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Home Forum / Community How to Make Effective Post Exchanges

How to Make Effective Post Exchanges

I wrote up this article to explain to others how to make effective post exchanges to promote the exchange partner's motivation to return good quality post exchanges to you. Enjoy this article and please reply with any comments, opinions, success stories and any other information you would like to provide.

First, we need to understand what a post exchange is. A post exchange is a partnership between one forum owner and another. The partnership is a mutual exchange of a certain number or continuing Post Exchange. Basically when a new forum is created, the owner need posts to help start it. He/she could make the posts themselves but other member posts will help boost traffic and get other users to join up. So the Post Exchange method has become popular in forum administration. You simply post on another forum and in exchange, the forum owner posts on your forum. This usually allows both of you to leave your forum link on your signature and open up more advertisement opportu

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nities.

Now we need to focus on how to make effective post exchanges. If you want good content on your forum, then you must give good content on other forums. Many people who conduct post partnerships don't really care about the content they give but when it comes to the posts they receive, they require the best. That is not a good exchange partnership. Do onto others as you want others to do onto you. Make quality posts and get them back in return.

There are three guidelines to keep in mind when wanting to have the best post partnership as possible and they are:

Be a member
 

Newsflash

Crude oil prices have been capturing many news headlines worldwide, be they are falling or rising. Crude oil has been demonstrating a sense of its importance to global consumers for the past couple of years. In the past, many economies had failed to adeptly face crude oil price shocks of 1974 and again in 1979. This time around the shock was building up steadily. Most economies, developed and developing, had the knowledge of this built-up and had prepared to face this shock.

Between 2001 and 2004, the OPEC Reference Basket of crude oil was in the range of US$20 and US$40 a barrel. In 2006, it rose to over US$70 a barrel before receding to current level of US$55 a barrel. Though it should be noted that in real term these crude oil prices are still below those heralded in the early 1980s, when the crude oil basket had reached US$85 a barrel at today's prices. In July 2006, the US light crude oil touc

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