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Bring Out the Natural Writer in You
Judy Cullins © 2004 All Rights Reserved.
Think you can't write a book that will sell? You aren't a
natural writer? In
fact, you don't really like to write?
Putting a book together can be daunting. But no, you don't need
to hire a
ghostwriter. You don't need to do research.
Your readers simply want answers to their challenges and
questions. Do that
and you will write an easy-to-read, well organized, and
compelling book with
1/2 the normal edits.
Save time, frustration and still get your book out within a
month or so when
you use my "Fast-Forward Writing Techniques."
Fast-Forward Writing Steps
1. Write down your working title.
This gives you momentum in the writing process and keeps you on
track with
focus so you don't write two books in one. In your title,
include your audience
if possible and what main benefit they will receive too.
2. Write down your book's thesis. (what is the number one
question your book
will answer?)
Know that each chapter and information in them must support
this. In a book
"Write your eBook or Other Short Book Fast," chapters like "The
Essential 9
Hot-Selling Points for your Book" and "Yes, Your Book Has
Significance" support
its title.
3. Make a list of all questions and topics your book will cover.
In a book about beating procrastination, the author including
questions like
these: Where are you now with procrastination? Why do you
procrastinate? What
are the consequences of your procrastination? Where do you want
to be (goals)?
Topics also include 15 procrastination solutions with examples
in workbook
style.
4. Categorize the above list.
Add questions that pertain to that chapter, and rename your
files with a
working chapter title. Now you are ready to write on a topic
when you feel like
it. You don't have to write chapter one first.
5. Pose one question at a time to be your chapter's middle.
The middle of your chapter is the meat. You may pose a question,
then answer
it with stories, tips, how-to's, inspiration in other forms. It
may have
pictures, author's note, sidebar with pertinent information. Add
your own ideas.
Make the question a heading. From your inner knowledge and
experience answer
it with your natural voice. Later you can add a just right hook
for the first
line beneath the heading so your reader wants to keep reading.
Pose the other
questions next and answer them when it's the right time. This
style gives you
flexibility and motivation because you only write what you can
and want to.
6. Write your chapter opening.
The opening consists of a hook, which can be a pertinent quote,
2-3 questions
on where your audience is now with this situation, and your
chapter thesis
that includes a benefit or so why your audience will read this
chapter.
Example: In a book on business stress, the author's chapter
named "Why are
you stressed?” she poses 1, 2 or 3 questions about where your
audience is now
before they read this chapter. Are you so stressed at work you
hate to even go?
At the day's end are you too tired to even see friends? Are you
so unfocused
that you dart from one thing to another and wonder why?
In this chapter see how knowing where you are is just the
starting point. You
will discover in your picture of where you want to be the exact
things you
can finally take action on. One picture includes a smiling face
at the end of
the day, greeting the family with a hug and positive talk. A
feeling you want
can be one of satisfaction, peaceful, loving or tranquility.
7. Write your chapter ending.
If you write non-fiction or self-help, your chapter needs a
summary, action
steps to ponder ideas and then a final one or two sentence
finishing statement,
to lead your reader from this chapter to the next. Your job is
always to get
your reader to want to keep reading. Make sure you name a
benefit or two that
the next chapter offers.
Here's to getting your natural words down, so you can feel you
can write.
Even if they are not the right words, they give you something to
build on. It's
easier to hook new ideas onto thoughts already expressed.
Just relax and get your thoughts onto the paper and your book
will get
finished in less time and less struggle. Now your manifested
book dream will
bring
you what you want--to be well known for your topic, to attract
new customers,
and to get your unique, useful message out to the world.
===============
Judy Cullins: 20-year author, speaker, book coach
Helps entrepreneurs manifest their book and web dreams
eBk: "Write your eBook or Other Book Fast!"
FRE.E "The Book Coach Says..." or Business Tip of the Month
www.bookcoaching.com/opt-in.shtml -- mailto:Judy@b...
Orders: 866/200-9743 -- Ph: 619/466-0622
===================================
BUSINESSMATE EZINE is published and edited by
Jess Guim, MCSE. |
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