Wednesday, 25 April 2012

How To Print Recharge Cards/Vouchers With A Free Software (Mtn, Glo, Zain etc)





This short note is for those who really want to start the recharge voucher printing business on a small scale or for those who just want to give it a try. You must have access to a computer before you can use this software, not compulsory that it is connected to internet. You can always sort the processes that involve internet at cyber cafes or anywhere you can get access to internet.




(The Picture above is one of the screenshots of the software)

Before engaging in this business, your computer and printer must be in good condition. Remove any virus from your computer by installing up-to-date antivirus; defragment your hard drive to increase speed, not compulsory though. You need business capital. You must have an active e-mail account.

These tips would help. Get your computer system and printer ready. Log on to the internet to open an email address if you are not having one before. Decide who suits you as your dealer. Log on to dealer’s website and complete a registration form. You need to provide an ID and password to easily access the software on your personal computer.

After registration with your principal dealer, a confirmation message will be sent to your email address. Check your e-mail and open your inbox for a confirmation message sent to you by your main dealer. This would serve as evidence that your details have been saved on the company’s data-base.

You may also visit your principal dealer at their office to get registered and start buying their PINS. This registration is free EXCEPT for some dealers that will ask you to pay for their software. Do not worry as there are is a FREE one out there,JUST KEEP READING.

Access your dealer’s website again so as to download the trading software onto your computer system. After downloading, install the software directly onto your desktop. This would be used from time-to time to print and manage your bulk PINS.

The next step is for you to get the recharge pins you will print with the software. You will get the PINS from your dealer. Call your dealers’ agent to confirm if they have on ground what you intend to buy before going ahead to make payment into their account, you can also ask them about the current prices they sell various recharge denominations of all the different networks. Thereafter, you can make payments to the company's account. After payment, send a text message to the dealer's agent to notify them about your payment details. Also with a text message, you can send a break down of your order to the agent E.g. “Send to me 200 units of N100 MTN, 500 units GLO and 200 units CELTEL N100. I have paid into your account”.

Copy these PINS from your mail and save it in a notepad or microsoft word document on your desktop. You can also save it in a flash drive, if you want to take the PINS to another computer not connected to the internet.The software has special features, one of which will ask you where you save the PINS and it will upload the PINS automatically. You will print and manage your encrypted PINS from this software after. Connect your printer to the computer and print in batches. You may inscribe your business name on the voucher if you wish. The software is so easy to use. The software has a USER'S GUIDE which can guide you through anything you want to do with the software. Already, you are on your way to making good profits from the venture.....

To get the FREE software, SEND A TEXT Message with your email address, phone number and state to 07062786554 or oluwalanaboats@yahoo.com

Once I receive your text, I will reply you within 24 hours of getting your text message.

NOTE: YOU CAN USE ANY PRINTER FOR THE PRINTING OF THE VOUCHERS, BE IT WHITE/BLACK OR COLOURED.

One thing I use to advise is the fact that, always try as much as possible to analyze different dealers before really venturing into the business. As a result of this, to make things easier for those that are ready to go into the business without wasting time searching here and there for info, I have compiled an easy to understand package of RECHARGE CARD DEALERS you can patronize, even if you do not have computer and printer.


(This is how the software and its userguide will be attached to the email you will receive from me)

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

How Do I Create an Ebook From My Blog Posts?


How Do I Create an Ebook From My Blog Posts?
April 17, 2012 By Oluwalana Samuel


Anthologize for WordPress

One of the methods often suggested for repurposing your content is to create an ebook from your best blog content. But how exactly do you do that?

An ebook from blog posts may be for selling or for giving away as an “ethical bribe” to your new subscribers. The ebook may be something that you just share with your readers or your other social media friends (and potential customers) to demonstrate your expertise in a certain area.

Whatever you decide to do with it, Anthologize makes it easier to create the outline of your ebook and it’s created faster from your existing blog posts.
How do I use Anthologize?

Step one – install Anthologize in your plugin section. Make sure you do not have any similar plugins (unlikely, but check anyway) or your plugins will go nuts.

Step two – locate Anthologize in your sidebar, and then click the tab so the drop down menu appears

Step Three – create a new project. Click the link that says add new project and then complete the details

When you have done that, click save project. This will now show you the screen of where all your projects are stored-

If you hover just under the title of your project you will see additional options.

1 – Project details
2 – Manage parts
3 – Delete project

Click the manage parts option.

Step four – Add a part


The next screen will ask you to add a name for your part and then you can click save. When this is done you will return to the main screen but your “part” will be showing on your dashboard.



Step 6 – Drag and drop your blog posts into the part


Step 7 - When you have ordered your blog posts and selected the ones you wish to include in your ebook, the next step is to “proof” it by hitting the “preview project” link.

Your screen will now open a new window showing you what your ebook will look like – this is for proofing purposes.

To see what the ebook really looks like you will need to export your project.

Step 8 – Exporting your project

Then onto your dedications and acknowledgements:

When you hit export you download your ebook in your chosen format :) as you can see you can even export in the epub format.

You can see what the example looks like here demo_of_anthologize (please note the content is from one of my sandpit sites and used for demo purposes only).

From start to finish the whole process took 20 minutes but you are not finished yet. When you have the exported document you will need to expand on the content and see that it flows. You may need to remove references to things like “blog posts” or other phrases that won’t make sense to your reader. A light editing job, adjusting the formatting and adding a few more images will make your ebook from blog posts something pretty special, very quickly.
You can do a lot with Anthologize – it’s a terrific tool

You can import content, you can sort posts by author (fab for multi author blogs) you can even sort the posts by topics. More importantly you have no excuse not to get the majority of your content ready for creating an ebook or industry reports.

How do you create ebooks from blog posts?
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10 Simple Ways to Get More Blog Comments


Much of the learning on your blog happens with the rich interactions in the comments section. And the more comments, the more readers and subscribers you get.

When it comes to blog comments—and user participation online in general— researcher Jakob Nielsen found something called the 90-9-1 rule.
On average, 90 percent of your blog’s readers will never comment on a blog post (he calls them “consumers”). 9 percent will comment from time to time (called “contributors”). And only 1 percent will regularly leave a thoughtful response that adds to the value of your post (the “creators”).

You could say that those are depressing statistics. Or you could decide that you are going to beat the law of averages by making your blog more comment-friendly.

Here are 10 ways to do that. How many are you using?
1. Make it easy to leave a comment.

If you make your readers copy letters and numbers they can’t read, you will lose some of them. And skip the register-to-comment thing. Because some readers won’t jump through that hoop.
2. Welcome opposing viewpoints.

Try writing an opinion or taking a controversial stand (if you can defend it). Readers on both sides of the issue will jump in and tell you what they think.
3. Ask.

If you want your readers to speak up, ask them a question or two at the end of your post. If you don’t, they’ll think you just wanted to educate and inform them (which is fine, but it doesn’t encourage commenting).
4. Limit those outbound links.

I know you want to be helpful, but when you throw in 4 or 5 links to other great blog posts and articles, your reader gets confused. Do you want her to stay on your blog or leave? Consider limiting your links to one or two.
5. Respond to reader comments and invest in a good comment spam filter.

Your readers want to be recognized by something rather than that annoying, “Your comment is awaiting moderation” message. If you get a lot of spam, invest in a good filtering system. But don’t punish your readers for it.
6. Recognize that some readers don’t want to be the first one to leave a comment.

She doesn’t want to show up all by herself. She’s much more likely to chime in if other people are already talking. Nothing you can do about this one, except to know that those kinds of readers are out there.
7. Give your readers a reason to speak up.

Ask what they think, how they feel about an issue. Stir things up from time to time. If you can get them to think, they’ll be eager to leave a comment.
8. Lose the ‘trick’ headlines.

A sensational (read, deceitful) headline may pull readers into your post, but if you don’t deliver the promise your headline made, they won’t be sticking around. And they won’t be commenting.
9. Make everyone feel welcome.

If a reader doesn’t feel like she’s inside the circle, if certain people are always dominating the conversation in the comments, she won’t feel loved—and she will go away. Limit the back-and-forths with any one reader.
10. Touch readers’ emotions.

Your readers will speak up when you have made them feel something. In fact, you won’t be able to shut them up. Because you have touched a passion, a love, or an emotion.

How about you?

Have any of these worked for you?

Do you have others?

How to Choose the Key Analytics to Make Money With Your Blog


How to Choose the Key Analytics to Make Money With Your Blog
April 23, 2012 By Oluwalana Samuel 15 Comments


Make money with your blog

If you’re looking to grow or monetize your blog in any way, shape or form, then using analytics to target your content is key.

Not only do analytics let you know more about your traffic sources, they offer excellent intelligence into truly understanding your audience and their potential to move from readers into customers.

Simply put, the more you know about the content your readers (existing and new) are reading and looking for, the more you stand a chance of putting together a monetization strategy for your blog that makes sense for all parties.

Of course, it can be easier said than done to use analytics to monetize your blog, since by their very nature analytics can be information overload.

With that in mind, here are some ways you can filter your analytics to help take your blog to the next level of content creation and monetization.

Do You Concentrate on Search or Social?

There’s been a lot written in recent months about social networks negating the need for optimizing your blog for search (SEO, or search engine optimization).

While there’s no doubt social media has made SEO more challenging, there’s no reason to give up on SEO for social search. By understanding who your larger audience is made up of, this helps you determine what your options are for monetization.

For example, this is a snapshot of our traffic mix since the start of April here at For Bloggers By Bloggers (click to expand):


How to Choose the Key Analytics to Make Money With Your Blog
April 23, 2012 By Oluwalana Samuel 15 Comments


Make money with your blog

If you’re looking to grow or monetize your blog in any way, shape or form, then using analytics to target your content is key.

Not only do analytics let you know more about your traffic sources, they offer excellent intelligence into truly understanding your audience and their potential to move from readers into customers.

Simply put, the more you know about the content your readers (existing and new) are reading and looking for, the more you stand a chance of putting together a monetization strategy for your blog that makes sense for all parties.

Of course, it can be easier said than done to use analytics to monetize your blog, since by their very nature analytics can be information overload.

With that in mind, here are some ways you can filter your analytics to help take your blog to the next level of content creation and monetization.

Do You Concentrate on Search or Social?

There’s been a lot written in recent months about social networks negating the need for optimizing your blog for search (SEO, or search engine optimization).

While there’s no doubt social media has made SEO more challenging, there’s no reason to give up on SEO for social search. By understanding who your larger audience is made up of, this helps you determine what your options are for monetization.

For example, this is a snapshot of our traffic mix since the start of April here at For Bloggers By Bloggers (click to expand):

FBBB Analytics overview

If you look at the pie chart, the key source of traffic is organic search, which accounts for almost half of all visits, and twice as much as traffic from social networks.

So now that I know search is responsible for the majority of the traffic here, I could use that information to come up with some ideas to make money from that knowledge.

Breaking Down Knowledge Into Premium Ideas

The first thing I’d want to do is delve a little deeper into the kind of terms the search engines are sending this way. After all, it’s all well and good knowing search makes up for half the traffic, but what exactly does that 48%+ consist of?

Take a look at your top keywords in your analytics settings. This shows you what people are searching for when they click through to your blog.

The image below gives a clear indication of what’s bringing traffic here:

For a blog resource centre like For Bloggers By Bloggers, getting traffic for “how to get your blog noticed” is a pretty good result.

It’s also a potentially lucrative search, with over 177 million results on Google for the term – obviously people are looking for ways to help their blogs stand out from the millions of other bloggers on the web today.

So, now that I know this term is being searched for and bringing traffic here, I can do a few things with this information to monetize that search:

1. Since I’ve already written a post about how to get your blog noticed on here, I can update that by coming up with a premium ebook with some of the best tips around for getting your blog noticed. I can then add a link to the ebook (or, better still, a sales box on that post) and then optimize the content even more for that search term, to drive even more traffic.

2. If I did write that ebook, I could then pay for a Google advertising campaign, and really optimize the copy to be punchy and attention-grabbing, to complement the organic results I’m already getting. This gives me a win-win all round (as long as people bought the ebook, of course!).

3. I could create a premium webinar offering a visual overview of some of the ways bloggers could not only create the kind of content that would get their blog noticed, but all the other options to help with this goal (off-site promotion, blogger buddy groups, email customization, business cards, etc).

As you can see, once you know the details about what’s bringing traffic your way, you can come up with more than one way to make money from your knowledge and previous hard work.

And the great thing with an ebook is that all the work is done upfront – everything after that is simply passive income with every sale.
Making Money from the Social Networks

While there’s clearly a few options for creating revenue from search terms, as the pie chart showed search still accounted for less than half the traffic. The next major source is social network referrals, and this traffic also offers a great way to make money if the information is used properly.

Take a look at the social traffic breakdown for this site for the last three weeks:

How to Choose the Key Analytics to Make Money With Your Blog
April 23, 2012 By Danny Brown 8 Comments


Make money with your blog

If you’re looking to grow or monetize your blog in any way, shape or form, then using analytics to target your content is key.

Not only do analytics let you know more about your traffic sources, they offer excellent intelligence into truly understanding your audience and their potential to move from readers into customers.

Simply put, the more you know about the content your readers (existing and new) are reading and looking for, the more you stand a chance of putting together a monetization strategy for your blog that makes sense for all parties.

Of course, it can be easier said than done to use analytics to monetize your blog, since by their very nature analytics can be information overload.

With that in mind, here are some ways you can filter your analytics to help take your blog to the next level of content creation and monetization.

Do You Concentrate on Search or Social?

There’s been a lot written in recent months about social networks negating the need for optimizing your blog for search (SEO, or search engine optimization).

While there’s no doubt social media has made SEO more challenging, there’s no reason to give up on SEO for social search. By understanding who your larger audience is made up of, this helps you determine what your options are for monetization.

For example, this is a snapshot of our traffic mix since the start of April here at For Bloggers By Bloggers (click to expand):

FBBB Analytics overview

If you look at the pie chart, the key source of traffic is organic search, which accounts for almost half of all visits, and twice as much as traffic from social networks.

So now that I know search is responsible for the majority of the traffic here, I could use that information to come up with some ideas to make money from that knowledge.
Breaking Down Knowledge Into Premium Ideas

The first thing I’d want to do is delve a little deeper into the kind of terms the search engines are sending this way. After all, it’s all well and good knowing search makes up for half the traffic, but what exactly does that 48%+ consist of?

Take a look at your top keywords in your analytics settings. This shows you what people are searching for when they click through to your blog.

The image below gives a clear indication of what’s bringing traffic here:

Traffic Sources Overview Google Analytics

For a blog resource centre like For Bloggers By Bloggers, getting traffic for “how to get your blog noticed” is a pretty good result.

It’s also a potentially lucrative search, with over 177 million results on Google for the term – obviously people are looking for ways to help their blogs stand out from the millions of other bloggers on the web today.

So, now that I know this term is being searched for and bringing traffic here, I can do a few things with this information to monetize that search:

1. Since I’ve already written a post about how to get your blog noticed on here, I can update that by coming up with a premium ebook with some of the best tips around for getting your blog noticed. I can then add a link to the ebook (or, better still, a sales box on that post) and then optimize the content even more for that search term, to drive even more traffic.

2. If I did write that ebook, I could then pay for a Google advertising campaign, and really optimize the copy to be punchy and attention-grabbing, to complement the organic results I’m already getting. This gives me a win-win all round (as long as people bought the ebook, of course!).

3. I could create a premium webinar offering a visual overview of some of the ways bloggers could not only create the kind of content that would get their blog noticed, but all the other options to help with this goal (off-site promotion, blogger buddy groups, email customization, business cards, etc).

As you can see, once you know the details about what’s bringing traffic your way, you can come up with more than one way to make money from your knowledge and previous hard work.

And the great thing with an ebook is that all the work is done upfront – everything after that is simply passive income with every sale.
Making Money from the Social Networks

While there’s clearly a few options for creating revenue from search terms, as the pie chart showed search still accounted for less than half the traffic. The next major source is social network referrals, and this traffic also offers a great way to make money if the information is used properly.

Take a look at the social traffic breakdown for this site for the last three weeks:

Social Overview Google Analytics

As well as the usual subjects like Stumbleupon, Twitter, Facebook and Google+, there are also networks that many bloggers might not usually consider as a traffic source.

Hootsuite, for example, is known more as a social media dashboard rather than a direct source of traffic. But they have their own URL shortening service that a lot of people use, because it gives you analytics about tweets, clicks, etc.

Or paper.li, which is more a content curation platform and could be missed as a traffic source. But the strength of paper.li is the reason it’s a great traffic referrer, by offering a snippet of your content and a direct link to the full piece.

So, by ignoring the obvious and going for the more “niche” platforms, you now have the opportunity to grab the audience that wants more information on these platforms and how they can benefit your blog.

Again, one of the easiest ways to do this is via a premium ebook:

* Break down the different components of Hootsuite
* Educate bloggers how they can use the platform to search keyword terms
* Advise how to schedule tweets based on this information
* How to share targeted content over multiple connected accounts
* How you can measure success from the Hootsuite analytics and then schedule campaigns around the results

Or, if you’re looking to educate about paper.li, why don’t you create a premium, password-protected video with an overview of how the service works, how you create a feed that people want to read and share, how to write content that gets picked up by multiple paper.li accounts and more.

Again, by knowing what social networks are driving traffic to you, you can tailor premium content and products and then optimize your copy – as well as promote on these networks – to attract the traffic that would buy your creation.
More to Analytics Than Search

These are just some options for the search and social side of your analytics – there’s a lot, LOT more to choose from.

Again, understanding these other analytics is key to helping you come up with ideas on how to monetize either existing content on your blog, or creating completely new products or premium content to meet your visitors’ needs.

For example – how does your blog stack up on mobile visits?


How to Choose the Key Analytics to Make Money With Your Blog
April 23, 2012 By Danny Brown 8 Comments


Make money with your blog

If you’re looking to grow or monetize your blog in any way, shape or form, then using analytics to target your content is key.

Not only do analytics let you know more about your traffic sources, they offer excellent intelligence into truly understanding your audience and their potential to move from readers into customers.

Simply put, the more you know about the content your readers (existing and new) are reading and looking for, the more you stand a chance of putting together a monetization strategy for your blog that makes sense for all parties.

Of course, it can be easier said than done to use analytics to monetize your blog, since by their very nature analytics can be information overload.

With that in mind, here are some ways you can filter your analytics to help take your blog to the next level of content creation and monetization.

Do You Concentrate on Search or Social?

There’s been a lot written in recent months about social networks negating the need for optimizing your blog for search (SEO, or search engine optimization).

While there’s no doubt social media has made SEO more challenging, there’s no reason to give up on SEO for social search. By understanding who your larger audience is made up of, this helps you determine what your options are for monetization.

For example, this is a snapshot of our traffic mix since the start of April here at For Bloggers By Bloggers (click to expand):

FBBB Analytics overview

If you look at the pie chart, the key source of traffic is organic search, which accounts for almost half of all visits, and twice as much as traffic from social networks.

So now that I know search is responsible for the majority of the traffic here, I could use that information to come up with some ideas to make money from that knowledge.
Breaking Down Knowledge Into Premium Ideas

The first thing I’d want to do is delve a little deeper into the kind of terms the search engines are sending this way. After all, it’s all well and good knowing search makes up for half the traffic, but what exactly does that 48%+ consist of?

Take a look at your top keywords in your analytics settings. This shows you what people are searching for when they click through to your blog.

The image below gives a clear indication of what’s bringing traffic here:

Traffic Sources Overview Google Analytics

For a blog resource centre like For Bloggers By Bloggers, getting traffic for “how to get your blog noticed” is a pretty good result.

It’s also a potentially lucrative search, with over 177 million results on Google for the term – obviously people are looking for ways to help their blogs stand out from the millions of other bloggers on the web today.

So, now that I know this term is being searched for and bringing traffic here, I can do a few things with this information to monetize that search:

1. Since I’ve already written a post about how to get your blog noticed on here, I can update that by coming up with a premium ebook with some of the best tips around for getting your blog noticed. I can then add a link to the ebook (or, better still, a sales box on that post) and then optimize the content even more for that search term, to drive even more traffic.

2. If I did write that ebook, I could then pay for a Google advertising campaign, and really optimize the copy to be punchy and attention-grabbing, to complement the organic results I’m already getting. This gives me a win-win all round (as long as people bought the ebook, of course!).

3. I could create a premium webinar offering a visual overview of some of the ways bloggers could not only create the kind of content that would get their blog noticed, but all the other options to help with this goal (off-site promotion, blogger buddy groups, email customization, business cards, etc).

As you can see, once you know the details about what’s bringing traffic your way, you can come up with more than one way to make money from your knowledge and previous hard work.

And the great thing with an ebook is that all the work is done upfront – everything after that is simply passive income with every sale.
Making Money from the Social Networks

While there’s clearly a few options for creating revenue from search terms, as the pie chart showed search still accounted for less than half the traffic. The next major source is social network referrals, and this traffic also offers a great way to make money if the information is used properly.

Take a look at the social traffic breakdown for this site for the last three weeks:

Social Overview Google Analytics

As well as the usual subjects like Stumbleupon, Twitter, Facebook and Google+, there are also networks that many bloggers might not usually consider as a traffic source.

Hootsuite, for example, is known more as a social media dashboard rather than a direct source of traffic. But they have their own URL shortening service that a lot of people use, because it gives you analytics about tweets, clicks, etc.

Or paper.li, which is more a content curation platform and could be missed as a traffic source. But the strength of paper.li is the reason it’s a great traffic referrer, by offering a snippet of your content and a direct link to the full piece.

So, by ignoring the obvious and going for the more “niche” platforms, you now have the opportunity to grab the audience that wants more information on these platforms and how they can benefit your blog.

Again, one of the easiest ways to do this is via a premium ebook:

* Break down the different components of Hootsuite
* Educate bloggers how they can use the platform to search keyword terms
* Advise how to schedule tweets based on this information
* How to share targeted content over multiple connected accounts
* How you can measure success from the Hootsuite analytics and then schedule campaigns around the results

Or, if you’re looking to educate about paper.li, why don’t you create a premium, password-protected video with an overview of how the service works, how you create a feed that people want to read and share, how to write content that gets picked up by multiple paper.li accounts and more.

Again, by knowing what social networks are driving traffic to you, you can tailor premium content and products and then optimize your copy – as well as promote on these networks – to attract the traffic that would buy your creation.
More to Analytics Than Search

These are just some options for the search and social side of your analytics – there’s a lot, LOT more to choose from.

Again, understanding these other analytics is key to helping you come up with ideas on how to monetize either existing content on your blog, or creating completely new products or premium content to meet your visitors’ needs.

For example – how does your blog stack up on mobile visits?

Mobile Visitors Overview Google Analytics

While the current visitors on mobile platforms may not be huge in the grand scheme of things, I know personally that these numbers are growing all the time, and expect mobile browsing to be a huge part of this site’s experience in the next 12 months and beyond.

So, taking that into account, why not create a mobile app for your blog for the key platforms (in our case, iPad, Android and iPhone)? Services like appsbuilder and JoeMobi allow you to create a very affordable app across all the major networks.

Once you’ve built your app, you can then charge a small price (either a monthly subscription or a one-off fee, or ad sharing with the app developers) and again this gives you a nice passive income for a small investment upfront.

Or, if you delve into the analytics around your demographics, you can tailor premium content around your audience. Certain demographics might prefer ebooks; some might prefer digital educational downloads or membership sites; others may be better suited to webinars or subscription-based podcasts.

The methods open to you monetizing your blog are really dictated by the information you receive from your analytics. They help you be smart about your blog – all you need to do then is make your blog smart about the content produced for the audience you’re looking to attract and turn into buyers.

The ideas presented here are just a small part of what you can create – the rest is up to you.

Ready to make some money?

3 Marble Tile Varieties You Should Consider When Decorating Your Home



Marble tiles are the rage these days. Most of the time, people only choose between granite or marble when tiling the floor or the walls. In this article, we will look at three marble types you can wisely choose from. They are as follows: tumbled, white and black. After reading through the whole article, you should be able to have a high level grasp on which variety or combination you would want for your home.

Let us start with the tumbled marble tiles. If you want to have that ageless look in your home or you want your home to emanate a rustic charm then this type is the one you have been looking for. Elegance from randomness is an awesome way to tile your home. It gives people an enigmatic feeling much like abstract art does. This type can also be used to accent other types of tiles so it is definitely a perfect fit if you are looking to use more than one tile variety.

Of all the marble varieties out there, white marble tiles are the most popular ones. This variety gives you a sense of clarity and cleanness that no other tile type will give. It probably has to do more with the color than anything else. If you want to use this variety of tile, the top quality ones are Thassos and Bianco Laza. And since white is a neutral color, it can go well with other tile colors when you are considering using multiple tile varieties, colors, and styles.

On the other hand, black marble tiles are also well worth considering. Black is quality they say and that is true with this tile type. It is classy and just like the white marble, it can be combined with another neutral tone for a multiple marble type effect. Use this color and variety of marble if you want simplicity. Furthermore, darker colored marbles are less porous thus using this type brings added benefits. On another note, you should realize that although the black will polish to a brilliance not seen in other styles, it will also show dirt and dust with far more ease as well.

Given the information above, you should now be able to have a basic understanding on the popular marble varieties available commercially and help you decide which one to buy and use for your home. On a personal note, I believe, if you choose tile for your home, you will be very happy with the results.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/3124571