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Daniel Meade

The domain doesn't matter so much (in the context of redirecting).

I say "so-much" because local domains can perform better in their own country, but usually it's negligible.

If the site had content originally on the .com, and you've already built up some SEO value from that content, then using a 301 redirect will tell search engines the content has permanently moved, and so any wighting for the content should transfer to the new home.

Hmmm, ok will have a think. I dunno if having it on .co.uk and .com will flag it as spam with Google?

How does following up work for you? Do you get results from it?

I have a relatively high response rate when I do follow-ups, and I often respond to people who follow up with me (even if they didn't get a response the first time). What often happens is many people forget to respond.

Anyway, I think if your ask is modest and you keep things succinct, people are happy to respond. Of course, no wasting people's time 😄

would love to see a snippet of your follow up mail and even how you have set up trello for this :) THanks for sharing

I use Monzo, a new UK bank much like Revolut. It's awesome for breaking down your spending habits and allows you to save where you can afford to.

I couple that with the Moneybox app, which invests about £150pm for me into global index and property funds automatically.

I also dabble with investing (manually) in stocks & shares, and crypto markets.

I don't use any software to keep track of everything, I just keep a keen eye on the aforementioned services.

It depends on whether or not you discussed it with the client. Typically I give clients 7 days unless they request longer, never more than 30 days though.

Check out www.waveapps.com/ it's free, and very good. Even handles basic accounting for you etc.

Perfect! On it now. How long do you usually give people to pay?

It depends on whether or not you discussed it with the client. Typically I give clients 7 days unless they request longer, never more than 30 days though.

You can, but it's not the best practice.

If you want the whole area to be clickable, a better approach might be to add position: relative; to the parent element (the modal). Then add an empty Anchor element just before the closing tag of this element. Set the anchor to be absolutely positioned and span the full height and width of the parent.

You shouldn't need to, but one thing to be wary of with this approach is that you might need to adjust the z-index of the anchor element so that it always sits on top of the modal content.

Adsense and affiliate revenue for a site called "businessnoob" way back in 2008. Sold the site for £2000 and went to work for the co that acquired it (they shut it down).

I haven't, but I've often considered it. I'd like to know others experiences around this also.

I think for me the barrier is in justifying the upfront cost + running costs + maintenance time reqd vs the MRR. Typically SaaS co's (that I've seen) for sale want a valuation == 2 years MRR.