
If you've been following the site for a while, you know that I've been a MailChimp user since ... well, since the very beginning of my online adventure. Over time, though, things have started to get difficult. I mean, MailChimp is still cool and all, but sending my emails for free has become rather troublesome. Here's the entire story.

Here's what you can learn about gaining confidence when starting an online business from 13 expert entrepreneurs.

I've been doing some research lately, trying to find non-obvious marketing tactics and see how I can apply them to my business. Compiling this post took a lot of work, but I'm happy to finally share it with you today.

When you look at it, a to-do list shouldn't have a big learning curve. You should just be able to use it right away because in the grand scheme of things, the to-do list itself is not important. It's the tasks that are listed on it that are important.

A productivity tool does come handy. That's for sure. But which one to use? This is the question we'll answer today. Let's have a look at all 5 tools, their strong and weak sides, their purpose, their level of simplicity, their ease of use, their feature-richness, their GTD-friendliness, and their (assumed) target group of users.