Archive for January 9th, 2008

January 9, 2008: 11:12 pm: adminHardware Stuff

Okay, so we all know that you can change the ringtone on your mobile phone by purchasing a ringtone online. In fact, there are an endless number of web sites that will sell you a ringtone or wallpaper (prices vary from $.99 to $2.99 and in most cases will put the charge on your cell phone bill). One thing I have found however is that although I can choose from hundreds of ringtone web sites, most of them are selling the same array of ringtones. So, in my quest to make my mobile phone, and hence, my ringtone unique, I have found myself limited to the same assortment of 100 or so [decent] ringtones.

Alas - clever software companies have now developed software that will allow you to make your own ringtones - from your own collection of CDs or MP3s. One such software product is Ringtone Media Studio, developed by Avanquest Software. Ringtone Media Studio actually includes three different studios; the Audio Studio for the creation of ringtones and the Image and Video studios to create mobile wallpapers and videos. Taking the unique-factor one step further, the Audio studio also includes a mixer so you can custom-arrange your ringtone and create something completely unique. With the advent of software such as Ringtone Media Studio, custom mixing of ringtones has become so popular that the term “Ringtone DJ” has been coined. So, has the creation of custom ringtones become an art form? I say most definitely-especially for those creative types; as ringtone creation can be seen as an off-shoot of the art of record spinning. Even for those not-so-creative types, creating ringtones is easy and somewhat addicting (I spent over 3 hours creating ringtones from the 5000+ piece Online Media Library which is included with Ringtone Media Studio). So now that music fans can create their own ringtones from their CDs and MP3 collections, what does this mean to the Music Industry - which today views ringtones as salvation from their slump in sales?

Ringtones to the music industry mean gravy - certainly another revenue stream from which they can joyfully tap. But if users can buy software such as Ringtone Media Studio for $19.99, why spend $1.99 or more (according to the Atlantic Record’s website, ringtones are $1.99 and up) on just one? Users of course need to buy the song - heck - they might even buy the whole CD - before a ringtone can be made, so couldn’t it be possible that ringtone creation software could actually increase music sales? I would think that consumers could actually be more compelled to purchase a CD if they have more than just one use for it. In fact, rather than buying a CD and just leaving it in a CD player for weeks, consumers can now transfer it to their PC, transfer it to their portable music player and now even make ringtones. Cool! Perhaps the music industry should embrace the ringtone creation software - rather than fight it - as being predicted by some. Time will certainly tell. In the meantime, consumers are certainly the winner today, with such a wide variety of ways to customize their phones and ringtones.

Ringtone Media Studio is a product from software developer Avanquest Software. A trial version of the software can be found at http://www.ringtonemediastudio.com

: 10:47 pm: adminThe Technology Way

Traditionally, the retail industry has lagged behind other industries in adopting new technologies, and this holds true in its acceptance of BI technology. Some industries, such as financial services, have become very sophisticated in using BI software for financial reporting and consolidation, customer intelligence, regulatory compliance, and risk management. However, retailers are quickly catching up and beginning to recognize the many areas of BI that can be applied specifically to their businesses.

The competitive game is changing for retail. As the industry continues to consolidate, retailers have begun to realize that using technology to better understand customer buying behavior, to drive sales and profitability, and to reduce operational costs is a necessity for long-term survival.

Retailers are now paying significant attention to BI software, specifically in the areas of merchandise intelligence (including merchandise planning, assortment, size, space, price, promotion, and markdown optimization), customer intelligence (including marketing automation, marketing optimization, and market basket analysis), operational intelligence (including IT portfolio management, labor optimization, and real estate site selection), and competitive intelligence. There are many factors that have led retailers to adopt BI software: increased competition, the need to squeeze more profitability out of less space, prevalent credit card usage, the Internet’s role as an alternative sales channel, the popularity of loyalty cards, and soon, RFID (radio frequency identification). These milestones have created a wealth of data that retailers are now beginning to appreciate and use.

Within individual companies, we view the history of BI in retail through a method that we devised to describe the status of any company’s evolution toward becoming an intelligent enterprise. We believe that organizations pass through five fundamental stages as they advance in their use of BI as a competitive differentiator:

Operate — At this most basic level are the companies rife with information mavericks: the guys in basement offices hammering away on desktop spreadsheets. If they go, the knowledge goes with them. There are no processes, and each request becomes an ad hoc data rebuild, resulting in multiple versions of the truth, with the likelihood of a different answer to any one question every time it is asked.
Consolidate — At this stage, a company has pulled together its data at the departmental level. Here, a question gets the same answer every time, at least within the department. However, departmental interests and interdepartmental competition can skew the integrity of the output and result in multiple versions of the truth.
Integrate — At this point in the evolution, a company has adopted enterprise-wide data and bases its decisions on this more complete information. This company is beginning to have a true awareness of additional opportunities for the use of BI to improve processes and profits.
Optimize — At this stage, the company’s knowledge workers are very focused on incremental process improvements and refining the value-creation process. Everyone understands and uses analysis, trending, pattern analysis, and predictive results to increase efficiency and effectiveness. The extended value chain becomes increasingly critical to the organization, including the customers, suppliers, and partners who constitute intercompany communities.
Innovate — This level represents a major, quantum break with the past. It exploits the understanding of the value-creation process acquired in the optimize stage and replicates that efficiency with new products in new markets. Companies operating at this level understand what they do well and apply this expertise to new areas of opportunity, thus multiplying the number of revenue streams flowing into the enterprise. Armed with information and business process knowledge, organizations approaching the innovate level will introduce truly innovative products and services that reflect their unique understanding of the market, their internal strengths and weaknesses, and an unfailing flow of ideas from continuously engaged employees.
We are finding that most large retailers have reached or are approaching the integrate stage, with many making great strides toward the optimize and innovate levels. There is an enormous opportunity for the evolution to continue — within every retail organization.

The Presence of BI in the Retail IT Infrastructure

In the typical retail IT infrastructure, there are two fundamental categories of systems: transactional/operational systems, such as POS and purchase order management systems; and analytic/BI systems.

Operational and transactional systems such as merchandise management, ERP (enterprise resource planning), and POS, are very good at what they do — organizing huge amounts of operational data and transactions. These systems can tell retailers what has happened in their business and what their customers have done — last week, last month, and last year.

It’s critical, however, for retailers to understand what will happen: what the demand will be for a select assortment of merchandise, what impact an incremental price change will have on demand, which floor plan will sell more designer shoes, which customers will respond to a direct mail or catalog offer.

Real value comes from systems that go beyond the limitations of operational software alone, systems that can take operational data and create enterprise intelligence and predictive insights.

These BI systems must combine data management (consolidating, organizing, and cleansing huge amounts of disparate data from varying systems and platforms) with predictive analytics (data mining, forecasting, optimization). When they do, retailers can make sense of customer, product, supplier, and operational data and draw insights that will help them run their businesses better and more profitably.

Leading retailers around the globe — like Wal-Mart, Foot Locker, Staples, Williams-Sonoma, and Amazon.com and many others — have begun using BI and analytics to make an array of strategic decisions. These include where to place retail outlets, how many of each size or color of an item to put in each store, and when and how much to discount. The effects of these decisions can save or generate millions of dollars for retailers.

The Strength of the Market for BI in Retail Today

The market is very strong and getting stronger. While it is difficult to find a comprehensive suite of retail-specific BI offerings that spans the spectrum from competitive intelligence to merchandise planning and optimization (product, price, promotion, and placement) based on customer insight, to knowing how to maximize the ROI on the next marketing campaign, to understanding where to build the next store, to reducing supply chain costs. Retailers are telling us over and over that they are seeking a single, stable, reliable, and proven provider of superior BI solutions. They are implementing projects that span multiple years and will deliver value for years to come.

The Retailers that are Realizing the Most Benefits from BI

We find that the retailers that are realizing the most significant returns on their investments are those that take a purposeful, pragmatic approach to establishing an intelligence platform upon which to base all other BI solutions. A single, reliable demand forecast, for instance, can also be used in merchandising, marketing, logistics, store operations, call center staffing, etc., for operational benefit. BI that remains segmented by functional area can provide some value, but retailers can realize a much larger return by building the foundation upon which the rest of the house will stand. This is true of both top-tier and midmarket retailers, regardless of segment.

Specific Areas in Which Retailers can Benefit Most Include:

Merchandising — This is clearly the most important area of a retailer’s business and an area where retailers are beginning to exploit the full value of BI. Analysis of past performance, combined with plans and forecasts of future customer behavior, leads to more accurate initial allocations of merchandise across channels and stores. Assortment and size optimization that are based on customer demand patterns ensure that the correct assortments, size, and case-pack distributions get sent to the correct stores. Daily price, promotion, and markdown optimization ensures that items are priced for optimal profitability, both preseason and in season. Space automation and optimization ensure that departmental sales and profit per square foot are maximized, and products are given the correct inventory and space on the shelf or on the rack. Optimized fulfillment ensures that products are allocated or replenished based on demand. Accurate analysis also results in a more efficient use of manpower in picking, packing, and shipping the first wave of product, while minimizing additional, costly payroll expenses to facilitate transfers between stores, vendor returns, changing signage and labels for markdowns, and otherwise correcting mistakes.
Marketing — By understanding customers better — whether by profiling, segmenting, gauging propensity to respond, or using market basket analysis — retailers can create better-defined targeted campaigns, reducing expenses (printing, paper, postage) while increasing response rates, revenues, and gross margins. Also, as retailers gain a better understanding of their customers’ buying behavior, this analysis can then be used to create more effective merchandising plans for the next season.
Operations — Understanding and predicting changes in demand — by hour, by day, by location, by promotion, by price change — means that the store floors, the catalog call centers, and the fleet crews delivering replenishment orders from the DC to the store are all appropriately staffed. This understanding also leads to optimal productivity since store-level human capital costs can be scheduled better and managed more efficiently.
The Integrated Solution

It is important to note that a good BI solution will be able to integrate with any other system or platform. That said different BI solutions need to interface with different operational systems for different purposes.

A solution seeking to use customer behavioral data to make better merchandising or marketing decisions needs to interface with sales transaction systems, loyalty systems, in-house credit systems, coupon redemption systems, catalog and Internet customer data systems, and so forth. A system that recommends optimized price changes should interface with the price management system, the item master, the system that generates labels, etc.

There must be a closed-loop interface between the operational systems that retailers rely upon to conduct day-to-day business and the BI systems that help them conduct that business more efficiently and profitably.

The Future of BI in Retail

BI will be defined by the retailers that have figured out how to maximize customer satisfaction and profitability with the right combination of quality products, friendly and efficient service, unique value, a differentiated shopping experience, and a business model that truly serves its community — locally and globally. How will this be accomplished? It starts with understanding the customer and then linking that insight into every decision that is made, from merchandising to marketing to distribution to store operations to finance, so that retailers can predict how to best serve their customers’ ever-changing needs and desires.

Our vision for the future of retail BI provides for that very scenario, through our intelligence platform and our solutions for customer, merchandise, operations, and performance intelligence that are combined in a suite designed to equip retailers to become truly innovative.

A solution seeking to use customer behavioral data to make better merchandising or marketing decisions needs to interface with sales transaction systems, loyalty systems, in-house credit systems, coupon redemption systems, catalog and Internet customer data systems, and so forth. A system that recommends optimized price changes should interface with the price management system, the item master, the system that generates labels, etc.

About the Author

Director of Microsoft Solutions for OnX Enterprise Solutions

: 10:43 pm: adminThe Technology Way

IVF is the scientific approach to getting pregnant. Originally
termed “test-tube” babies by the Press, embryos are fertilized
in the lab, removed from a human body. One attempt at pregnancy
through IVF is termed a cycle, and can be divided into 5 general
phases.

1. Preparation

You’re body is manipulated with drugs. Doctors prescribe a
medication such as Lupron to shut down your ovaries for two
weeks.

2. Stimulation

Following the Lupron series you will receive a set of up to 14
shots of another medication, such as pergonal, to hyperstimulate
egg production. At the conclusion of these shots you will be
given a final medication to boost maturity of your eggs.

3. Harvesting

Once the eggs have reached maturity you are heavily sedated and
between 5-15 eggs are suctioned from your ovaries via ultrasound
guided vaginal retrieval.

4. Fertilization

Egg and sperm meet each other for the first time in the lab.
Approximately 100,000 motile sperm are introduced to each egg.
Fertilization is documented and the growing embryos are
carefully observed in vitro for up to 6 days. The growing trend
is to observe growth longer, past the 6-8 cell stage, and
blastocyst or advanced stage embryo transfer is not uncommon.
There are several benefits to a blastocyst transfer, you might
wish to ask your Reproductive team about them.

5. Embryo Transfer

Mom comes back in the picture as 3 or 4 growing embryos are
transferred back into your uterus in a procedure that resembles
a PAP smear. With any luck a new baby begins growing. On average
it takes 3 IVF cycles to establish a pregnancy.

This is a very brief draft of a typical IVF cycle, and it can be
an expensive, invasive procedure. But for couples who are having
trouble conceiving, IVF is a well-established, proven method to
overcoming infertility. There are a million people out there who
walking proof it works.

: 6:53 pm: adminThe Technology Way

The content of your web site should be written with readability in mind. Those who provide written content that does not reflect an understanding of internet readability research are losing an opportunity to have their message heard more often and more clearly.

Studies demonstrate that the internet poses very particular challenges and opportunities with respect to how information is actually read.

There are many elements of readability that require consideration.

Font choices (both in size and actual font) can have an impact on readability. For instance, research has demonstrated that fonts lacking serifs outperform fonts with serifs. This revelation runs contrary to the long-held understanding that fonts utilizing serifs speed reading.

Previous research was conducted on traditional page reading. An examination of readability specific to computers reached opposite conclusions. This underlines the importance of understanding readability specifically in terms of computer and internet use.

Color choices, column widths, page organization and other features are all being examined as new research regarding web readability is conducted. Anyone hoping to be successful with a content-rich site must keep abreast of new studies and their conclusions.

There are other considerations particular to writing content. Of course, all potentially visible grammatical and spelling errors must be avoided. Content providers should understand “scannability” and the scanning habits of internet users. They should also be fully aware of the structure types that aid in readability and encourage visitor examination.

Content should be written in an appropriate contextual voice. Marketing-heavy language requires additional cognitive processing burdens on a reader, reducing its effectiveness. Those who tailor their messages in concise, objective language at an appropriate reading level for their audience can achieve a better response.

Although achieving an understanding of content readability requires time and research, it is necessary for those who want to maximize their content’s value to readers. Even great writers need to acquaint themselves with new research and study regarding readability.

About The Author

C.E. David

Article Staff provides content and editing services to sites of all types. http://www.articlestaff.netfirms.com/.

Article Staff blogs at http://articlestaff.blogspot.com/

articlestaff@usa.com

: 8:31 am: adminMiscellaneous

There are angels and angels. Like the cherubs. Like the seraphs.
And Satan the devil, himself. There are prophets and prophets.
Like Jesus Christ. Like Muhammad. Like Siddhartha Guatama. And
there are terrorists and terrorists. Like. . . . Don’t think
that I am going to mention Osama Bin Laden. Or some madman
wielding a bomb, a gun , or a knife. No! Because there have come
to be many terrorists after September 11, 2001.

The Shorter Oxford Dictionary on Historical Principles defines
the word terrorist as ” anyone who attempts to further his views
by a system of coercive intimidation”. But today that definition
is relative. Because we are all terrorists! Forget the
Palestinian suicide bombers. Ignore the Muslim fundamentalists.
Do not think of those ones doing havoc in Indonesia, Russia or
East Africa. And remember not the several “terrorist” groups
mushrooming around the world. Yes, forget them.

Now, look around you, and you will come to see that you do not
have to go too far to look for a terrorist. Because that husband
who turns his wife into a punching bag is a terrorist. Because
that smoker who carelessly threw away the butt of his burning
cigarette into the bush, which eventually starts a conflagration
is a terrorist. Because the worker who goes on strike to demand
better pay is also a terrorist. The list has not ended.

If you are suspected of producing nuclear weapons, especially if
you live in North Korea, you are a terrorist. If it is thought
that you are hiding weapons of mass destruction, and your
country is called Iraq, you are a terrorist. If you are an Arab
Muslim from the Middle-East, you are a terrorist. If you are an
undocumented immigrant in the United States, you must be a
terrorist. I am not yet finished.

The other day, a German government official called George Bush,
Jnr. a nazi. Now come to think of it—nazi—fancy word
for terrorist. So if you are fighting the war on terror, you are
a terrorist. If you are a dictator that goes by the name of
Robert Mugabe—chasing white farmers and your political
opponents all over the place, no doubt, you must be a terrorist.
But that is not all.

If you are a writer that likes to “intimidate” your readers, you
are a terrorist. If you are a newsman like Robin White of the
BBC, who always asks his interviewees embarrassing, questions,
you are a terrorist. And if you are a baby born today, I welcome
you, “baby” terrorist. Because you have just tormented your
mother for nine months. Because she has just passed through
terrible birth pains for your sake. Perhaps, she died in the
process. No thanks to a terrorist like you.

And if you folks out there dare post a contrary opinion to this
article, then you are a terrorist! And I will point you out to
George Bush Jnr, and his “lap-dog” Tony Blair. And you will find
yourself in the lonely Guantanamo Bay near “dangerous” Cuba
learning how not to be a terrorist. (Something like weeping and
gnashing of teeth.) Call the angels! Call the prophets! No
dialing tone!!

I am done.

ARTHUR ZULU, The Most controversial Writer in the World, is the
author of the best-selling book, HOW TO WRITE A BEST- SELLER.
For your copy and Free excerpt of the book, click on:
http://www.1stbooks.com/bookveiw/10975 For contact, mailto:
controversialwriter@yahoo.com

a

: 8:29 am: adminLiving With Software

When you look around the world for likely IT offshore outsourcing destinations you may want to open your view a little to the south toward Brazil. Software programming is becoming a global commodity and Brazil offers the clear advantage of time zone, easy travel, and low cost IT professionals. Imagine skilled English speaking IT professionals at 50-70% less, working in the same business day as the Eastern U.S.A. The bill rate may not be as low as India and China, however, your ability to benefit from joint creativity during all parts of the development life cycle will far out weigh the difference. Top people in all countries seldom work nights. With Brazil’s time zone, the best and brightest are working in the same work day that you work. Even with well documented requirements, if your team can’t communicate often and freely due to time zone, you may not end up with what the user really wants?

Yes I know, you are probably wondering why you seldom hear of Brazil. This country hardly ever hits the radar when the decision is made to start looking offshore. And those U.S. companies that find Brazil seldom flaunt it, keeping it a best kept secret. Companies like AGCO, Alcatel, American Express, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Caterpillar, Citibank, Deutsche Bank and the list goes on. Brazil unlike India, has a huge domestic IT market that has only recently looked offshore for opportunities.

One good reason to consider doing business with Brazil is security. They respect your patent, copyright, and trade mark under penalty of law. Enforcement of intellectual property laws should be a major concern of businesses that venture offshore for IT development. Brazil has intellectual property protection legislation that is substantially similar to that of the United States which should put you at ease. Brazil enacted its first intellectual property law in 1887 and has current laws that are in line with international standards. Legal penalties for infringement can be civil or even criminal in Brazil.

In today’s world, data security is very important. Brazil rates better (62)on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index for 2005 than India (88), Russia (126), China (78),Saudi Arabia (70), and the Philippines(117) to name a few.

Some other reasons to consider Brazil for your next offshore outsourcing project include:

1. Brazil is an $18 billion IT industry and one of the largest IT industries in the world. It has a large and experienced work force.

2. Billing rates in Brazil are very competitive. They come in less than Canada and slightly more than those of India.

3. This is a highly educated professional work force. Brazilian Universities are very competitive to get into and very inexpensive to stay in. Expect to find professionals with advanced degrees.

4. Brazil has 1-3 hours different in time with U.S. Eastern Standard Time. Time zones do matter if you are traveling or trying to collaborate with someone long distances away. You can easily call your Brazilian project team during your work day.

5. English is a very popular skill and not hard to find with technical professionals in Brazil. English language capability is expected of young and middle aged high tech professionals in Brazil.

6. Air travel to Brazil is convenient and affordable. Sao Paulo is a 10 hour direct flight from Atlanta, Ga.

7. Good industrial infrastructure and low cost telephony service.

8. Brazil has excellent hotels and restaurants also at a low cost.

9. Brazil offers a friendly culture with similar racial diversities, religions and family life styles as in the U.S.A. This similarity facilitates remote cross cultural team building.

10. Brazilian women play a leadership role in business and in government. Traveling female executives are no surprise in Brazilian conference rooms or leading negotiations.

If you consider Brazil remember that it is as large as the Continental United States. Just as the salaries of IT professionals varies between a high in New York and fall as you travel south, salaries vary in Brazil as well. Professionals working in Sao Paulo or Rio may well garner a higher wage than similarly skilled professionals in Curitiba or Belo Horizonte. Your business stay in either of these smaller cities would be cheaper and have a comfortable tempo.

W. Henry Johns- President

Vision TRE, Inc.

henryj@visiontre.com

http://www.visiontre.com

Mr. Johns has over 25 years of experience in global project management and is currently the President of Vision TRE, Inc., a Georgia based IT outsourcing company. More about the author can be found at http://www.visiontre.com/aboutUs.htm

: 6:37 am: adminMiscellaneous

For some of us, being a published author would be the climax of
a career. Having a book that you created sold in bookstores
worldwide is the dream of a lifetime. Imagine being on a best
seller list! The fame! The fortune! The celebrity status! And
how hard can it be, if you are very good at what you do AND are
willing to do whatever it takes to get to the top?

While traditionally this route has been the one that many great
authors have taken, there are several other options now
available that will also lead to your continued (and profitable)
success! TRADITIONAL PUBLISHING

Let’s take a look at how you would get published via Traditional
Publishing methods. First of all, you would need to get the
attention of a publisher. Therein lays the first of many
obstacles. You see, every week, publishers are inundated with
thousands upon thousands of manuscripts from talented hopefuls
just like you! Imagine entering your office on Monday and being
greeted with over one thousand packages, all with your name on
them. Obviously, the chances of one manuscript rising to the top
of the pile are slim to none.

But say for a moment that somehow the publisher DOES select your
manuscript. There are a few caveats that you need to be aware of
before you order up the Champaign!

1. Firstly, the publisher controls ALL aspects of the
book-to-be. It is, in practicality, HIS book that YOU are
writing, so you must defer to him regarding the content, the
look etc! 2. You need to be aware of the long window of time
between when you hand in the completed manuscript and when the
final copy of the book is stocked on the shelves for sale. If
the focus of your writing is in any way time-sensitive, your
work may well be out of date before it is even published! 3.
Don’t plan on making MILLIONS. The standard fare for most
authors is a measly 8% commission per copy! When a book sells
for $29.99, you get a whopping $2.40-enough to go to Starbucks!
4. Now the good news is that IF a bookstore decides to carry
your book, they will pay for all of the books that they stock.
However, don’t cash the cheque just yet! The bad news is that
whatever they DON’T sell in 90 days, they will return and expect
a refund!

SELF-PUBLISHING

Now don’t despair! There is more than one way to get a book out
to the hungry masses! Consider the example of Marjan (pronounced
Mar-yahn) Glavac. In 1997, Marjan was teaching in a high school
in London, Ontario, Canada where he was approached by a
publisher to work on a book. For several months, Marjan toiled
until finally he had his first three chapters complete. However,
when he contacted his publisher again, she told him that she
already had two other authors working on exactly the same thing!

Despite the letdown, he decided to press on and finish the
project and see where that would take him. Marjan knew that,
once complete, the book had to be printed, then distributed,
then sold if he were to make any money (assuming, as he did,
there was a market for his book).

One Thousand Hours Later…

It took Mr. Glavac about one thousand hours to complete his
work. This gave him 200 pages of material that his wife
faithfully edited. The next step was to send a perfect sample of
each and every page to the press that was waiting to start the
print run. This was where they ran into trouble: “For some
reason, my printer at home suddenly refused to work properly! I
couldn’t believe it! Here we were with a book waiting to be
published and the clock was ticking and my printer was smearing
every page that I printed. I finally had to run across town in
the middle of the night and borrow a laser printer from a friend
of mine!”

Head North, Young Man

By himself, Marjan had found a press that agreed to print his
book. The deal worked in this way: to cover the printing of a
minimum number of books, Marjan would open an ‘account’ with the
press by depositing a minimum of two thousand dollars with them.
When they had more money, they could deposit it and get more
books printed. The more books they wanted, the more money it
would be.

Imagine their excitement on the day that their first shipment of
books arrived! Three thousand copies shipped and stored in the
Glavac garage! Unfortunately Marjan discovered a huge glob of
ink in the centre of every single book. The entire shipment was
useless and had to be returned!

The Do-It-Yourselfers

To get his books sold, Glavac then contacted local bookstores.
“The first question that they ask you is ‘Do you have a
distributor?’ Bookstores make no bones about the fact that they
really do not want to deal with self-publishers. It was very
frustrating! I thought that my original contact with a real
publisher would have made some kind of difference-boy, was I
wrong!”

So he set about contacting distributors, which was almost
another road block in itself. “Distributors, like presses, are
not willing to take on any risk themselves. They all want a
minimum of ten thousand copies which, of course, I would have to
print at my expense. Plus, if they go bankrupt, you are in
danger of losing all of those books that you just paid for!”

After some thought, Marjan decided to forego the risks and
simply sell their product out of their garage. This required
spending more money and more time! They needed to purchase
envelopes, postage and labels. Whenever an order came in, it had
to be packed up and mailed out again as quickly as possible.

Against All Odds-A Best Seller!

Despite the obstacles, Glavac printed over 9000 books and sold
7000 of that number between 1998 and 2005. That equates to a
best seller in Canada and also to over $83,000 in gross revenue
for Marjan!

Knowing the risks and labour involved, would Best Selling Author
Marjan Glavac self-publish a book again? “Not likely! I’m still
going to follow my dreams and continue to publish, but I’ve
found a better way to do it that carries no pressure, no risk,
little labour and ensures that everything I publish always
up-to-date, no matter what!”

E-BOOK AUTHORING

The ‘better way’ that Marjan is referring to is called eBook
Authoring. Its fans and its benefits are many. For starters,
there is no overhead cost and no inventory of product to keep on
hand. Also, as an electronic file, it can be sent as a Portable
Document Format (PDF) to any editor in mere seconds, making it
easy to shop around. One of its best features, though, is that
copies of it can be bought literally 24/7 without you lifting a
finger! And when some of the material becomes dated, you, the
author, simply update it, re-PDF it and continue selling it: a
true living document!

“I love e-books because they are so practical and easy!”
exclaims Glavac. “My last e-book was over 100 pages but it took
me only 150 hours to complete it including editing, graphics and
setting up a website to sell it! And in the last eight months,
I’ve made over $6800, some of it while I slept! In fact in my
first 24 hours, I sold 123 copies and earned $2 948.31 USD.”

So Easy, and Still Legal! The road to successful e-book
authoring is radically different, and much more practical, than
that of traditional publishing and self-publishing. It all
begins with finding a market. “The first thing that you need to
do is make sure that there is a market out there for what you
want to sell.” says Glenn Dietzel, of awakentheauthorwithin.com.
“Send out surveys to peers, business people, anyone connected to
your area of interest and find out exactly what they are looking
for.”

Once you know there are people willing to buy what you are
offering, you need to get their email addresses. Usually this is
done by offering a newsletter or a smaller eBook which the
prospects will receive in exchange for their address. Through
this process, you build a list of willing, interested people who
gladly receive your emailed newsletters about their topic of
interest. They will be a great resource to you as you survey
them in search of content or even a suitable title for your
projected e-book.

Once the book is complete, you know that you already have a
large list of potential customers waiting to make a purchase
from your website! Price-wise, you can charge $27 to $97 for
every product you sell with NO costs to cover. And the more you
market the book to your list, the more you will sell!

So do yourself a favor-when you decide that it’s finally time to
show the world what YOU have to offer, become an e-book author
and let your market make you a success, even while you sleep!

Glenn Dietzel “What If You Could Instant Access To A New York
Publisher Without An Agent and Without A Formal Book Proposal?”
How? By Following This Simple, Proven System for Authoring
Success… http://www.AwakenTheAuthorWithin.com/author.htm