How To Write and Sell a Successful "How To" Book
by Bob Follett, author and publisher
You have knowledge, experience, skills. You are ready to communicate your know-how toothers through a book. This brief guide will help you get started.
Caution
: Almost no book will provide a significant
financial
return on the author's investment of timeand effort. Don't give up your day job expecting that a book will be the sole source of your income.For some authors, the book is a way to validate their professional status. For some it is a way toextend their message beyond the audiences they can talk to personally. For some it is a text toaccompany the seminars, workshops, lectures, or other presentations they make. There are many reasons why authors write books. Making a lot of money should not be one of those reasons. It is possible that you might be pleasantly surprised. It is also possible that you might win the lottery.
Getting Started:
Take out three sheets of paper. (If you work on a computer, as I do, work on three separate pages.)
Step 1. Who will be the reader?
On the first sheet of paper or page, write down a description of theperson to whom you are directing the book. Be specific.
(For example: a 45-year-old female with aMaster's degree in Social Work who has worked her way through the ranks to become executivedirector of her social service agency in a large city. She has a sometimes difficult board, miserly funding agencies, high staff turn-over, and still has teen-age children and a husband at home.)
Thinkof a person or a composite of persons you know.
You will hope to have a broad general audience of readers. But a book must be written to asingle reader. Think of the process as the author sitting across the table from the reader and talking tothe reader. A book differs from a presentation to a group. It is a written presentation to one reader at atime. If you can't clearly define the specific reader at whom the book is to be directed, you are notready to proceed. If the reader you intend for the book cannot be easily and inexpensively informed of the availability of the book, then the book may be impossible to sell.
Step 2. What are the benefits?
On the second sheet of paper or page, detail the specific benefitsthat your book will deliver to the reader. What will the reader be able to do when he or she hascompleted the book? Just providing general knowledge is not a compelling benefit.Readers don’t care what you put in the book. They care about what they get out of the book.What will the reader get from the book that will make the reader's investment of money, time,and effort in acquiring and reading the book worthwhile? You are asking people to give up their money, time, and effort
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their time is especially valuable. What benefits are you going to providethem? These benefits need to be very focused, not mealy-mouthed generalities. If you can't clearlydefine the specific benefits readers will get from your book, you are not ready to proceed.
Step 3. How will the book be structured?
On the third sheet of paper or page (and you may needto use more than one sheet for this step), write down an outline of the content of the book. This willdefine the structure by which you will deliver the benefits to the reader The first chapter will always be an introduction. It will specify the benefits you will deliver to thereader. It will validate the reader's decision to purchase the book and encourage the reader to investthe time and effort to go through the book. The second part of the introduction will set out the structureof the book in detail.
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