Sunday, July 30, 2006

Video on Websites - Myvideotalk India


IF your website does not have video its going to be outdated soon. Recent studies on why the demand for larger harddrives on computers is constantly increasing at unheard of rates in recent times revealed the facts . People simply want more space for video and multimedia files. People are looking for increased multimedia when they go online as suggested by the trend of computer sales.
Consumer trends are showing that in the very near future consumer spends will be propelled by video content on websites and anyone not deploying these state of the art facilities on their websites will be left far behind the competion who readily adopt to this changing consumer behaviour.
My Video Talk India can help you with simple applications that allow you to put, with relative ease I may add, video on your websites at a price that is second to none. Try it you will be delighted !!!

video mail is now in India - introduced by my video talk



Companies around the world are working over time to speed up their broad band deployment and increasing bandwidth, furthering it with aggressive addition of wimax and g3 technologies which will introduce wireless broadband services, thereby increasing the spread of customers and services substantially, MY Video Talk a USA based MNC with a successful background is getting ready for their launch in India. While still in prelaunch stage My Video Talk India - is getting ready to aggressively get into the Indian market place which promises to be in the top three wimax countries in the world. Video services promises to open up a whole new world of advertising personal communication and services. Time to get involved and get ahead of this trend is now.

"Australian wireless broadband sales soar, says IDC The Australian wireless broadband market will double in size this year, growing three times faster than the wired market, according to IDC. The Australian wireless broadband market will double in size this year, growing three times faster than the wired market, according to IDC. IDC research manager for wireless and mobility, Warren Chaisatien, said. Business take-up would surpass the consumer market in 2007, he said.
Australia, Chaisatien said. WiMax would foster mobile phone-like functionality, such as roaming agreements and provider
cooperation, but would also lead to consolidation, he said.

Monday, July 24, 2006

Video mail business set to explode in India



While the telecom world is still marvelling mobile telephony growth In India, which at 100 million connections has emerged as the fastest growing in the world, but the other scorching growth story in the country's telecom sector could well be broadband services.

In a recent report Canada-based broadband telecom research firm Maravedis Inc. just released, it forecasts that the next phenomenal telecom growth story in India lies in broadband wireless access (BWA) segment, which could experience the same explosive growth as mobile telephony experienced over the last three years. Although broadband has seen grown quite a bit in the past year we have seen nothing yet !!! "But if India can bring in the right conditions, broadband, particularly over wireless access, would follow the same explosion as mobile phones experienced in India lately." The mobile phone which made its debut in 1995 and struggled for the first three years to touch the 1 million mark in 1998. Growth started perking up thereafter to reach 3 million in 2000, 5 million in 2001, and 10 million in 2002. But finally mobile telecom subscription exploded in the country to reach 100 million in June 2006.

WiMax is defined as Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access. It is a standards-based wireless technology that provides high-throughput broadband connections over long distances. WiMax can be used for a number of applications, including "last mile" broadband connections, hotspots and cellular backhaul, and high-speed enterprise connectivity for business. Broadband services were launched in India in 2005 and now cover about 300 Indian cities with a combined 1.5 million connections. Even though 1.5 million broadband connections in about a year look reasonably satisfactory by Indian standards, the number is piffling considering that India now has 50 million fixed line and 100 million mobile users, said the report. The report said that the government has recently announced allocation of spectrum on the 3.3 to 3.4 GHz band range, the country needs 3.4 to 3.5 GHz -- which is the WiMax spectrum -- for a profitable business case. Meanwhile activity in the broadband wireless access space seems to be hectic already, in anticipation of the government announcing its new spectrum allocation policy expected by the year end.

Five Indian operators, Bharti TeleVentures, Reliance Telecom, the NASDAQ-listed SIFY Ltd, the state-owned BSNL and Tata Group-owned VSNL have acquired Broadband wireless licenses in 3.3 GHz range and are in various stages of trials. The report says that VSNL has also announced Phase 1 pre-WiMax deployment.Global telecom companies too have joined the fray. Intel is reportedly making "significant progress" in working closely with the Indian government in bringing the country's rural broadband goals to reality, while Motorola is strengthening its presence in the hinterlands through its extensive broadband wireless access projects for state governments. Alcatel has joined the bandwagon too by entering into a joint venture recently with a government-owned telecom research outfit to focus on exclusive BWA/WiMax solutions that are tailor made for India "at Indian price points." "Although the Indian broadband arena is emerging, it offers huge potential for those that can demonstrate perseverance, patience and commitment," said the report, which has projected that assuming India releases WiMax spectrum by this year end, the annual BWA/WiMax equipment market opportunity -- a mere $6 million in 2005 -- could increase to $256 million in 2012. "By then India could have accumulated 18 million BWA subscribers making the country one of the top three WiMax markets in the world," said Adlane Fellah, CEO and founder of Maravedis, that claims to be a world leader in market research and analysis of the global broadband, BWA and WiMax markets.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Tv advertising with the simplicity of email

FIND OUT HOW COMPANIES use VIDEOS FOR PROMOTING THEIR PRODUCTS OR SERVICES

Introduction to MVT products by rep from Bulgaria
Thai tourism
Software company website using MVT product
Real Estate
University Website using videos
Automobiles
Hotel - Le meridien
UPS Parcel Service

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Feel free to give me a call!!

Warm regards,

Jitendra Jog
Tel: + 91 (0) 9324226499
india.noni@gmail.com

We are leading the way ....

Guys check out this video from Amy our Customer support Head ....we are 28 people in all now and we have only just started i would like to see every member of our team in the founders circle lets GO FOR IT

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cheers
jj

Shift in Trends ??!!

The Following is an excerpt from a rather lengthy article I read over the weekend and puts across very clearly the shift in some key global trends and therefore the increasing needs for our products and services. Get ahead of the trend now grow your Video mail business as deep as possible now before the big BOOM in INDIA. India is already strongly gearing up for 3G and Wimax (wireless broadband) networks by early next year the market size of your target audience is going to triple.

regards
jj

The new generation is in love with screen culture - but not television.

CALL them gen Y, the millenium generation or echo boomers, they are the generation that has grown up with access to technology every day of their lives. Born between 1982 and 1995, the offspring (or echo) of baby boomers number more than 250 million worldwide.
Their parents grew up in homes with a limited number of TV channels, no remote control and usually a single phone. If they wanted to play video games they had to go to the local arcade or milk bar. Echo boomers, the "always-on" generation, have grown up with mobile phones that take pictures and play video, portable media players, the internet, instant messaging, Voice over IP, cable TV, online games. With access to all this technology they're the new wave of consumers marketers are desperate to reach.
Thanks to the raft of personal technology available to them, echo boomers are watching less television and are not great consumers of print media, the traditional marketing channels.
Significant changes have occurred in television usage among young consumers, who typically are more avid adopters of new distribution platforms. "Between 1994 and 2004 there appears to have been a reduction in average daily television usage of between 17 per cent and 21 per cent among all viewers under the age of 24," he says. This is the impact of pay television, online services, DVDs, computer games and mobile phones, which have been around for about a decade, has been small but incremental and it is only now that their effect is being realised
The advent of digital television and personal video recorders (PVRs) makes the situation more complex. This generation want their entertainment on the device of their choice when they want it and this is a big challenge for advertisers.

Nearly half of US households are expected to own PVRs in 2010. Also, internet protocol television (IPTV), which integrates the web with television, video, music, and general computer content, has the potential to allow viewers to control and customise what they watch. IPTV has been tested and is already in homes in the US and Britain. There are significant shifts in their social behaviour because of the technology they have access to, the fundamental difference being in the way they communicate. Take today's 12-year-old. When she is 27 her interaction with technology is going to be greater than with any other generation. "Companies are going to have to change everything because of what she and her generation will demand - the services they offer, how they market products, their employment policies." Portable media players and podcasting are also eating into the time echo boomers spend in front of the television.

Increasingly, advertisers are turning to media such as SMS, video, email, blogs and viral marketing online to try to reach this elusive youth market.
Mobile phone marketing is now considered mainstream, with the Mobile Marketing and Advertising Awards recognising excellence in integrated advertising and marketing campaigns, content and applications for mobile phones.
Internet advertising has also seen exponential growth as advertisers go online.
According to a report by research group Frost & Sullivan "the online industry's growth to the rapid migration of eyeballs from traditional media to the internet and the increase in online media consumption across all demographics; strong uptake of broadband by Australian households; the evolution of wireless technologies such as 3G, which allows for digital advertising across both online (large screen) and mobile (small screen); and an increase in online spend by major advertisers and agencies".
Interactive games are also being used by marketers hoping to get their products in front of echo boomers. Young men are the hardest market to reach as they watch less television than young women. Online gaming sites are enormously popular with this group; for example IGN Entertainment, which has sites such as ign.com, and gamespy.com, says it averages 15 to 20 million unique users a month, 91 per cent of them male, with an average age of 22.

Friday, July 14, 2006

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Thursday, July 06, 2006

My Video Talk - In Prelaunch stage in India


The newest media wave to hit the online shore is video. Individual emails abound with links to "the funniest video ever," or blurry clips of new babies or birthday parties.

Businesses, on the other hand, have largely been left standing on the shore, scratching their heads and wondering if there's any real value to be earned from diving into making their own live video broadcasts, video emails or video on demand infommercials. Here are just five of the many ways video adds to the bottom line of any company.

1. People remember more of your message.
While people generally remember 10% of what they read and 20% of what they hear. But, they'll remember as much as 50% of what they see and hear together. Before anyone can act on your message, they need to process and remember it.

2. Increase responses by up to 30%.
A call to action is much easier to follow if it is actively delivered. Sound and motion are powerful action drivers, especially when they are delivered by your sincere enthusiasm and passion for your topic. Companies who have made the switch to video email and on- demand broadcasts have reported response rates jump as much as 30% following a broadcast.

3. Build your credibility.
People do business with people they know, like and trust. When you cut through the technological barriers of the Internet and put yourself online, you put "your self on the line" as far as viewers are concerned. The time it would normally take you to build a relationship with a potential customer can be dramatically shortened as a result.

4. The cost savings are obvious.
Anytime you can avoid the high costs of sending someone on the road to meet with clients or attend a meeting, the bottom line savings are immediate and obvious. In addition to any costs associated with attending a meeting, you need to factor in travel costs covering airfares to taxis and tolls, hotel costs, meal expenses, and even your internal costs to process the expense paperwork.

5. Soft cost savings multiply returns.
Spare yourself the productivity drain and the physical and mental tolls travel takes on your company's road warriors and you could enjoy "soft" cost savings that dwarf your hard dollar travel costs. Want an example? Look at your own calendar for the past month and count up just the hours you spent traveling to and from meetings. Multiply that by your hourly wage, and then by the number of employees in your firm.

If reasons like these don't help you convince the reluctant decision makers in your company to add video to your communications mix, please be patient with them. Historically they are in good company.

There were many who claimed the smeary images on hard to handle rolls of paper called "faxes" could never function in place of an original document. And who, they asked, would ever want to spend more time typing an email message when they could so easily pick up a telephone and place a call?

MY VIDEO TALK INDIA can help you achieve all this and more, for your customers, as your customers.With a the most powerful and remunerative affiliate programme it also allows you to offset some of your costs and or use it to build great profits.

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