via email. Politely ask for the answers to be sent back by a specific date. Take the questions and answers and copy & paste them into a blog post. Interviews have the added benefit of also sending you more traffic, because the person you interview will link to it and spread it around.
  • Open mic style posts: Liz Strauss does this very effectively with her “open mic night” posts, and it’s a great example of community-building as well. An open mic post is where you don’t write a big post yourself, you present a question or a topic for discussion and your readers add their thoughts or ask their questions in the comments. Don’t think for a moment this is a technique which can be used by the lazy. You have to be hanging in their with your readers, responding to their comments. But the cool thing is that you don’t have to spend a large chunk of continuous time on this. You can check in on it from time to time.
  • Use different media: Writing takes a lot of time, but popping off a quick video or audio often does not take too long. Just keep in mind that when you do this, you can’t really do any editing or you’re not saving time. You just spit it out and go. You can use services like YouTube and Utterli. YouTube lets you record videos directly from your computer’s webcam, and Utterli lets you post audio right from your phone. By just chatting for a couple minutes into your camera or phone, you don’t have to spend huge amounts of time writing.

Blog Less

Despite the fact that nearly every blog-advice blogger on the planet says you should blog every day, quality is much more important than quantity when it comes to blogging (most people aren’t successful, so why is doing everything they do a good idea? Hmm?). I’ve seen this first hand for myself, ever since I dropped down from seven posts a week to 5, and now I’m down to a whopping single post per week. Did I kill my business? No! In fact, my subscriber count and my income are up, up, up! (Some of you are aware of FeedBurner recently adding FriendFeed subscribers in with feed counts, which raised everyone’s feed subscriber counts overnight—I’m talking about an increase I saw before FeedBurner made this change.)

It’s true that in some ways, posting every day or even more than once a day can grow your blog’s audience. Certainly it will help with blog SEO, but maybe not as much as you might think. In my own example, I’m writing bigger, meatier blog posts that are absolutely my best writing. The result is that each post gets more trackbacks and more traffic. The more backlinks a webpage gets, the more authority it has in Google’s eyes, which is ultimately better for SEO.

Having more posts indexed by Google but getting fewer trackbacks or less influence & reach is not an even trade. Quality is better than quantity. If you make people happy, you’ll also make Google happy. And if you make Google happy, Google will make you happy when you see your PageRank numbers and search engine rankings.

Blogging less leaves me more time to do important stuff like spend time with my granddaughter and really be there for her in her life as she grows up (I just got her her first kite, and now we’re waiting for a day with some breeze in it—I can’t wait!). Blogging less also allows me to make more money, because I have more time to create and promote information products or maintain my network.

You just don’t need to blog everyday (but you do need to be consistent). What you need is to blog about stuff your audience can’t live without. You need to blog about stuff they want to spread to their friends and link to in their own blogs and on social media.

Thanks for Your Time

One last thought: it’s been my observation (of both others and in myself) that no matter what anyone says about being pressed for time, people always take time for what’s truly important to them. If you say your family’s important to you, but you never spend time with them, you’re sending mixed messages. Your real priorities are revealed by how you spend your time, not by what you say. If you say blogging is the way to get customers, but you choose not to take the time to do it (how we spend our time is always a choice), then what are your actions really saying?

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The Ultimate Guide to Thesis SEO

by Michael Martine on June 20, 2009 · 26 comments

Thesis includes its own SEO options, eliminating the need for multiple SEO plugins. I wrote this as the Ultimate Guide to Thesis SEO.

Once you’ve installed Thesis, you can modify various SEO settings in the Thesis Options under Appearance in your WordPress admin.

Title Tag

thesis-head-seoYou can decide whether to show the site name or the site tagline in the title tags for your blog’s home page, or both, and in what order. These settings are only for the home page and not for single post pages or other blog pages.

This matters, because Google places a lot of importance on what the <title> tag has in it. To search engines, a document’s title is the primary indicator of its contents. In Thesis, what you call your blog and use for the blog tagline may become your blog’s title tag content. Title tags are often (but not always) used by Google as the main link text in a search result.

I would only show the tagline if it’s short and has more important keywords than the site name. For instance, if a site name is a brand name instead of a keyword, but if keywords are in the tagline, then consider showing the tagline in addition to the site name.

Google is sensitive to what appears natural (and seems to be growing more sensitive to this by the week). The most natural “non-SEO” way to do titles is to have the site name first (and often as the only thing).

Keyword-heavy titles are a no-no, precisely because to Google it looks like you’re “trying” to artificially boost your search rankings. Notice I didn’t say no keywords. Keep it light and keep it real.

Append site name to page titles

Checking this box in your Thesis options sticks the name of your blog after the titles of pages—and that include single post pages. It’s common now to exclude the site name on other pages, and for blogs especially to exclude site name from single post pages. I don’t think this is a smart idea, for two reasons:

  1. It’s more “natural” and “non-SEO-ish” to include the site name, and faking naturalness is the paradoxical name of the game where Google is concerned.
  2. If it’s good for people, it’s usually good for SEO.

For me the bottom line with appending site name to page titles or not has to do with brand-building and being user-friendly. Page names without any site names would make your browser history, back button, and tabs more difficult to use, not easier.

Thesis also lets you choose the text separator character placed between blog name and tagline. By default it is a hyphen. Any common character is fine, such as colons or pipes, which look like this: | (a simple vertical line, it is shift+backslash on your keyboard).

Home Page Meta

thesis-home-metaMeta tags for SEO are the meta description and meta keywords. Except it’s really only just the description. Google and most other search engines pay little to no attention at all to the meta keywords because of past abuses by site owners. However, the meta description becomes the descriptive text below a result link in search engine results pages (called SERPs), so what you write in it is very important. You have to keep it short: about 150 characters or less (use twitter’s “countdown” feature in the tweet box if you don’t want to count characters yourself).

Whatever you create for your blog’s name, tagline, and home page meta description are going to have a big impact on what your blog’s home page gets found for in search, and whether or not people will actually click on its entry in the results pages when it appears.

Add Noindex to Archive Pages

thesis-noindexGoogle sends its trusty Googlebot search engine spider to crawl the web and add pages to the Google search index. You have control over what Googlebot sees by controlling which pages are added to Google’s search index. These search spiders are also called robots.

Why would you not want Google to add all of your blog archive types to its index? Because if there is more than one URL for the exact same blog post, then Google will see those URLs as separate, individual web pages that have the exact same content in them. This creates what SEOs refer to as “duplicate content.” The real problem with this is that you are now competing against yourself and these URLs are weaker than one big strong URL would be. In other words, Google likes an obvious main choice.

So you really only want one type of archive pages to be indexed by Google. Which one you pick could depend on how you have your blog’s permalinks set up.

If you’re using category-based permalinks like this: http://domain.com/category/postname/, then you want to uncheck category noindex. If you’re using typical date-based pretty permalinks like this: http://domain.com/year/month/day/postname/, then uncheck the daily archives noindex.

It’s also worth noting that checking boxes does more than noindex these archive pages: it also nofollows them. Not only will the pages not be in Google’s search index, their links will not be followed (seen, really) by Googlebot to their destination (think of it as “blocking the exits” but only for search engine spiders).

Canonical URLs

You want this. This is a brilliant feature in Thesis. Canonical URLs tell search engines which URL for a post is the one you want it to see. This is done through a link tag in the head of the HTML: <link rel="canonical">. So a link to:http://michaelmartine.com/2009/06/11/frugal-theme-review/#comment-98707 would actually be seen by a search engine as http://michaelmartine.com/2009/06/11/frugal-theme-review/.

Optimizing at the Page/Post Level in Thesis

When you write a post or a page and you’re using Thesis, you have many great SEO options at your command.

Custom Title Tag

You can supply a custom title that is different from the post’s main headline. You should use this… but not like you’re probably thinking. Here’s the thing: there is nearly no difference between a headline that’s great for SEO and a headline that’s highly attractive to people. Having gobbledegook title tags that are “SEO optimized” is an outdated strategy.

When you submit a post to any social media service, the title tag is used to create the headline for the item on the social media service. So if your title is different from your blog’s headline, this could create a problem. The title tag has to be a great headline, so it should be the headline. And of course, titles (not headlines) are what Google uses as the headline link in search results pages. So, even in search, the headline does all the work of pulling people in.

In other words, what I’m really saying here is take the time to create killer headlines for your blog posts that are so good, you won’t have to use the custom title tag feature in Thesis.

Meta Description

Same deal as meta description for the blog’s home page mentioned above, except this time it’s for this individual page or post. The character limit (about 120-160) is short. What you write here matters. Google bolds keyword matches in this text in search results pages (also for titles). Do not needlessly repeat keywords in the meta description–once is enough, really.

Meta Keywords

Fairly useless, but if you feel you must, put about 3 to 10 keywords here.

Noindex this Page

Checking this box essentially tells Google and other search engines: “Hey, don’t bother adding me to your search index, I don’t want to be found.” In other words, the entire page or post will not exist for Google (and for the world, essentially).

Post Image Alt Text

You can supply a post image in the Thesis single post options that is treated differently than placing the image directing in the post content, which is one of the coolest features of Thesis. This alt text is designed to be used by assistive technologies which allow the disabled to browse the web. Making this text target important keywords for your blog can help your SEO (so does accurate image file naming).

Excerpt

You should write unique, original material in here that is not the same text as your meta description.

About Thesis in Combination with All-in-One SEO Pack Plugin

If you are using the ever-popular All-in-One SEO Pack plugin (hereafter referred to as AIOSEO), you have some extra work to do. Thesis will allow AIOSEO to prevail, so you should be safe. If you want to preserve all the old AIOSEO settings while now beginning to use Thesis SEO settings for new posts, you can certainly do that. You will need to check the box in your post editing screen that will disable AIOSEO for that post only.

You will also need to deactivate many of the automatic settings of AIOSEO, such as auto meta descriptions (you should be doing all of these manually, anyway, for the best possible optimization). You will also have to make sure AIOSEO is updated, even if you’re only keeping it around to maintain the optimization of your pre-Thesis posts (should you decide to take advantage of Thesis’s SEO options).

Some optimization is better than no optimization, which is why “out of the box” blogs are still better than most regular websites, and the automatic settings of AIOSEO are better than not having AIOSEO. However, manual creation of the meta tags and careful choosing of all settings will deliver the best optimization possible with these tools. One reason why I like Thesis is that it does not automatically provide content for these settings. No magic bullet SEO automation will work as well as insightful manual optimization.

And This is Only One Reason to Get Thesis

thesistheme

Thesis is much more than better search optimization for your blog. It’s a highly-customizable theme for WordPress self-hosted blogs (in other words, it’s not available for wordpress.com users). You can customize a huge array of elements in Thesis without doing any HTML/CSS/PHP coding. If you’re a designer/developer or a multiple blog owner, get the developer’s license. The developer’s license lets you use Thesis on all of your blogs.

If you already have Thesis, but want more information on optimizing your WordPress blog overall (including keyword research, permalinks strategies, and more) then you’ll want to check out WordPress SEO Secrets, my step-by-step guide.

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Review of Frugal Premium WordPress Theme

by Michael Martine on June 11, 2009 · 2 comments

Frugal is a premium WordPress theme developed by Eric Hamm, who is a brand-new daddy and all-around cool guy. Eric is passionate about blogging and the web, so naturally Continue Reading…

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Five Ways to Tell You Need a Blog Consultant

by Michael Martine on June 3, 2009 · 15 comments

Blog Consulting

It happens all too easily: we’re just too close to our own shit. We thrash around in our own mud puddle like we’re drowning in a bottomless swamp. We Continue Reading…

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Can Blogging Make You a Better Person?

by Michael Martine on May 26, 2009 · 22 comments

Can blogging make you a better person?
Well, that depends: do you want to be a better person?

Think carefully about your answer. Most people would say “Yes” without a moment’s Continue Reading…

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Internet Marketing FAQ

When you’re totally new to internet marketing, you have questions about pervasive practices which everyone “in the know” takes for granted, but which you find baffling.

I realized this when Continue Reading…

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I have some great news!

I’ve been asked to join Project Mojave as faculty for SEO and blog stuff. But that’s not nearly as cool as the fact that Project
Mojave Continue Reading…

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I got a great question from a Mandy Moore in the comments on my post, How to Write an Ebook that Doesn’t Suck. It’s such a great question, I’ve Continue Reading…

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Should You Write an Ebook if Your Blog is Small?

by Michael Martine on May 5, 2009 · 21 comments

The Blogger Ebook Problem
If your blog is small, should you write an ebook?

I call this the blogger/ebook problem. It’s sort of like the old paradox of needing a job Continue Reading…

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Are Ebooks Dead?

by Michael Martine on April 30, 2009 · 16 comments

I’m on a bit of an ebook kick. Previously, I wrote How to Write an Ebook that Doesn’t Suck, which assumed that writing ebooks was a good thing. But Continue Reading…

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How to Write an Ebook that Doesn’t Suck

by Michael Martine on April 23, 2009 · 27 comments

Let’s face it, most ebooks suck.

They have too little information, bad English and worse graphics. They’re written because their authors wanted to write them, by which I mean they Continue Reading…

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Should You Have a Blogroll?

by Michael Martine on April 20, 2009 · 19 comments

A blogroll is a list of links to other blogs you read and like. Many blogs have them, and they’re one of those “bloggy” things that make blogs what Continue Reading…

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How to Set Up A Blog (For the Long Run)

by Michael Martine on April 14, 2009 · 30 comments

Wouldn’t it be great if you could start something knowing that you couldn’t fail?

When you first get into blogging, you’re faced with a dilemma: the more you learn, the Continue Reading…

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The One Thing Missing From Most Online Businesses

by Michael Martine on April 10, 2009 · 1 comment

The short answer to the question in the headline is: YOU.

Get your free “self-discovery” training from Mary Anne Fisher at Internet Profits On Purpose.

If you can’t see the video Continue Reading…

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Remarkablogger Reader Survey Results

by Michael Martine on April 9, 2009 · 2 comments

A big THANK YOU to everyone who helped with the survey. Your feedback is greatly appreciated and it’s a wonderful resource I can use to make Remarkablogger a better Continue Reading…

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What is self-promotion?
Imagine you’re at a party, and you meet the guy who only wants to talk about himself. You know, that guy. Everything is about him. I bet Continue Reading…

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Are you interested in many different things, and have a hard time choosing just one? If so, you may feel it’s impossible to ever have a great blog about Continue Reading…

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How to Wrap Text Around A Video

by Michael Martine on March 30, 2009 · 13 comments

In my blog post on How to Embed Video in a Blog Post, Scott asked in the comments if I could show how to get text to wrap around Continue Reading…

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Tell Me Something…

by Michael Martine on March 27, 2009 · 8 comments

Not too long ago I did a Remarkablogger reader survey (you can still respond to it) in which I asked demographic-style questions about gender, age, etc. The information I Continue Reading…

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Getting Personal(ity)

by Michael Martine on March 26, 2009 · 21 comments

I was writing the first post on a brand new blog that was going to be my personal blog, thinking that I would share the URL with everyone and Continue Reading…

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WordPress SEO Secrets Book ONLY Version Now Available

by Michael Martine on March 23, 2009 · 14 comments

The “full-blown” version of WordPress SEO Secrets was a great success, and now that the newlsetters and teleseminars are starting to roll, it’s getting even better.

And even though Continue Reading…

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Six Secrets to Explode Your Profits (and Your Mind)

by Michael Martine on March 20, 2009 · 6 comments

My friend and personal/business development coach Mary Anne Fisher is releasing a series of six training videos on her blog at i Profit On Purpose. They don’t cost a Continue Reading…

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How to Be a Godsend

by Michael Martine on March 19, 2009 · 6 comments

Godsend: (noun) An unexpected good fortune or benefit; a windfall.

If you were a godsend to your clients or customers, do you think you’d have any trouble thriving–even in a Continue Reading…

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Asking the right question makes all the difference. I have such a question to share with you, but before I present that question to you, I’d like to ask Continue Reading…

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Take the Remarkablogger Reader Survey!

by Michael Martine on March 17, 2009 · 2 comments

I’ve put together a survey and I’d really appreciate it if you took a few minutes to respond. Why? Because the more I understand you, the better I can Continue Reading…

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Three Top Blogs You Should Subscribe To

by Michael Martine on March 16, 2009 · 8 comments

I thought today I’d introduce you to some gems that I check on regularly and go back to often. These blogs may not be “top” in the “number one Continue Reading…

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A Top Headline Writing Trick Copywriting Gurus Love

by Michael Martine on March 13, 2009 · 22 comments

What’s the most important part of your blog post?

If you didn’t say, “The headline,” think about what made you click through to read this from your reader or email.

You Continue Reading…

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icon for podpress  From Blog 2 Biz (Rough Notes) [26:28m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

I’m always working on something, but I haven’t let you in on the process until now.

You get to “eavesdrop” on me talking about a new information product I’m working Continue Reading…

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The response to my post Ten Ways to Crank Out Killer Posts in Ten Minutes or Less was fantastic! I feel some very warm fuzzies towards my readers for Continue Reading…

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