There’s a fascinating phenomenon that’s been making itself evident whenever web users visit gossip sites like Bossip, whereby large ads for intriguing films such as Black Church Inc., Bottoms Up, When the Checking Stop Coming In and The Swirl are prominently displayed from Moguldom Studios.


Perhaps you envision yourself as a similar documentarian, or an educator who is searching for a way to immediately upload the video content you produce and make it available for sale to customers who can then view it via a variety of ways – including through mobile apps.


That’s where sites like Uscreen are filling a niche in 2014 and beyond, offering a 21st century method of turning digital video content into downloadable viewing options for customers – available to buy from those who represent everybody from classroom content distributors to independent filmmakers.


The space between initial video concept and customer purchase is getting shorter


Whereas years ago DVDs ruled the roost, these days online video is a major variety of the content growing at lightning speeds. That fact bodes well for both the video creators and buyers – as well as for the sites that are able to bring the two together quickly and comfortably.


Imagine if you’re a bodybuilder with a revolutionary workout training system that must be seen by users in a video format to understand it best – but you’re not keen on placing your entire exercise regimen on YouTube and then relying on the peanuts in ad revenue as compensation. Using a site like Uscreen can be a good alternative, allowing you to direct your clients straight to the URL where your content is hosted for purchase.


In the past, you would’ve been stuck with on the arduous process of transferring your video content to a DVD – and those of us who’ve actually performed such feats know how time-consuming that process can be and the level of technical expertise it entails – and afterward, you’d still have to worry about shipping the physical DVD to your customers. Thankfully, the Information Age has greatly streamlined this process, and even folks who have DVD products that they continue to sell can now use Uscreen to offer their customers the convenient option to stream the content online instead.


No matter the style of content, this business model for video distribution is the cutting edge wave of the future – and the present. By offering web-conscious video watchers who are willing to pay to legally view the things they want to consume, instant video platforms are providing revenue streams to content creators, who charge their own buyers either a monthly fee or a per-sale cost for each video downloaded.


In the same manner that downloadable e-books changed the game for booksellers and made it much easier and more profitable for authors to sell directly to the public, it seems the video-viewing market is undergoing a similar revolution that might make DVD rental companies go the way of Borders Books & Music stores.






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