Many have been requesting a published collection of the best of my Pearls. As those who've seen me speak know well, I always decorate my presentations with many Pearls, the real mobile services that exist around the world, described always on one Powerpoint slide. I've shown over 1,200 Pearls into the public domain since 2000, and my private collection includes thousands more.
Now I'm announcing the published collection series, as an eBook series. Volume 1 is focusing on mobile advertising and marketing, and has 50 Pearls including all the "biggest hits" from the Nightlife Guide to the City and the MacDonald's campaign in 2001 onto Blyk, BMW, Otetsudai Netoworks and the advertising sides to Flirtomatic. The eBook includes 13 Pearls around mobile advertising and marketing, that have never been seen in the public domain, and I've only used in my private workshops.
The eBook is 104 pages in length, is a pdf file, and available today. It only costs 9.99 Euros and you can go order it right now and get it today. The link to the ordering page is here [Order Tomi Ahonen's eBook Pearls Vol 1: Mobile Advertising]
Dear Mr Tomi,
I have a great fan of your works and have purchased your latest book 'the 7th mass media'. I have been trying to purchase your ebook but 'painpal' has been giving me lots of trouble. Is there any other pay I can pay you for the ebook?
Posted by: Aaron Chua | January 18, 2009 at 07:24 AM
Hi Aaron
Painpal does need your computer to have cookies allowed, so that might be able to solve it. What I can do is send you the link directly, perhaps that will help. I will do that now.
But at the moment I don't have other ways to handle the payments. I am looking into places where I might sell the eBook, but am not planning to turn it into a "real book" as such, with an ISBN number etc, so am not expecting to bring it to Amazon (at this point) as its more a very niche specialist interest for those who are into mobile services and probably will find it from the blog anyway.
Thank you
Tomi Ahonen :-)
Posted by: Tomi T Ahonen | January 18, 2009 at 12:27 PM