SHOULD YOU WRITE A BOOK?
By Steven Van Yoder
One morning, you open your inbox and find several e-mails that will boost your business.
There is an invitation to speak at a local group comprised of your best prospects. Several emails have arrived
from people who've "heard of you" and inquire about your services.
There is a message from a potential joint venture partner who has invited you to be a guest
on a teleconference that will reach 500 people, all of them prospects. Later that day, a journalist calls.
She wants to write a story about your business, which she heard about on a radio interview you gave weeks
earlier.
Is this a fantasy? No. This could be a typical day in your life as a published author.
More and more business people are realizing the power of writing a book to catapult their
businesses to a higher level. Speakers, consultants, coaches, therapists & other small business owners
are learning that publishing a book is one of the most powerful marketing strategies available.
Published authors report that their lives change, often dramatically, when their books reach
the marketplace. When you become an author, you become known as the expert. When you are known as an expert
in your field, whatever your field, you will find that the world will beat a path to your door.
A Book Generates Visibility and Attracts Clients
Of all the information products you can create, a book has the greatest potential to open doors.
A book can give you more recognition and professional credibility than audiotapes, CDs, videos, seminars,
workshops and public speaking.
Since my book ;Get Slightly Famou;s was published last year, I have been amazed at how it has
transformed my business.
Publishing my book was a newsworthy event that resulted in tens of thousands of dollars in
new business, high-profile media coverage, speaking engagements, radio interviews, partnership opportunities,
and too many other benefits to mention.
Prospective clients now hear about me from all over the world. The media regularly call me,
and I appear in newspaper articles and radio interviews.
'Get Slightly Famous' is not just my most effective marketing tool. It has become the core
of my brand identity. My book provides a marketing platform for my business that gives all my marketing efforts
a natural, sharp focus.
Best of all, marketing is not such a struggle anymore.
As a successful author you will find the stress of constantly seeking new clients can largely
become a thing of the past. Clients will seek you out, ready to pay good money for your services, because
you are seen as a leader in your field. You become their first choice.
It's Not Just a Book -- It's a Business!
Your book is the seed from which you can grow a multi-faceted "empire'' of related products
and services, including seminars, teleclasses, reports, consulting packages, audiotapes, & other profitable
information products.
Imagine selling thousands of books to trade associations as premiums for their members. Or
how about creating a $49-a-month newsletter, a $995 home-study course, a $499 a year membership website?
Could you use your book as the basis for a year-long mentorship program for which individuals or groups pay
thousands of dollars a piece to participate?
The idea is to see your book as a launching pad for new business opportunities.
Barbara Hemphill used her book 'Taming The Paper Tiger' to develop a multi-pronged branding
strategy. Hemphill offers organizing skills services designed to reduce stress and increase productivity.
Her business is based almost entirely on her book.
Barbara has used her book to develop 'Taming the Paper Tiger' software, gain an endorsement
by Pendaflex, and found the Hemphill Productivity Institute. Her company now employs more than 70 Paper
Tiger authorized consultants across the U.S. and Canada.
You can write a book!
Me, publish a book, you ask? Yes, you. It is easier than you might think, and you don't need
to be a seasoned writer to become a published author.
Writing a successful book is not the easiest thing in the world, but it is entirely possible.
The talents and expertise you bring to your clients can form the basis of a successful book. If you know
your subject area, and can communicate your ideas in a clear, compelling, organized manner, becoming a
published author is within your reach.
A strategy that works for many is to break the process into smaller steps by writing a series
of articles. They then become the basis for a book. Or, you can work with a talented freelance writer to
help you express your ideas clearly and with conviction.
The most traditional route is to find a publisher who will handle the production, marketing,
promotion and distribution. This involves upfront work (you write a detailed proposal, a table of contents,
sample chapters and a market overview). Then you shop the proposal around to potential publishers,
either on your own or with the help of a commissioned agent.
Self-publishing has many advantages over traditional publishing, the most compelling being
greater financial returns for the author. "When you self-publish, you keep all the profits," says Dan Poynter,
author of The Self-Publishing Manual. "Additionally, you get into print quickly, own the copyright, and take
all applicable tax breaks."
On the downside, self-publishing can be expensive. You pay upfront for all the production and
distribution costs, and if your book does not sell, you will be stuck with the leftover inventory. However,
if your book is successful, you will not only have the satisfaction and advantages of being a published
author, you will make more money.
Whatever publishing route you choose, the Internet provides a global marketplace for your book.
Never before has it been so easy to market a book if you are willing to invest the time and energy to write
one.
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Steven Van Yoder is the author of Get Slightly Famous. He teaches small business owners how to duplicate
his success and become a "slightly" famous author in your field. Visit http://www.getslightlyfamous.com to claim your FREE Slightly Famous Marketing Plan Workbook and learn how
to attract more business with less effort by creating your own information empire.
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