Marketing tip
The Easiest and Best Way to Write Your
Book
by Diane Eble
You want to write a book. You have an idea.
Great!
But you don't
know where to begin.
I have your
answer.
Start with an
article.
You've heard the
expression: "How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a
time."
The "elephant" is
the book. The "bites" are the series of articles that will
eventually make up the book—each article a piece of a
chapter.
You can assure
yourself of finishing the book if you just tell yourself you
will work on one little piece—one article, with one
thought—at a time.
Set a realistic
goal. If an article a week isn't realistic, then try an
article every two weeks, or one a month. Either way, you'll
be making progress.
The Hidden Treasure in Your
Articles
Once it's
written, don't just move on to the next one. Whether you
know it or not, your article contains a hidden treasure.
There is extremely valuable information about your audience
locked up in that article.
You can unlock
the treasure and put that article to work for you to
actually shape your book into something you know people will want to
read.
How?
By publishing it
online, and using the feedback that's available to learn
more about your audience.
When you publish
an article in an online ezine directory such as
ezinearticles.com, the directory keeps track of how times
people have viewed your article, how many times it's been
published in other places or emailed to people. People are
also allowed to vote on your article, and to
comment.
As you write your
book, article by article, chapter by chapter, you can get a
feel for which topics are most interesting to other people.
You may find out that some articles receive a lot of votes
and comments, others get none. This will help you reshape
your book so that you give people more of what they want,
and don't bore them with what they don't want.
This really gets
me excited. Never before has something like this been
available to writers. Before, it's always been a crapshoot
as to what people really will want to read. The Internet
tools available now have changed all that—to writers'
everlasting advantage.
You just have to
know how to use the tools.
What to Do with Your
Article
Once written,
submit your article to ezine directories. Start with
ezinearticles.com, the biggest and best
directory. Look through the categories and find the one that
most closely fits your audience's needs. Go as far as you
can.
For instance,
this article could go in the "Writing and Speaking"
category, but it's best if I go further and put it in the
"Writing and Speaking—Writing" category. Now, I could put it
in "Writing and Speaking—Writing Articles" category—but I
won't. Why not?
Because you, the
reader, are probably most interested in this point in
writing a book, right? I'm telling you the best way to do
that is to start by writing articles, but that's not what's
on your mind at first. See how it works? You always start
with your audience. It's all about them—not you!
People will find
online articles through keying in words or phrases in the
search box, so you will want to figure out what kind of
keywords people will use to find the information in your
article. All ezine directories will ask you to submit
keywords. Make your title and your first paragraph,
especially, rich with keywords.
In addition to
keywords, you need to submit a summary of your article. This
is like a little ad to get people to read it, so you want to
make sure it summarizes well what you want to say, while
enticing them to read more.
The next unique
thing about an ezine article is that you can include an
author's bio box, also called a resource box. Here is where
you can put something in about yourself. Here is where you
can also ask them to take some action—sign up for your
newsletter if you have one, or your blog, or go to your
website to read an excerpt from another book you have,
etc.
I suggest you put
up a simple blog where you can post your other articles, and
say in the resource box, "To read more articles on this
topic, visit http://www.yourblogurl.com."
Blogs are great because they're free, quick and easy to put
up and maintain, search engines like them, and people can
comment on them as well. Just make sure that the articles on
your blog and the ones in the ezine directories are at least
20 percent different.
Use the
information you're learning about your audience to rethink
your book's content as necessary.
Caution
One caution about
using this technique: Do not submit the content of every
single chapter to online directories!
Two reasons for
this.
One, a chapter is
probably too long for an article anyway. One chapter may end
up being the equivalent of several articles. You'll want to
submit only 500-900 words tops as an ezine article. Use
something that's representative of the chapter. All you need
is a sense of how people like your content.
Second reason you
can't submit all of what will eventually be your book's
content is—no publisher will touch it if it's already been
published.
However, if you
can approach a publisher and say, "pieces of several of
these chapters have gotten 10,000 views, been picked up by
2000 other ezines, and received 300 comments"—well, let's
just say a publisher is likely to be convinced you have an
audience, even if you're trying to sell your first
book.
Further Resources …
-
If you're having difficulty coming up with
ideas for your book or articles, read
"
Two
Never-Fail
Ways
to
Overcome Writer's Block." The second technique is
especially good for coming up with ideas so quickly you'll
be amazed. One of my clients used this to restructure her
book in two minutes! She used the same technique for each
chapter and in one day, got the whole book ready for
editing. My 16-year-old son, who has writer's block big
time, also used this when he needed to write a paper.
Within 15 minutes we had mind-mapped his paper's ideas, and
he was on the computer typing his paper. Amazing
tool!
-
The second resource is my class,
"Writing
Secrets Revealed." In that class I expand on the
technique mentioned above, and mention several others. I
revealed all the tips that have allowed me to be
prolific and never experience writer's block for the
past 3 decades.
-
Finally, for an updated list of 50 ezine
article directory sites, with links,
click here.
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