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Monday, April 30, 2012

Slaughter house ETP Design 500 KLD Capacity By saleem asraf syed imdaadullah


Slaughter house ETP Design 500 KLD Capacity By saleem asraf syed imdaadullah





  • FLOW CHART

    • Influent → Coarse screening → oil trap → Equalization - drum solid separator → DAF (FOG recovery) → Primary clarifier → Anaerobic reactor (UASB) → Aerobic Aeration tank 1 - clarifier 1 - Aeration tank 2 - clarifier 2 - disinfection tank →pressure sand filter - activated carbon filter - Coagulation + UF/MF → RO → (Permeate → reuse) ; RO concentrate → Evaporator or MD → Crystallizer → Solids offsite/disposal.
  • Assumptions (used everywhere)

    • Plant flow (average): Q = 500 m³/day = 20.833 m³/hr (continuous).

    • Representative influent (from your earlier inputs / typical slaughterhouse): COD 5,000 mg/L, BOD₅ = 2,000 mg/L, TSS = 2,000 mg/L, FOG = 1,000 mg/L.

    • Anaerobic (UASB) COD removal: 65% (design basis). Result used downstream. 

    • Design safety / sizing factors: apply 20–30% spare capacity or safety factor on hydraulic areas/ membrane areas and 30% on membrane area unless noted. Where design ranges exist I choose conservative mid/high values for reliability. Design references are shown inline


    1) Coarse screening

    Purpose: remove rags, large bones, plastics; protect downstream pumps/ drum screen.

    Design:

    • Bar spacing: 10 mm (coarse) for slaughterhouse (use a finer 6 mm if many small solids).

    • Peak/continuous flow: 21 m³/hr → choose screening capacity for 30 m³/hr to allow surges.

    • Typical item: coarse channel screen or perforated step screen. Provide a wash/compactor or manual basket.

    • Headloss: design ~10–50 mm. Provide trash bin sized for daily accumulation (estimate ~10–20 kg/day coarse solids; depends on operations).

    Recommendation: stainless steel (SS304/316) with a bypass manual screen and access for cleaning.


    2) Oil trap / grease interceptor (before equalization)

    Purpose: remove free-floating oils/grease to reduce downstream fouling.

    Design basis & calculation:

    • Use 2 hours hydraulic detention (typical interceptor detention 30 min–2 hr for food industry grease traps; choose 2 hr to be conservative). 

    • Volume = Q_hr × detention = 20.833 m³/hr × 2 hr = 41.7 m³.

    • Use two compartments (inlet baffle + separation zone + cleanout sump). Depth ~1.2–1.8 m. For compact footprint pick 1.5 m depth → plan area = 41.7 / 1.5 = 27.8 m² → e.g., 7 m × 4 m footprint.

    Notes: provide skimming port, access manholes, sludge/grease collection tray. Material: GRP or SS depending on budget.


    3) Equalization tank (with drum solid separator)

    Purpose: dampen flow/load variations; allow coarse solids separation (drum screen) and chemical dosing if needed.

    Design assumptions:

    • For high-strength slaughterhouse waste, recommended EQ storage = 1–1.5 days to homogenize and give time for downstream chemical dosing/pH adjustments. I’ll size 1.5 days as in earlier plan. 

    Calculation:

    • Volume = Q × 1.5 day = 500 m³/day × 1.5 = 750 m³.

    • Provide mixing (slow mixers) to avoid short-circuiting; mechanical mixers or coarse bubble aeration to prevent septic conditions. If anaerobic pre-treatment is used immediately after EQ, DO control may be needed.

    • Drum screen: install as bypass/inline solids removal inside EQ: design for continuous throughput ~21 m³/hr. Typical drum screen flux (vendor dependent) handles dozens to hundreds m³/hr per unit; specify vendor model for Q=25 m³/hr with 1–2 mm perforations. Provide rakes, wash water and 1.5–2 hour solids hopper.

    Recommendation: EQ as rectangular concrete tank in 2 compartments (settling & buffer) with level control for equalization and automatic dosing skid for coagulant / pH if needed.


    4) DAF (FOG recovery)

    Purpose: remove dissolved/ emulsified oils & greases, remaining floatables; concentrate FOG for rendering or digestion.

    Design criteria (industry ranges):

    • Hydraulic Loading Rate (HLR) for DAF in meat processing: typically 5–10 m³/m²·hr (high-rate DAF); many vendors design 4–10 m³/m²·hr. I choose 6 m³/m²·hr (conservative, compact). 

    Calculation:

    • Hourly flow Qh = 20.833 m³/hr.

    • Required DAF area A = Qh / HLR = 20.833 / 6 = 3.472 m². Apply practical plate-pack geometry (effective area multiplies by plate factor 3–6). Choose a plate-pack DAF with plate pack factor 5 → actual tank footprint ≈ 3.472 / 5 = 0.695 m² (very compact) — vendors typically give modular units; choose a standard DAF rated for 25 m³/hr.

    • Typical recycle (saturation) ratio 10–20% → design recirc pump capacity ~ 5 m³/hr and air saturator at 4–6 barg. Sludge (float) concentration: 3–6% solids; expected daily DAF float ~ 200–350 kg dry solids (depends on FOG/TSS removal %).

    Notes: include polymer/coagulant dosing skid upstream, skimmer and float hopper with pump to sludge tank. Material: SS316 recommended.


    5) Primary clarifier (after DAF)

    Purpose: remove remaining settleable solids before biological treatment.

    Design criteria:

    • Surface overflow rate (SOR) for primary clarifiers (industrial): 25–40 m³/m²·day average. I’ll use 30 m³/m²·day (conservative). 

    Calculation:

    • Flow Q = 500 m³/day.

    • Area A = Q / SOR = 500 / 30 = 16.67 m². Add 30% safety factor → ~21.7 m². Choose a circular clarifier: area πD²/4 = 21.7 → D = sqrt(4×21.7/π) = ≈5.26 m → choose 6 m diameter clarifier.

    • Depth: 3.0–3.5 m. Volume ≈ area × depth ≈ 21.7 × 3.5 ≈ 76 m³. Provide sludge hopper and scum removal.

    Notes: Provide inlet baffle, flow-distribution box, sludge withdrawal pump to sludge handling.


    6) Anaerobic reactor — UASB 

    Purpose: remove bulk COD, generate biogas for energy recovery.

    Design basis used earlier (restated with steps):

    • COD influent = 2,500 kg/day (500 m³ × 5,000 mg/L). Design OLR = 4 kg COD/m³·day (conservative/mid-range for UASB on high-strength wastes). 

    Calculation:

    • Required UASB volume = COD load / OLR = 2,500 / 4 = 625 m³.

    • HRT = Volume / Q = 625 / 500 = 1.25 day = 30 hours. (UASB HRTs typically 12–48 hr for strong wastes; 30 h is conservative.) 

    • COD removal expected ≈ 60–70% → design 65% (1,625 kg/day removed). Remainder COD to aerobic stage ≈ 875 kg/day → concentration post-UASB ~1,750 mg/L COD.

    • Gas handling: CH₄ ≈ 0.35 m³ CH₄/kg COD removed → CH₄ ≈ 569 m³/day. Provide gas holder, condensate trap, H₂S mitigation (if H₂S high), flare/CHP skid. 

    Reactor geometry & internals: typical UASB height 4–6 m; provide gas–solid–liquid separator (GSL), influent distribution, sludge withdrawal. Material: concrete with internal lining or FRP/steel if modular.


    7) Aerobic treatment — Aeration tank 1 → Clarifier 1 → Aeration tank 2 → Clarifier 2 → Disinfection

    You specified two-stage aerobic with two clarifiers. I size the total aerobic system to reach polishing BOD ≈ <30 mg/L (ready for filtration + RO).

    Design approach: compute required aerobic volume from remaining BOD load after UASB and volumetric loading (kg BOD/m³·day).

    Step A — Estimate BOD load to aerobic:

    • Influent BOD load = 500 × 2,000 mg/L = 1,000 kg BOD/day.

    • Assume UASB removes 60% BOD (approx. aligned with COD removal), so BOD to aerobic = 1,000 × (1 − 0.60) = 400 kg/day. (This matches earlier quick calc.)

    Step B — Aerobic volumetric loading (typical):

    • For high-strength industrial effluent use volumetric organic loading (VLR) = 1.5 kg BOD/m³·day (conservative high-rate design). Range 0.5–3 kg/m³·day used in literature; 1.5 is reasonable for reliable removal. 

    Calculation:

    • Aeration basin total volume V = BOD to treat / VLR = 400 / 1.5 = 266.7 m³.

    • Split into two identical aeration tanks: V1 = V2 = 133.3 m³.

    • HRT total = V / Q = 266.7 / 500 = 0.533 day = 12.8 hr → per tank ≈ 6.4 hr HRT each (reasonable for high-rate activated sludge). 

    MLSS / SRT (guidance):

    • Choose MLSS near 3,500–4,500 mg/L for strong industrial BOD; pick 4,000 mg/L.

    • Calculate biomass mass: X × V = 4 kg/m³ × 266.7 m³ = 1,066.8 kg MLSS (total volatile solids basis).

    • Required sludge wasting (to maintain SRT) depends on chosen SRT; pick SRT = 8–12 days for conventional AS (choose 10 days). Then waste sludge VSS/day ≈ biomass / SRT = 1,066.8 / 10 = 106.7 kg VSS/day (dewater accordingly).

    Aeration (O₂) requirement:

    • O₂ required for carbonaceous BOD removal ≈ 1.42 kg O₂ / kg BOD removed (standard). So O₂ = 400 × 1.42 = 568 kg O₂/day

    • Aeration energy estimate: Standard Aeration Efficiency (SAE) for fine-bubble diffused aeration around 2.5 kg O₂/kWh (practical). Electrical energy ≈ O₂ / SAE = 568 / 2.5 = 227 kWh/day → average power ≈ 9.5 kW. (This is an indicative figure; blower and diffuser selection will refine it.) 

    Clarifiers (secondary) sizing:

    • Secondary clarifier SOR design basis: 30 m³/m²·day average (range 24–33). I’ll use 30 m³/m²·day. Include RAS flow in calculation (assume RAS = 100% of influent flow, i.e., equal to 500 m³/day). So flow to clarifier = influent (500) + RAS (500) = 1,000 m³/day

    • Area per clarifier = (flow to be treated by that clarifier) / SOR. If you have two parallel trains, each clarifier handles 500 m³/day influent + 500 m³/day RAS split — practical approach: two trains each sized for 500 influent + RAS 500 → clarifier area per train = 1,000 / 30 = 33.33 m². Add 20% safety → ~40 m². Choose circular clarifier diameter: D = sqrt(4×40/π) ≈ 7.14 m → pick 7.5 m dia, depth 3.5 m.

    Notes: provide scum removal, RAS pumps sized to maintain RAS rate (100% of influent) and sludge wasting pumps sized for 106.7 kg VSS/day to dewatering.


    8) Disinfection tank

    Purpose: final pathogen control before filtration and RO feed.

    Design:

    • If using chlorination (or sodium hypochlorite) for non-potable reuse: typical contact time 15–30 min at designed residual; but since water later goes to RO (which will remove pathogens) you can use modest disinfection. For a conservative design use 30 min contact time.

    • Volume = Q_hr × contact time = 20.833 m³/hr × 0.5 hr = 10.42 m³ (for 30 min). Depth 2–3 m → area ≈ 10.42 / 2.5 = 4.17 m² (say 2 × 2.5 m tanks in series).

    Notes: If using UV, design as per UV vendor (based on UVT and flow), and you can omit long contact time.


    9) Pressure sand filter (PSF) → Activated carbon filter (GAC) → Coagulation + UF/MF

    Purpose: final particulate removal and taste/odor/organics polishing to protect RO.

    Pressure Sand Filter (rapid sand / multimedia)

    Design:

    • Filtration rate: 5–10 m³/m²·hr for pressure sand (pick 6 m³/m²·hr conservative). 

    • Flow for reuse water (after disinfection it's still 500 m³/day incoming, but we intend to send RO feed after coag+UF; we should size filters for RO feed flow which is the permeate target + recycle; practically RO feed = UF permeate ≈ ~400 m³/day permeate but feed to RO is 500? To be safe, filter the full plant flow or the UF feed. I’ll size filters for 500 m³/day = 20.833 m³/hr).

    • Area = Qh / rate = 20.833 / 6 = 3.47 m². Use two units in parallel for service/cleaning; each ~2 m² (e.g., 1.6 m dia pressure vessels).

    Activated Carbon Filter (GAC)

    Design:

    • Empty bed contact time (EBCT) typical 10–20 minutes for organics removal. Choose 15 min.

    • Volume = Q_hr × EBCT = 20.833 m³/hr × 0.25 hr = 5.21 m³ EBCT. Two parallel vessels, each 2.6 m³. Bed depth 0.8–1.0 m → footprint modest. Service flow velocity and contact time controlled.

    Coagulation + UF/MF (pre-RO polishing)

    Coagulation: Jar-tests required; typical dosing alum/Fe + polymer before UF.

    UF sizing (pre-RO):

    • Earlier we used UF flux 50 L/m²·hr typical for industrial UF with robust membranes. That gave area ≈ 417 m²; add 20% → ~500 m². (UF flux varies widely; vendors will provide module counts.) 

    Practical UF layout: choose skid with multiple modules (e.g., 20–40 modules) and CIP system. UF retentate returned to sludge handling or to anaerobic digest as co-substrate (if acceptable).


    10) Reverse Osmosis (RO) — staged for high recovery

    Purpose: produce high-quality permeate for reuse and generate concentrate for ZLD.

    Design assumptions & basis:

    • Target RO recovery 80% single-pass (common for industrial brackish), producing 400 m³/day permeate and 100 m³/day brine. Adjust antiscalant and pH for scaling ions. 

    • Choose conservative RO flux 15 L/m²·hr for challenging feed (low flux prevents rapid fouling).

    • Permeate hourly flow = 400 m³/day ÷ 24 = 16.667 m³/hr = 16,667 L/hr.

    • Required membrane area = 16,667 L/hr ÷ 15 L/m²·hr = 1,111 m². Add 30% safety / spare → ~1,444 m² total membrane area. (Vendors will quote element counts; e.g., 8-inch elements ~37 m² each — you'd need ~39 elements; multiply by staging and arrays.)

    RO high-pressure pump energy: typical range 3–7 kWh/m³ depending on salinity and configurations. Use 4 kWh/m³ baseline → RO electrical = 400 × 4 = 1,600 kWh/day (indicative). 

    Notes: include antiscalant, acid dosing, high-pressure pump with VFD, permeate polishing line, concentrate recirculation piping.


    11) RO concentrate → Evaporator (or Membrane Distillation) → Crystallizer (ZLD)

    Purpose: concentrate brine to solids; produce dry salts for disposal — achieve Zero Liquid Discharge.

    Design approach (as before):

    • Brine from RO: 100 m³/day. Target final liquid <10 m³/day (overall 98% recovery). Need to evaporate 90 m³/day (convert to vapor). 

    Evaporator energy estimate:

    • Multi-effect evaporators with thermal integration typically ~100–200 kWh(th)/m³ evaporated depending on feed and number of effects. Use 150 kWh(th)/m³ for planning → thermal energy = 90 × 150 = 13,500 kWh(th)/day. (If MD chosen, low-grade heat can be used; MD energy may be less electrical but needs heat input and has scale/maintenance issues.) 

    Crystallizer & solids handling:

    • Expected solids mass: depends on salt concentration in RO brine (unknown without analysis). For conservative mass-balance: if initial dissolved solids (TDS) ~10,000–30,000 mg/L machine, solids produced could be hundreds to a few thousand kg/day. Pilot crystallizer tests will fix numbers. Provide conveyors, rotary drier or filter press to produce dry salt cake, storage shelter and transport arrangements.

    Recommendation: integrate UASB biogas into a steam boiler or thermal oil loop to supply part of evaporator heat (biogas from UASB ~569 m³ CH₄/day ≈ 5,653 kWh thermal — realistically supply ~40% of evaporator heat). Evaluate fossil fuel backup and heat recovery from engines/CHP. 


    12) Solids offsite / disposal

    • DAF float: concentrated FOG and solids (3–6% solids) — send for rendering, co-digestion, or dewater and landfill as per regulations.

    • Primary/secondary sludge: dewater (centrifuge/belt press) to 20–30% DS, then compost, incinerate or co-process depending on local rules. Expected dewatered cake ~200–500 kg DS/day (estimate). Pilot and lab dewatering tests required. 


    Quick summary table (key numbers)

    • Flow: 500 m³/day

    • Oil trap volume: ~42 m³ (2 hr detention)

    • EQ tank: 750 m³ (1.5 day) with drum screen (rated ~25–30 m³/hr)

    • DAF area: ~3.5 m² (plate pack unit, vendor module for 25 m³/hr)

    • Primary clarifier: ~22 m² area → choose 6 m dia × 3.5 m depth (vol ~95 m³)

    • UASB: 625 m³ (HRT 30 hr), CH₄ ≈ 569 m³/day

    • Aeration tanks (total): 266.7 m³ (two tanks of 133.3 m³ each), total HRT 12.8 hr

    • Secondary clarifiers: area per clarifier ~40 m² (choose 7.5 m dia) — two trains

    • Disinfection tank: ~10.4 m³ (30 min contact)

    • PSF area: ~3.5 m² (2 units parallel)

    • GAC EBCT volume: ~5.2 m³ (two vessels)

    • UF area (pre-RO): ~500 m² (vendor modules)

    • RO membrane area: ~1,444 m² (flux 15 L/m²·hr, 80% recovery)

    • RO permeate: 400 m³/day; brine: 100 m³/day

    • Evaporator duty (to evaporate 90 m³/day): ~13,500 kWh(th)/day (planning basis)

    • Aeration O₂: ~568 kg O₂/day → aeration energy ≈ 227 kWh/day (indicative)

    • RO electrical: ~1,600 kWh/day (indicative)

    • Pilot / testing required for RO fluxes, UF flux, DAF performance, evaporator energy and crystallizer solids composition.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

How not to mismanage constipation

Source: http://herbsforever.org/2012/04/mismanage-constipation/

Good and health digestion consist of two vital factors: appropriate assimilation of the dietary nutrients and regular elimination of the waste product from the body. Transportation of stool in the body again takes place in two phases — forward motions activity of the colon and expulsion of feces from the rectum. Constipation in caused when any of these aspects is interfered with, resulting in the failure of eliminating stools regularly and satisfactorily.


1.  Ayurveda advises everybody to get up at dawn and first of all drink a glass of water which is kept overnight in a copper vessel.


2. All able-bodies persons should go out for at least 30 minutes of walk everyday,


3. One cup OATS every morning for breakfast.


4. The consumption of bulk and roughage-producing food which is at the same time easily digestible is the first dietary improvement a patient of constipation should adopt.
Wholegrain ‘atta’, leafly vegetables, unpolished lentils and moderate use of lubricants like milk and butter facilitate proper formation and passing out of the stools. Kitchen spices should be used in a balanced way so that these should only help proper digestion and not cause acidity.

5. Atleast two - three liters of water in a day.
Heavy and fried food items like those made of ‘maida’ such as bread and ‘naan’ and junk and fast food are slow to digest. Similarly, fruits like apple, pomegranate and unripe banana and grains like polished rice also cause constipation to a majority of patients.

6. Dinner atleast two hours before sleep time.
#Constipation #Ayurveda

Sunday, April 08, 2012

NAMES FOR MUSLIM CHILDREN

NAMES FOR MUSLIM CHILDREN BY MOULANA RAFEEQ HATHURANI

ONLINE SOURCE: http://www.786umno.com/kids.htm

NAMES FOR MUSLIM CHILDREN

NAMES FOR MUSLIM CHILDREN BY MOULANA RAFEEQ HATHURANI

ONLINE SOURCE: http://www.786umno.com/kids.htm

Thursday, April 05, 2012

MICROJOB SITES MAKING MONEY ONLINE BY DOING SMALL JOBS

MICROJOB SITES 

1.www.fiverr.com

2.www.gigbucks.com

3.www.fittytown.com

4.www.twentyville.com

Please register for online earning by doing small jobs online.your payments will come through paypal.

Read more....http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120404/jobs.htm#13




Making money online
Get into the GIG league 
Abhishek Joshi

Are you looking for ways to supplement your current income?

Have you been feeling that earning money online could be your thing, but don't know how to go about it?

Have you been sitting on the fence letting apprehensions like Internet fraud grow on you?

Would you love to market your skills online in the global marketplace?

Or are you looking for a fun way to earn some extra dough in your spare time?

If your answer to any of the above questions is "yes", then numerous microjob sites giving you an opportunity to do "gigs" at fixed prices could be just what you've been looking for.

What is it all about?

Simply put, there are websites where people share things they are willing to do for a fixed price tag that could range from $2 to $50 or even more. People list gigs ranging from writing articles, designing website headers, setting up a website and writing a resume to making someone laugh, drawing a caricature or giving expert advice.

How does it work?

You create a gig for a small service you are willing to offer; you share the gig with the world. Every time your gig is ordered and after you successfully complete an order, depending on the website's terms and conditions and after they deduct their cut from the amount the buyer has paid, you could withdraw your earnings through an online payment processor like Paypal (You could sign up for a free Paypal account at Paypal.com).

What gigs can you offer?

Your gig could be in line with your professional expertise or hobby. Or anything else that is worthwhile. Check out other people's gigs for ideas.

You might like to come up with gigs that give you a good return on your time and/or money investment.

And do bear in mind that your gig could be your gateway to a long haul, to getting your gig featured prominently on the website. Make sure you complete your gig within the timeline you've set. Add to it a dash of quality work, and you could soon be having a steady stream of positive feedback for your work which shows up in the testimonials accompanying your gig.

In fact, many sellers make it a point to go the extra mile to attend to their customers' additional requests and avoid negative feedback. After all, avoiding the negatives is as important as getting the positives.

Promoting your gig

Let's face it — The micro jobs websites make for a huge marketplace. To make it worth your while, you've got to make your gig stand out. Which "tags" or keywords to use while creating your gig? For a cue, you could have a look at the existing popular gigs in your niche.

When you create your gig, you could add to the gig's description a link pointing to your personal blog. The blog could, in turn, be having your work samples. And you could take advantage of social networking websites, video-sharing websites like YouTube and online forums pertaining to your niche (Clueless? Think google) which allow you to put in a link you wish to promote, in your signature, to get the word out about your gig.

Building on it

Once you've set the ball rolling, sky's the limit. Even if the gig doesn't draw a good response, build on the lessons you learn along the way and you'll find yourself going from strength to strength. Who knows, you might hit upon a goldmine of ideas for gigs, or a big project from a client impressed with your service.

What is a gig?

A gig is a job, especially a temporary one.

On microjob sites, gigs are small tasks that people can do for a fee. These tasks could relate to writing, social networking, search engine optimisation or even programming.

Gigs on microjob sites straddle a range of non-specialised jobs like data entry work

MICROJOB SITES MAKING MONEY ONLINE BY DOING SMALL JOBS

MICROJOB SITES 

1.www.fiverr.com

2.www.gigbucks.com

3.www.fittytown.com

4.www.twentyville.com

Please register for online earning by doing small jobs online.your payments will come through paypal.

Read more....http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120404/jobs.htm#13




Making money online
Get into the GIG league 
Abhishek Joshi

Are you looking for ways to supplement your current income?

Have you been feeling that earning money online could be your thing, but don't know how to go about it?

Have you been sitting on the fence letting apprehensions like Internet fraud grow on you?

Would you love to market your skills online in the global marketplace?

Or are you looking for a fun way to earn some extra dough in your spare time?

If your answer to any of the above questions is "yes", then numerous microjob sites giving you an opportunity to do "gigs" at fixed prices could be just what you've been looking for.

What is it all about?

Simply put, there are websites where people share things they are willing to do for a fixed price tag that could range from $2 to $50 or even more. People list gigs ranging from writing articles, designing website headers, setting up a website and writing a resume to making someone laugh, drawing a caricature or giving expert advice.

How does it work?

You create a gig for a small service you are willing to offer; you share the gig with the world. Every time your gig is ordered and after you successfully complete an order, depending on the website's terms and conditions and after they deduct their cut from the amount the buyer has paid, you could withdraw your earnings through an online payment processor like Paypal (You could sign up for a free Paypal account at Paypal.com).

What gigs can you offer?

Your gig could be in line with your professional expertise or hobby. Or anything else that is worthwhile. Check out other people's gigs for ideas.

You might like to come up with gigs that give you a good return on your time and/or money investment.

And do bear in mind that your gig could be your gateway to a long haul, to getting your gig featured prominently on the website. Make sure you complete your gig within the timeline you've set. Add to it a dash of quality work, and you could soon be having a steady stream of positive feedback for your work which shows up in the testimonials accompanying your gig.

In fact, many sellers make it a point to go the extra mile to attend to their customers' additional requests and avoid negative feedback. After all, avoiding the negatives is as important as getting the positives.

Promoting your gig

Let's face it — The micro jobs websites make for a huge marketplace. To make it worth your while, you've got to make your gig stand out. Which "tags" or keywords to use while creating your gig? For a cue, you could have a look at the existing popular gigs in your niche.

When you create your gig, you could add to the gig's description a link pointing to your personal blog. The blog could, in turn, be having your work samples. And you could take advantage of social networking websites, video-sharing websites like YouTube and online forums pertaining to your niche (Clueless? Think google) which allow you to put in a link you wish to promote, in your signature, to get the word out about your gig.

Building on it

Once you've set the ball rolling, sky's the limit. Even if the gig doesn't draw a good response, build on the lessons you learn along the way and you'll find yourself going from strength to strength. Who knows, you might hit upon a goldmine of ideas for gigs, or a big project from a client impressed with your service.

What is a gig?

A gig is a job, especially a temporary one.

On microjob sites, gigs are small tasks that people can do for a fee. These tasks could relate to writing, social networking, search engine optimisation or even programming.

Gigs on microjob sites straddle a range of non-specialised jobs like data entry work

MICROJOB SITES MAKING MONEY ONLINE BY DOING SMALL JOBS

MICROJOB SITES 

1.www.fiverr.com

2.www.gigbucks.com

3.www.fittytown.com

4.www.twentyville.com

Please register for online earning by doing small jobs online.your payments will come through paypal.

Read more....http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120404/jobs.htm#13




Making money online
Get into the GIG league 
Abhishek Joshi

Are you looking for ways to supplement your current income?

Have you been feeling that earning money online could be your thing, but don't know how to go about it?

Have you been sitting on the fence letting apprehensions like Internet fraud grow on you?

Would you love to market your skills online in the global marketplace?

Or are you looking for a fun way to earn some extra dough in your spare time?

If your answer to any of the above questions is "yes", then numerous microjob sites giving you an opportunity to do "gigs" at fixed prices could be just what you've been looking for.

What is it all about?

Simply put, there are websites where people share things they are willing to do for a fixed price tag that could range from $2 to $50 or even more. People list gigs ranging from writing articles, designing website headers, setting up a website and writing a resume to making someone laugh, drawing a caricature or giving expert advice.

How does it work?

You create a gig for a small service you are willing to offer; you share the gig with the world. Every time your gig is ordered and after you successfully complete an order, depending on the website's terms and conditions and after they deduct their cut from the amount the buyer has paid, you could withdraw your earnings through an online payment processor like Paypal (You could sign up for a free Paypal account at Paypal.com).

What gigs can you offer?

Your gig could be in line with your professional expertise or hobby. Or anything else that is worthwhile. Check out other people's gigs for ideas.

You might like to come up with gigs that give you a good return on your time and/or money investment.

And do bear in mind that your gig could be your gateway to a long haul, to getting your gig featured prominently on the website. Make sure you complete your gig within the timeline you've set. Add to it a dash of quality work, and you could soon be having a steady stream of positive feedback for your work which shows up in the testimonials accompanying your gig.

In fact, many sellers make it a point to go the extra mile to attend to their customers' additional requests and avoid negative feedback. After all, avoiding the negatives is as important as getting the positives.

Promoting your gig

Let's face it — The micro jobs websites make for a huge marketplace. To make it worth your while, you've got to make your gig stand out. Which "tags" or keywords to use while creating your gig? For a cue, you could have a look at the existing popular gigs in your niche.

When you create your gig, you could add to the gig's description a link pointing to your personal blog. The blog could, in turn, be having your work samples. And you could take advantage of social networking websites, video-sharing websites like YouTube and online forums pertaining to your niche (Clueless? Think google) which allow you to put in a link you wish to promote, in your signature, to get the word out about your gig.

Building on it

Once you've set the ball rolling, sky's the limit. Even if the gig doesn't draw a good response, build on the lessons you learn along the way and you'll find yourself going from strength to strength. Who knows, you might hit upon a goldmine of ideas for gigs, or a big project from a client impressed with your service.

What is a gig?

A gig is a job, especially a temporary one.

On microjob sites, gigs are small tasks that people can do for a fee. These tasks could relate to writing, social networking, search engine optimisation or even programming.

Gigs on microjob sites straddle a range of non-specialised jobs like data entry work