Digital Book Distribution

Digital Book Distribution

I just read about a great new service for self-published authors.

We all know the Digital Literature Revolution is radically changing the way we interact with the “written” word. Not since Gutenberg and the introduction of mass printed books have we redefined our relationship with literature in such a profound way.

“BookBaby” digitally distributes the works of independent authors, poets, memoirists, and publishers, making their eBooks available to digital retailers (like Apple iBookstore, Barnes & Noble.com, Sony’s Reader Store, and Amazon.com) in all available regions and territories. We’re part of the CD Baby family (the world’s largest online distributor of independent music), which has paid out over 160 million dollars to artists just like you.

BookBaby provides a simple, comprehensive solution to their digital distribution needs. With BookBaby:

You get 100% of your net sales revenue!

Distribute your eBook worldwide, to all of the major platforms (iPad, Kindle, • Nook, Sony Reader) and online retail stores!

They pay out within one week of receiving payments!

Consolidated sales reporting.

You can enhance your eBook with video, graphics and more. BookBaby also specializes in conversion of more complex documents, including tables, graphs, multiple of images, and embedded multimedia files including video and audio clips.

For more information go to http://links.mkt1524.com/servlet/SignUpForm?f=731947&source=BC11DM2 and sign up for the free report.

Atlanta Video Production Company Announces the Promotions of Erin Dyer and Megan Clark to Producer

Atlanta video production company, Atlanta Business Video (ABV), recently announced the promotion of Erin Dyer (partner) and Megan Clark (studio manager and editor) to Producer. Having previously served as the primary producers on many projects, both Dyer and Clark have a vast amount of experience working in this role. Their video production responsibilities include the art and service of filming, video editing, and distribution.

“Both Erin and Megan are a tremendous asset to Atlanta Business Video. The promotions are in recognition of their creative and technical growth as well as professional accomplishments,” explains Roger Stix, Producer and owner of the Atlanta video company. ABV’s high definition video production services include offering a digital high definition film crew, production logistics, on-set direction, editing, graphic creation, and script writing. Video productions include corporate commercials, branding video, and virtual walk-on for Websites.

As a founding partner, Erin Dyer helped launch Atlanta Business Video in 2008. Her educational background includes earning a B.A. in both Film and Psychology at Georgia State University. Megan Clark first joined ABV working as a filming and editing specialist. She is a graduate of University of Georgia with a degree in Telecommunication Arts and Film Studies, which focused on Production, Video Editing, and Film Theory.

Atlanta Business Video offers both On location video services and in studio video productions using the latest in green screen technology. In addition, ABV’s studio services include studio rental, talent selection, and more. The professionals at ABV produces crystal clear videos using the Final Cut HD Pro Software Suite, which is the latest industry standard. They also provide re-editing services of existing videos.

About Atlanta Business Video

Atlanta Business Video is a new kind of Web 2.0 video production studio designed to be able to create professional quality Atlanta video productions at prices that are affordable to even small businesses by using their green screen studio. They offer a variety of services to meet your professional video needs. Shoot on-location or take advantage of Atlanta Business Video’s in-studio video production to create corporate commercials, branding videos, or a virtual walk-on for your Website.

Video Marketing Packages

Atlanta Business Video’s Video Marketing Packages provide a unique service that blasts your video all over the Internet, and directly to approximately 20 of the top video sharing sites (such as Youtube, Vimeo, Viddler, etc.) with the research to get you found on the first page of Google! The majority of online videos are not optimized, which means the search engines/web crawlers can’t see them. We know how to target and optimize videos to make them attractive to Google and the other search engines. On many popular video sharing sites our submissions are promoted as new submissions, video of the day, video of the hour, genre, etc. Additionally, proper use of the other options available can stimulate additional views.

There are two types of video marketing packages. In option one your videos are posted on the Atlanta Business Video video accounts. In option two, we create personalized accounts for you on each of the video sharing sites.

Video Marketing Package One:

Videos are distributed through our existing accounts on each of the roughly 20 sites that accept the majority of the video genres we produce.

Benefits:
- Videos are more prominently featured due to a priority status of our video distribution arrangement
- Add SEO terms (meta-tags) to the video (supplied by you)
- Titling assistance based on your SEO and targeted markets
- Each video posted includes information on your company (supplied by you)
- Includes a clickable link from your video that allows viewers to go directly to your site. Additionally, this link is recognized by Google which increases your primary website’s SEO ranking
- Video viewer statistics from each of the different video sharing sites (Additional charges apply).

Video Marketing Package Two:

Create your video sharing site accounts at each of the sites to which we distribute.

Benefits:
- Includes everything in Package One through personalized accounts:
- Brand video sharing sites with your theme colors (Additional graphic design is an additional hourly charge)
- Upload a user profile picture to your video sharing site account
- Add a company/personal description to your account (supplied by you)
- Add SEO meta-tags to your accounts (supplied by you)
- Includes a clickable link from your video sharing site account to your website, which increases traffic and improves your website’s ranking

Additional Services:
- SEO Research- For those that have not yet SEO’d your website, or need better targeted SEO
- Install Google Site Analytics- Inquire for information and pricing
- Website Creation- If you do not have a website or need re-branding
- Graphic Design- Logos, more complex graphics for your video sharing site accounts, PowerPoint backgrounds, brochures, etc.
- Photography – Portraits and event photography

Call for Pricing 404.343.3540

How Online Video Can Reach the Business Audience

Even busy executives want to do more than just read on the web

Executives with no time for fun and games do have time for the sound and motion of video, according to findings from Forbes Insights. In some cases, they may actually prefer it to text for learning about products and services.

A majority of businesspeople surveyed by Forbes in October 2010 said they watched more online video than a year earlier. Nearly 60% of all respondents said they would watch video before reading text on the same webpage, and 22% said they generally liked watching video more than reading text for reviewing business information. Three-quarters of all executives said they watched work-related videos on business websites at least once a week, and more than half did the same on YouTube.
Atlanta video production
Video can be highly effective for merchants. The executives surveyed reported taking a wide variety of actions after watching online videos, with about two-thirds visiting vendor websites subsequent to viewing and more than half searching for more information. Especially among younger executives, likelihood of making a purchase was high.
Atlanta Videos
Generational differences ran throughout the Forbes research, with a split in behavior at age 50. While the youngest executives were most interested in video across the board, baby boomers in their 40s had comparable participation levels. It was older executives who had not yet gotten on board with video, and business-to-business marketers must continue to reach them through other means.

But video has only become more important for the younger set, and marketers can depend on them to watch, pass along, recommend—and often, enter the purchase funnel.

An E-Marketer Article

Tech Year in Review: The Rise of Apps, iPad and Android

In 2010, the computer truly went mobile.

Sure, users of Apple Inc.’s iPhone have had the Web in their hands since 2007. But this past year, smartphones plunged into the mainstream, giving millions of people the ability to browse the Internet, watch movies and stream music anywhere they could maintain a cellular or Wi-Fi connection—and without having to find a place to sit down and boot up a laptop.

There were 81 million smartphones sold world-wide in the third quarter, the analysts at Gartner say, almost twice as many as a year earlier. They accounted for nearly one in five mobile phones sold that quarter. The chiefs of Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T Inc. think smartphones could account for nearly three of every four phones sold by the middle of the decade.

This surge has upended the balance of power in the wireless market.
Devices running on Android, the software distributed by Google Inc., and Apple’s iOS have shot past Research In Motion Ltd’s BlackBerry, Gartner data show. Android is even closing in on market leader Nokia Corp., which has struggled and replaced its CEO this year.

Microsoft Corp., a powerhouse on the desktop, is struggling to find a foothold, with just 2.8% of the market for its mobile operating system in the third quarter. It has pinned its hopes on devices running a new version, Windows Phone 7, which are just hitting stores.

This past year also saw the tablet computer finally get traction, thanks to Apple and its iPad. The company sold 7.5 million iPads in their first six months on the market, and Gartner thinks nearly 55 million tablets will sell next year.

The momentum in technology is now with devices that can easily be carried around and the applications that sustain them.
The Journal runs through the defining moments of that transition this year and look at what to expect in 2011:

IPAD

Apple created a new mobile category with its iPad touchscreen tablet computer, which went on sale in early April. Despite the notable failures of companies like Microsoft to sell a tablet-like device in the past, Apple proved the combination of a sleek device, a high-resolution display and content via iTunes could appeal to consumers. Analysts at Citigroup estimate Apple will sell about 14 million iPads this year, and some analysts say it could have shipped even more if Apple’s supply had kept up.

Coming next: Competition. So far, Apple has had the tablet market essentially to itself, with Samsung Electronics Co.’s Galaxy Tab its only real competitor at the cash register. The New Year will bring alternatives from Motorola Inc. and RIM among others.

ANDROID

This year saw the iPhone gain its first worthy competitors. And nearly all of them are powered by Google’s mobile operating system, Android. While the first Android device was launched two years ago, it wasn’t until 2010 that Android hit its stride. Credit Google’s partnership with Verizon Wireless and two phone makers—Motorola and HTC Corp. The collaboration produced a series of hit phones this year and saw Android pass Apple in market share. That annoyed Steve Jobs and ensured Google’s profitable search engine will be a mainstay on mobile devices.
Coming next: Cheap smartphones. Android’s next move is downmarket, with some predicting Android phones will sell at unsubsidized prices under $100. That plus cheaper data plans could dramatically expand smartphone penetration.

APPS

2010 was the Year of the App. Sometimes cheap, often silly, these little computer programs—there are hundreds of thousands of them—turned smartphones into game rooms, barcode scanners and photo manipulators.

Three years after Apple reluctantly opened its iPhone to outside developers, apps have grown from time-killers into an ecosystem seen as a key to keeping consumers loyal to their phones. That explains why companies like Google, RIM and Verizon have jumped into the game and opened their own online marketplaces for third-party programs.
Apps, many of which cost just 99 cents each, have also spawned a cottage industry with thousands of developers, established software vendors and start-ups focused on churning out mobile programs. Gartner estimates that global app sales will total $6.7 billion in 2010. Look no further than Rovio Mobile’s goofy “Angry Bird” game, which has sold 12 million copies.

Coming next: Apps go corporate. AT&T, business-software developer SAP AG and other companies are working on apps that can help their employees track sales, monitor systems or check-out customers without being tied to their stations. The quick adoption of tablets by business users is helping fuel the trend.

GOING 4G

U.S. wireless networks moved solidly into their fourth generation this year, with Sprint launching the first 4G handsets this summer and Verizon Wireless rolling out its own 4G network this month. The first generation was analog. The second was digital, which made better use of spectrum and was more secure. The third allowed fast data connections. The fourth-generation technology promises super-fast broadband service that will make wireless video a breeze. For now, it’s mainly a service for laptops, and nationwide coverage doesn’t yet exist. But phones will be pouring out in the year ahead, and the networks are expanding. Now if the carriers would just agree on what qualifies. T-Mobile, exploiting the fuzziness around the official definition of 4G, announced it has the nation’s largest 4G network. Sprint and Verizon says it’s just an advanced form of 3G.

Coming next: Paying for what you use. Carriers are looking to cash in as data use grows. AT&T has already dropped its unlimited data plan for new users. Verizon plans to adopt of some consumption pricing as it transitions to 4G. Users are going to have to start watching bits the way they used to count minutes.

PARTS SHORTAGES

Fancy smartphones were all the rage, but humble transistors, resistors and screens showed their clout this year. HTC’s Droid Incredible went on prolonged back order almost immediately after its April launch due to shortages of its high-tech display. Insufficient supplies of basic components like semiconductors used in wireless base stations cost network-equipment company Ericsson around $500 million in sales in the second quarter. Shortages of network equipment in turn held up AT&T’s promised improvement of its much-criticized network in San Francisco.

Coming next: Samsung. The company’s mobile-display business, which has had difficulty meeting demand for ultrathin screens for smartphones, is boosting production with a new facility that opens in July. Capacity will go up to 30 million screens a month from three million currently.

PATENT WARS

The favorite sport for companies in the mobile business this year was patent litigation, and the home field was the International Trade Commission in Washington, D.C. The ITC, set up to adjudicate trade disputes, has the advantage of moving faster than the federal court system, and it’s fast becoming the locus of intellectual property litigation expertise.

Companies including Apple, Motorola, Microsoft, Nokia and even Eastman Kodak Co. turned to the court, which has the power to bar imports of products that are found to infringe on companies’ patents.
Coming next: More legal disputes. Patent attorneys don’t expect any slowdown at the ITC, which has the capacity and expertise to handle more cases. Rulings from this year’s round of cases could also show up in 2011, and their tone will affect whether other companies chose to fight or settle.

SECURITY/PRIVACY

True, the big one hasn’t dropped yet. But smartphone makers, app developers and users are well behind the curve when it comes to securing mobile devices against the sort of attacks that PC users started defending themselves against long ago.

Hackers have turned up embarrassing holes in devices, and financial institutions copped to weaknesses in banking apps. Moreover, it turns out there’s plenty of intentional leakage, with data streamed off your phone by some of your favorite apps to support advertising or other functions.

A Wall Street Journal examination of 101 smartphone apps found 47 transmitted your location and five sent personal details like age and gender to outsiders.

Coming next: Extra rigor. Chip makers, carriers, and handset makers are going to roll out new security features to try to make consumers feel comfortable buying products and services on their mobile devices.

CHINA

China, always a ripe market for sellers of mobile gear, gained notoriety this year as a supplier. Equipment company Huawei Technologies Co. expanded its reach in Europe and set off fresh alarm bells in the U.S. with its failed attempt to win a piece of Sprint Nextel Corp.’s big network upgrade.Meanwhile, Chinese makers of low-cost, unbranded cellphones doubled their market share over the past year to account for 33% of all cellphone sales in the third quarter, according to Gartner. The move put further pressure on companies like Nokia that still sell lots of low-end phones.

Coming next: Chinese smartphones. Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corp. are rolling out Google-powered phones that could be sold by carriers for as little as $50. With Android software available free, China’s growing tech savvy and cheap skilled labor make it a competitor to watch.

DIGITAL WALLET

It used to be stores had the advantage once you were inside: You knew their price, but not what their competitors were charging. The mobile Web changed all that—and in the process hastened the erosion of their pricing power. Now, shoppers can use their smartphones to find better deals. Chain stores’ best hope is that shoppers won’t bother, but a host of apps are making the process a lot easier. They include barcode scanners like RedLaser and price-comparison search tool TheFind.
Meanwhile, wireless carriers are looking to turn phones into digital wallets. AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile USA formed a joint venture with Discover Financial Services in November that will someday let consumers wave their phones in front of a scanner to pay for purchases.

Coming next: Purchasing on mobile phones takes off. It can be clunky, but shoppers will get used to it as smartphone penetration increases. IE Market Research estimates cellphone purchases in the U.S. will jump from $1.61 billion in 2009 to $6.74 billion in 2011.

LOCATION, LOCATION

Everybody had high hopes for location-based services and ads that could be served up on a smartphone right as a person walks by, say, Starbucks. But it hasn’t worked out as expected just yet. Outfits such as Foursquare, Gowalla and Loopt attracted media buzz, but they don’t seem to be attracting many users. Just 4% of Americans have tried location-based services, and only 1% use them weekly, according to Forrester Research.

Coming next:Try, try again. Foursquare and its brethren are raising lots of funds, and 2011 will be an important year. They will be looking to give consumers more of a reason to continue checking in. Expect more coupons and other marketing offers to roll out.

—Compiled by Andrew Dowell, Spencer E. Ante, Pui-Wing Tam, Don Clark, Yukari Iwatani Kane and Amir Efrati

Read more: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704774604576035611315663944.html#ixzz19WC2kl6M

Facebook Breakups: ‘Tis the Season

Worried about your relationship? Going into the holiday season, maybe you should be. Graphic designers Lee Byron and David McCandless wanted to find out what times of year people (or at least people on Facebook) were most likely to break up.

Tracking search terms for breakups across 10,000 Facebook status updates, they found that Christmas Day had the fewest splits, but the weeks leading up to Christmas constituted one of two yearly peaks. The other busy time for relationships to go bust: spring.

In another survey, the designers looked at why Facebook users break up and how they do it—with younger users relying more on phone calls and messaging.

Below, the peaks and troughs of breakups through the year, with the designers’ speculation on the timing.
Facebook Trends

A Wall Street Journal Article

SEO- Practicing What you Preach

Traffic Source Results

Atlanta Business Video Website Statistics

Atlanta Business Video Website Statistics


I have always tried to practice what I preach- In order to market effectively online you need: video, SEO, and social networking. I’d like to not only share where we are in our statistics, but also walk you through a few points that you should be looking for when evaluating the effectiveness of your own website. Are you having the same success?

TRAFFIC SOURCES: 
Atlanta Business Video Website Traffic

Where is the traffic to your website coming from? The more places you are on the internet, the more paths potential clients have to connect to your business.

These are our top traffic sources (in order):

- Organic Google

- Direct Traffic

- Online Video Multi-Players Referral

- SiteProWeb Referral

- LinkedIn Referral

- Youtube Referral

- Facebook Referral

- Yahoo Organic

- AOL Organic

- Bing Organic

It is also important to notice not only the different sources, but the type of source. When searching for Atlanta Business Video you get:

- Video results

- Website results

- Blog results

- Video Sharing Site Results

- Map results

Atlanta Business Video Google Statistics

BOUNCE RATE:

After the traffic has arrived at your site, it is important to notice the bounce rate. This is the percentage of single-page visits (i.e. visits in which the person left your site from the entrance page). This can be caused for several reasons: your website is too cluttered, they didn’t find what they were looking for etc. It’s time to make some changes if this percentage is too high.

Atlanta Business Video Website Statistics

Atlanta Business Video Website Statistics

The online market is constantly evolving. Are you keeping track of your websites statistics for maximum effectiveness?

- Roger

ABV can now serve video that can be viewed on IPhones, IPads, Blackberries, and Androids without watermarks!

ABV Now Provides Video for Mobile Smart Phones
ABV Now Provides Video for Mobile Smart Phones

ABV Now Provides Video for Mobile Smart Phones

ABV can now serve video that can be viewed on IPhones, IPads, Blackberries, and Androids without watermarks.

With Mobile ad spending up nearly 80% in 2010 to $750 Million and forecasted to surpass 1 billion dollars next year, Atlanta Business video has added the capability for its videos to reach this important and growing segment of web users.

Our mobile videos contain no watermark, does not link back to the server site, such as YouTube, and can be set-up as a clickable link to make it easy to bring viewers where you want them, sign-up pages, order forms, etc.

Whether the content was created by us, or you have your own content, ABV can provide mobile hosting services that enable your videos to reach this important and growing segment of web users.

Please contact us for more information.

Roger

Video Distribution and the SEO factor

What if I told you that there was a surefire way to make your website standout and POP… would that be of interest to you? And what if I further told you that this method is inexpensive, easily accomplished, and has a 50 times greater chance of landing you on Page 1 of a search result?

I thought that would grab your attention.

What is the secret ingredient, that magic potion, you ask? The answer is, not surprisingly — video.

It turns out that of all the things you can do on your website to engage viewers, create more page views and get higher search engine rankings, adding video just may be the best.

Forrester Research did a test and found that when search results are blended (that is, they include text, video and images) videos that are search engine optimized give you a 50 times greater chance of ending up on the all-important first page of a search result.

But here’s the catch: You can’t just add a video to your site and expect a great search engine result for that page. The video must be search engine optimized, that is, it must contain key words in the file names, captions, and so on. That same Forrester blog indicated that less than 20% of all online marketers search engine optimize their video.

If you want your video to be picked up and analyzed properly by Google and the other search engines, you must not only add SEO keywords to it, but you must actually submit the video to Google using XML tools.

Putting your video on YouTube and embedding the YouTube player and URL into your site is insufficient. The traffic and the rankings will be applied to YouTube and not your site.

Obviously properly SEOing a video offers a tremendous opportunity.

1. It helps attract new customers by virtue of the SEO factor

2. It engages them, reducing the “bounce rate” and

3. It can help increase your conversion rate – that is, the number of people who visit and then end up buying something or calling for more information

ABV produces professional videos that are affordable for a company as small as one person and distributes them, properly titled and tagged for SEO purposes to all the major video sharing sites.

Roger Stix, Producer

Creating Effective, Inexpensive Video From Home

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We have talked to many individuals who are hesitant to commit to a professional web video but recognize the importance of video in communicating their message and for SEO purposes. Also, we have a large client base that likes to use a mix of both professionally produced video and personal video to help build their presence online. In fact, we strongly recommend that practice, to maximize your exposure online and keep your content fresh.

If you are ready to begin building your online video presence but want to try it out independently we have found an inexpensive option for you to explore.

While there are several very inexpensive and convenient mini-cameras now available, many of which offer HD resolution, their have relied on an internal microphone that provided poor audio quality. For instance, the extremely popular Flip HD camera records in 720p, can be carried in your pocket, and purchased for around $180 new. Honestly, I have to admit that the quality is pretty amazing for what you pay for it. However, as mentioned, the Flip camera always gives itself away by the poor audio output.
Flip camera HD

The Kodak Zi8 solves that problem by having an audio-in jack that accepts an external microphone. Like the Flip, it sells for $180. Now- unless you are willing to invest in a microphone to go with the camera, there is no advantage to the Kodak over the Flip (in my inexperienced opinion, this is not an article arguing the quality of either product).
Kodak Zi8

The Good news is we have found a $40 microphone to use with the Zi8, the AUDIO-TECHNICA ATR3350. It is a wired omni-directional lapel mic with a 20 foot cord.
Audio Technica ATR3350 Mic

Using the camera and the microphone together, you have a perfect solution for at home video production for just around $220. As a video production company, we do not feel that this is enough to completely replace your need for professionally produced content (we do edit personally recorded footage for clients, however)- but think it is a great way for one to begin exploring and benefiting from the rapidly growing world of online video.

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