Thursday, November 20, 2008

Understanding the Difference in Health Insurance

Choosing the right health insurance plan is a top priority, but understanding the differences in health insurance can be a daunting task. Depending on where you live you may have various choices of companies and products within each company or be limited to just a few. A consumer can choose between a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO), Point-of-Service (POS), and Preferred Provider Organization (PPO).

The difference with an HMO plan is that the insured pays a monthly premium and a small, co-pay, typically around $25 for doctor's visits. The HMO covers the cost for XRAYS, hospitalization, care, and laboratory test. There is no deductible to meet before care is covered and usually a smaller out-of-pocket cost, if any. However, an HMO requires the insured see doctors only within the HMO network. The insured must maintain a primary care doctor who provides a referral to see a specialist and the wait to see doctors is typically longer. Monthly premiums are typically lower than most plans and as long as a patient stays in-network, co-pays are lower and they are not required to pay co-insurance.

A POS plan is an HMO that allows patients to refer themselves to specialist outside the plan instead of being required to visit their primary care doctor first for a referral. If a patient makes a referral outside of network the patient will be obligated to pay a co-insurance; however, if the primary care doctor refers the patient out of network, the cost is typically covered.

A PPO plan requires patients to see doctors within their network or preferred provider group to receive the most coverage; however, patients are able to see any doctor they prefer at a higher cost. A PPO plan pays for preventative care while the patient pays a co-pay and then covers other procedures after a patient has met a set deductible.

The difference with a PPO plan is a patient is required to pay co-insurance and meet a deductible before receiving services. A deductible is a predetermined amount that a patient must pay before a plan starts paying its portion of the plan's co-insurance and usually does not include doctors, office visits. The average deductibles range from $250-$5,000. Co-insurance is the amount the plan is willing to pay for non-office visit procedures such as a visit to the hospital. Co-insurance is broken down into percentages with the average amount being paid by the insurance company as 80% of the cost for service. However, some plans do offer a 70/30 split which will lower a patient's premium.

Deciding on health insurance is a tough decision, but knowing the difference in plans will help a patient make an informed one. Patients can contact the plans in their state through their websites or insurance agents and follow this guide to pick the right plan for themselves and their families.

Katie Appleby is an accomplished niche website developer and author. To learn more about health insurance please visit Affordable Health Insurance Today for current articles and discussions.

Skin care tips

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Game Lineups For 2008

July 2008 held E3, the biggest convention in the world where hardware, electronic devices, and game consoles come together in an effort to look back on the past year and to figure out what's in stall for them for the next few months. Most of all, it was in E3 2008 where game developers talked about their previously-released games and the ones they will release soon.

So far, PS3 has been the unanimous vote for having a game lineup which has many players excited. This can be due to the release of Metal Gear Solid 4 last June. This year also saw the release of Devil May Cry 4: Special Edition, which many have been clamoring to buy.

However, Xbox is not to be left behind. This year Fable 2 coming out, the sequel to the game with an amazing storyline and graphics. It looks like Fable 2 will be following fans' expectations and getting better gameplay with wonderful graphics. And there's always the wait Rock Band 2, where even non-exclusive gamers are buying to get the taste of rocking out their favorite songs.

There are still no updates for the use of the Wii Fit, but Nintendo's release for Wii has The House for the Head: Overkill is a transition from the arcade to its home-based console. Nintendo DS also has many lineups, one of them including the anticipated sequel to Phoenix Wright, with the recently released Ace Attorney Apollo Justice.

Some of the game lineups are for multi-platforms, just like the previously PS exclusive Final Fantasy XIII, which will utilize both the Xbox 360 and the PS3. Nevertheless, the 2008 game lineups have been amazing so far, and there are still a few months to go.

http://www.theaffiliatewarehouse.com

Paul Collins is a very successful businessman and diversed into many things throughout his career, As Business Development and Marketing Manager, Paul managed all aspects of controlling over 100 retail units in the U.K. Very much involved with Franchising and Business opportunities, always willing to help and advise, Paul has helped many people on the road to starting there own businesses. Paul has owned and run successful retail units, franchises and printing Companies, the most recent project was overseeing and advising on a expansion of a local magazine.

Paul is also an internet marketing expert and has many successes at making money on the internet.

http://www.theaffiliatewarehouse.com

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Free Online Games at GamingBooth


Gaming Booth is a great free online games arcade that offers over 5,000 games. My favorite game is Onslaught 2. Check out the site and see which game is your favorite.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Automatic Blog News Updates With Industrious Marketing

Whether you have been marketing for a while or not, successful or not, you have probably heard that the money is in the list.

You have most likely heard that you need to automate with autoresponders and get traffic using the seo power blogs.

The question is, how do you do all of this so that is doesn't take up a whole lot of time and once set up, runs pretty much on its own.

The following is how I do it and is a suggestion of how you can do this too.

First you need three things:

1. A list

2. A blog

3. An autoresponder

How to get a list

You can start building a list simply by joining giveaway events as a contributor and setting up a free gift and a squeeze page. A squeeze page is simply a regular html page with a brief description of what you are offering and an autoresponder sign up form embedded in the page. A good place to find out about upcoming giveaway events are www.giveawayannouncer.com and www.componga.com/announcer.

Setting up your Blog

You can easily set up a free blog either with Wordpress or Blogger, depending on your needs for functionality. You need a blog versus a regular html page because of the built in RSS feed. If you don't like blogs, you can set up a CMS site as long as it has an RSS feed built in. You should post to your blog on an average of at least three days. You can also automate this task but more on that in a bit.

Setting up your autoresponder

Your autoresponder is the coup de-grace of this plan because you can set it up with as many messages as you choose to send to your list and with a good autoresponder service like Aweber, you can include your blogs RSS feed to send your posts to your list when they are made.

The last recommended thing to do to further automate your autoresponder and blog posts sent to your list is to write advance blog posts and time stamp them for future posting dates.

There you have it! A simple yet effective way to grow your list through autoresponders and squeeze pages and an even simpler method of delivering your messages and blog content to the list you will be growing.

Andrew Witherspoon - The Industrious Marketer is an expert infopreneur and internet marketer who believes that success is measured by the obstacles you overcome while trying to succeed. Visit http://blognews.componga.com for more information on automating your blog updates.