Problem: Article: Open your Internet browser and click the address bar at the top of the screen. Type in www.bubblews.com, hit Enter, and you will be redirected to the Bubblews home page. Do this by enter your email address and password on the fields provided. Once logged in, you will be on the news feed page of your Bubblews account. Scroll through the news feed until you find the post that you want to share. Once you find it, click on the title to open the Bubblews post. Once you have the post open, you can share it using five different social media sites. These share buttons are to the left of the article.
Summary: Head to the Bubblews website. Log into your Bubblews account. Search for the post you want to share. Open the post.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: In particular, it can help you if you:   Belong to a company that is not well known Can't always find the right person at a large company to sell to Are looking for leads for big ticket items Are selling to companies where nobody picks up a phone any more LinkedIn selling is somewhat limited if you are selling to individuals. LinkedIn is great for finding leads.  But if you are already in contact with the right people at prospect companies, it won't be very helpful. The Premium accounts will help you find the right buyers and contact them.   When you search with a Premium account, you will be able to read the full name of the people you find in search. Premium account holders can also send a limited number of "LinkedIn InMails" directly to the sales prospects they find.  They are "guaranteed opened," meaning, if the person you are trying to contact does not open the message in seven days, your credit is refunded and you get to try with someone else. Sales accounts cost USD$ a few hundred to USD$1000 per year. LinkedIn search is pretty user friendly, but it still takes a bit of practice to get the right people to come back on the search.   You probably already know who the economic buyers for your product are, but you may not know what their job titles are. For example, if you want to set up meetings with materials managers of food manufacturing companies, you simply set your search filter to show you people in food manufacturing with title material manager. You may need to specify additional keywords to get the exact list of people you are looking for. InMails are messages sent via LinkedIn to the prospect you want to contact.   Consider hand crafting the message to the prospect.  LinkedIn only gives you a limited number of InMails, and charges you for them, so you want to make each one count.   LinkedIn fits the VITO letter model a lot more than the smile and dial model. Remember that putting in a personal note referencing your connection to the prospect increases your success dramatically. Since you only have a limited number of InMails, you may want to use other ways of contacting prospects that you can find without LinkedIn.  You can try:   Guessing their email address. Using a lead database. Phone call Facebook messages.  Facebook also charges for premium emails, but sometimes it is pretty cheap. LinkedIn lets you see the contacts of your contacts, some of which could be sales prospects.   Make a list of your happy/reference customers who might introduce you to their friends. Add these customers as connections on LinkedIn. Browse your customers' connections.  You will find some connections that could also be sales prospects for you. You can approach these new prospects in several ways.  You can hit them with an InMail, do a LinkedIn introduction request (which does not count against your InMail quota), contact them offline, or ask your customer for an introduction. Note that adding your customers as your connections can have risks.  A clever competitor sales rep might be able to see who you are connected to unless you set your privacy correctly.  You can avoid this by hiding your connections.

SUMMARY: Know that LinkedIn is very powerful in getting sales leads. Know when LinkedIn cannot help you. Consider signing up for a Premium LinkedIn sales account. Determine the job titles of your sales prospects, so that you can search for them. Contact your prospects via LinkedIn InMails. Don't waste your InMails. Use LinkedIn for reference selling.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: "  Learning to count by twos, fives, and tens to 100 will improve your child's understanding of number relationships and begin to provide easy reference points. "  "Doubles" are math facts such as "3 + 3 = 6" or "8 + 8 = 16."  Again, these facts provide easy reference points as students learn to add.  A child who knows instinctively that "8 + 8 = 16," for example, can more easily figure out the sum of "8 + 9" by simply adding one to the total. Try grouping cards by fact families to emphasize the relationships among these numbers.  While students should recognize how numbers interact with each other, rote memorization of basic math facts will provide a complementary foundation for moving on to more complicated arithmetic.
Summary: Instruct children in "skip counting. Encourage children to memorize "doubles. Use flash cards to stimulate memorization.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Most people who sell scrap copper don't rely on finding it by chance. They have sources on which they rely to find a steady supply of copper to sell.  For example, you might be able to set up an agreement with an appliance repair store to pick up damaged goods you know contain copper.  They might be happy to allow you to recycle what would otherwise wind up in a landfill. Cut wires off the outside.  Wire can be snipped off of TV’s and monitors with scissors.  Cut off the plugs from the end to add to your brass pile.  The small black boxes on charging cables can be cut off and put in your transformer pile.  Search inside for insulated wires and connectors.  Thinner insulated copper wires can be found throughout old laptops, VCR’s and DVD players. Take apart desktop computer towers to find the ribbon wire and insulated connectors in the board and hard drive. Large appliances are often sold for steel.  But don’t forget to look inside for copper wiring. Small appliances such as coffee makers, AC units, fans, blenders and toasters may all have copper wiring inside. Small electronics, such as cell phones, cameras and hand-held games are good places to search for copper wire. Electricians scrape up electrical wire for scrap during demolition.  Plumbing materials also contain copper and brass.  Always check with the owner or a construction supervisor before taking copper away from a property that you do not own.  Even if you are being paid to clean a demolition site, that does not give you a claim to the wire or any other materials you find there. Look for old statues or décor.  Old garden gnomes, statues and other lawn ornaments may contain copper.  In addition, sometimes roofing material is made from copper sheeting.  Roofing copper is recyclable and environmentally friendly. Unless you have permission to remove copper from a property you do not own, it is considered theft.  Copper theft has been on the rise since the value of copper started to increase in 2004.  CNBC refers to copper theft as an epidemic that is sweeping the United States.  The FBI states that copper theft is threatening the infrastructure of the United States.  Thieves are targeting electrical sub-stations, cellular towers, telephone land lines, railroads, water wells, construction sites, and vacant homes.  Delivery of electricity, water, telecommunications, transportation and security and emergency services is disrupted.  This poses a threat to public safety and national security.  Businesses are taking steps to protect themselves from copper theft.  They are installing security cameras, securing metals in locked areas, installing alarms, limiting access to buildings and increasing lighting.  In many states, the difference between a misdemeanor and a felony has to do with the value of items stolen.  Since copper is so valuable, copper thieves are often charged with a felony when caught.  Also, since copper thieves can knock out traffic lights or disrupt 911 services, other felony charges such as disrupting public service may be filed.
Summary:
Find specific sources of copper that are always reliable. Find copper wire inside old electronics. Search construction and remodeling sites. Look for copper in your home. Understand the consequences of copper theft.