citing a document posted on a website

Hello,

I have decided to go through the excercise of creating a source list entry, first reference note, and subsequent note for all of my sources.  I hope I will get to the point where I "speak the lanage" so to speak and won't need the quick models, but untill then I run into problems when the models don't quite work.  I used quick check model "website as a "book" on page 657.  

Any feedback would be appriciated.

I am trying to cite the following http://www.bcgcertification.org/skillbuilders/Mulon-MilonMobile10Feb07.pdf posted on http://www.bcgcertification.org/skillbuilders/.  

I used a citiation provided here (http://www.apgen.org/resources/worksamples.html) as a model and came up with  the following full reference note:

Elizabeth Shown Mills, "Moulon, Milon, Millon of Mobile" report to private, 28 December 2005; posted at Board for Certification of Genealogist (http://www.bcgcertification.org/skillbuilders/ : 4 Dec 2014).

Assuming that's correct, im not sure where to go with the Source listing and subsequent note.  Just to take a stab at it:

Source Listing:
Mills, Eilizabeth Shown. "Moulon, Milon, Millon of Mobile".  http://www.bcgcertification.org/skillbuilders/. 2014

Subsequent Note:
Shown, Board for Certification of Genealogist, "Moulon, Milon, Millon of Mobile".  

Submitted byEEon Wed, 12/10/2014 - 18:56

Hello, the1gofer!

Welcome to the site.

Your basic problem here is using the wrong model. It would be great if everything historical researchers use could be cited as a book. But most things can't—which, of course, is the reason EE exists.

What you have consulted is (a) a research report; that (b) is published or archived at a website.  In your handy copy of EE, turn to the index and look up "research reports." That refers you to several examples—most of them in Chapter 4 (Business & Institutional Records).  If you'll flip to the examples on pp. 203–5 (4.28 Historical Research Reports), you'll find an explicit example of a professional historical research report posted at that very website.  It gives you all three forms of the citation: Source List, First Reference Note, and Subsequent Note (the short form).