E-Books are hot-sellers, but many people worry about writing them. If you take note of the information detailed here there is no reason why you can’t start yours right now. If you are worried about certain aspects of the writing, why not employ someone to carry out some of it for you while you oversee the project.
Once you’ve decided on a topic for your E-Book, and have done research to ensure that people are looking for and buying information on this topic, write a series of articles. By writing the articles it provides practice and they are easier to do but they can also be used later to help promote your book in all sorts of online areas. If these articles are sent to article directories, within a short space of time you should have a very good idea how many people have shown an interest and can estimate how successful it will be.
Once this is complete you can start writing the content of the e-book and work out how you want it to look. Books generally follow a familiar structure of: introduction, main subject content and a conclusion but it is becoming very common to see an additional section on resources. To help increase the number of sales it is often worth adding extra material.
Once each article is written, place it into the e-book so you will have a better idea of how long it will be. E-Books are shorter than print books with the optimum length being around 50 pages so stick to the topic, and offer good, useful information. People do not like reading on compute screens so prefer to have shorter books that do not drift from the subject.
Be aware of ‘bonus’ material as you write because E-Book purchasers love to get bonus material. You can easily write some extra articles or provide another report you have complied. Any extra material you supply will need to be worthwhile on its own and be related to your e-book subject.
Francisco Segura owns
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