Ten
Tips To Get Started Writing Your Book
by
Judy Cullins ©2001
You are far
more likely to successfully write and publish your book if you follow
these tips before you write a single chapter.
1. Write
your book's working title. It helps you focus and answer the readers'
questions about the topic. Most non-fiction has subtitles as well. It's
better to be clear than clever, but clever and clear are fine. "Passion
At Any Age: Twelve Ways to Unleash It", "Self-Promotion for
the Creative Person", "Quadruple your book's Online Sales in
Less Than One Month".
2. Write
your book's thesis.
A thesis is a sentence or so stating the audience's main problem and how
your book will solve it.
Knowing the
thesis before you write the book keeps you on track. All chapters should
support it. The thesis could be "Each of you has passion and you can unleash
it through these twelve steps."
3. Test
your book's significance.
While most writers fear their book won't sell, it takes only two significances
to write a book, and three for a great seller. Ask yourself, Is it relevant?
Then write it!
Does it present useful information? Does it have the potential to positively
affect people's lives? Is it lively, humorous? Does it help answer important
questions? Does it create a deeper understanding of human nature?
4. Pinpoint
your target audience, all-important to your book's success. No, not
everyone will want to read your book. How old are your prospective readers?
Male? Female?
Are they interested in personal growth, science fiction, mystery, how-to
books? What challenges do they face? Are they business people? What magazines
and Web sites do they like? Are they Internet savvy? What causes do they
support?
Once you know them, write a letter and tell them why you are writing your
book and what benefits it will bring them.
"Dear over-50 reader, 'I'm writing Passion At Any Age to help you
live life full throttle—with more abundance, joy, and meaning.' "
5. Write
your reasons for writing this book. Your reader, the media, the television
and radio talk show hosts all want to know why you wrote this book. Be
prepared up front, so you will shine when opportunities come your way.
For instance, "I wrote this book because so many of my clients and students
asked me to. They didn't want theory; they wanted practical how to's to
help them live life well. This audience, primarily over 50, wants and
needs practical and spiritual tools to let their passion out."
6. Write
down your publishing goals for this book. Do you want to give it away
to members of your family or a particular group? Do you want to sell it?
How many copies do you want to sell your first year? How much money do
you want to make each month? What publishing format will you choose—self-publishing,
traditional publishing, Print Quality Needed or Print on Demand, or eBook?
7. Organize
the parts of your book. In one file, keep your introduction; in another,
your index or resource section. Include your bibliography and keep a file
of all people you will quote in your book who may give you a testimonial
later.
Keep each
chapter in its own file labeled correctly so you can find it within minutes.
Twenty percent
of your papers are important. Be sure to file them vertically and in order
to save you time and frustration as your book projects grows. Keep computer
files also.
8. Write
down your chapter's format. Readers expect a clear map to guide them.
They like consistency. In non-fiction, each chapter should be approximately
the same length and have the same sections.
To make your
chapters sparkle, use stories, anecdotes, headings, photos, maps, graphs,
exercises, tips. Readers like easy-to-read side bars in boxes.
9. Write
the back cover material before you write your book.
This "outline" helps give your book direction and helps you focus only
on what's important to your thesis or theme. Your back cover has around
8 seconds to impress your prospective buyer.
Include what
sells: reader and famous people's testimonials, a benefit-driven headline
to hook the reader to open the book and read the table of contents, and
bulleted benefits.
Your bio
and picture can go on the inside of the back cover to leave more room
for your sales message on the back cover.
10. Mock
up a front cover in your book's early stages.
Keep it by your workstation to inspire you. To sell your books, your cover
and title have around four seconds to hook your buyer.
Covers are
more important than what is inside. Browse the bookstore and copy a few
ideas to get you started. Do you have color preferences? Is you title
powerful and short enough to be read across the room?
Writing a
book is so much easier when you approach it in small bites. As soon as
you get these ten parts written you will be able to start asking more
specific questions that become your chapter headings.
= = = = = = =
Judy Cullins: 20-year
author, publisher, book coach Helps entrepreneurs manifest their book
and web dreams eBk: _Ten Non-techie Ways to Market Your Book Online_
http://www.bookcoaching.com/products.shtml Send an email to Subscribe@bookcoaching.com
FREE The Book Coach Says... includes 2 free eReports/ Judy@bookcoaching.com
Ph:619/466/0622
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