A Surprising Way to Write a Million Dollar E-Book
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by Joe Vitale September 05, 2003
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| Joe Vitale |
About
the Author:
Joe
Vitale of www.mrfire.com
is author of numerous books, including the international #1 best-seller,
"Spiritual Marketing," the best-selling e-book, "Hypnotic
Writing," the best-selling Nightingale-Conant audioprogram,
"The Power of Outrageous Marketing," and the best-selling
e-book (with Jim Edwards) "How to Write and Publish Your Own
OUTRAGEOUSLY Profitable e-Book --- in as little as 7 days!"
See www.7dayebook.com |
| Joe Vitale
has written 6 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Joe Vitale... |
Ever
since Jim Edwards and I wrote our best-selling e-book, "How
to Write and Publish Your Own OUTRAGEOUSLY Profitable e-Book ---
in as little as 7 days!," people have written to us for advice
on how to pick a good subject for their e-book. While we've addressed
that question in our book and in other articles, last night I came
across a surprising new way to help you pick a million-dollar winner.
Last
night I was reading a wonderful old book on creativity. It's titled
'Direct Creativity' and written by Robert Crawford. It's dated and
copies of it sell for a lot of money today but it still contains
some pure gold. For example, this amazing insight from the book
lit up my brain cells:
"Most
things you consider have several possibilities, not just one."
At
first glance that tip might not mean anything to you. But imagine
you're looking for a topic for your next e-book --- and you want
to be sure it will be a winner. Crawford explained his principle
this way:
"You
are an author. You lack a good subject for a book. You have been
reading 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.' But are there not other down-trodden
people in the world? There might be a story of a down-trodden Indian,
or down-trodden African, or a down-trodden Eskimo, or a down-trodden
Chinaman, or maybe a down-trodden white person in a northern city.
Perhaps you choose the story of an American Indian because you feel
that you have a mission in the world to improve his lot."
Do
you see how this works? I love this insight into creativity. What
it means for you and your next e-book is this:
Search
online for the best-selling books of a few decades ago or even of
a century or two ago. Just as 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' was a classic
and controversial book of the 1800's, and one you could adapt into
an original e-book of your own today, there are countless other
once mega-hit books out there that time has forgotten. You can find
such a book, model it, and write a new e-book based on its basic
and already proven concept.
For
example, John Bear wrote a book called 'The #1 New York Times Best-Seller.'
It was a reference book consisting of facts about the 484 books
that had been New York Times best-sellers (up to 1992, when the
book was published). You could flip through it, look for a book
that was successful decades ago, and then write an e-book based
on the nature of the best-selling book. The chances are extremely
high that your new e-book would be a success, too.
Why
is this so? The truth is, there are only a finite number of topics
available to us as authors. I once read that there are only 36 possible
plot situations. You can have millions of novels and screenplays
written, but only out of those 36 plots. (See 'The Thirty-Six Dramatic
Situations' by Georges Polti.) The same holds true for nonfiction.
The key is to find a winner from the past and
update it with your own style and your own message for
today.
Of
course, you still have to write a good book. That's where the e-book
Jim and I wrote can help you, too. But for a creative way to determine
your next e-book, this brilliant method is priceless.
In
short: Do a little research, find a successful book of the past,
and model it to write a winner of your own today.
Go
for it! |