The First Thing(s) You Should Do If You Want to Write a Book
Chris Stanley
Helping You Write Revenue with Mini Books | Mini Book Coach | 27x Author | 17x Amazon Best Seller | Independent Adjuster & Auto Estimating Mentor
(This is a chapter from my upcoming book Mini Book Straitjacket: How to Finish Your Non-Fiction Draft in 7 Days or Less available for pre-order)
The number one thing you can do to make your book successful is to make a strong promise to your reader.
This promise to the reader is a promise of what problem you are going to help them solve. This promise is made through your title, your subtitle, and your book cover. The reader will decide on purchasing and reading your book based on these three things alone.
The success of your book is determined long before you write your first word; it's decided when you choose a problem and make a promise.
You communicate your promise in 5 different ways:
We'll break each of these down.
Problem & Offer of a Solution
Every good business and every good book starts by solving the correct problem for the customer.
When starting a business, you must know your customer and then decide what problem you want to solve for that customer. This is no different with your books. Each mini book you write should solve one singular problem your customer has.
It should help them achieve the big promise that your company aims to fulfill.
For instance, I help people write mini books, and this book is helping with the problem of getting your first draft done in 7 days or less.
Choosing a Problem
If you are having trouble choosing what problem to solve, consider these 3 growth catalysts:
The more of the growth catalysts your problem has, the better for your book and business. (You can find more on this concept in my book Simple Online Business Model.)
Choosing a Solution
Your solution doubles as the category of your solution.
You can solve a problem in several different ways, but how you choose to solve that problem defines your category of solution and book. To get a book written without taking a lot of your time, you could hire a ghostwriter, use ChatGPT, or write a mini book. My solution and therefore category is mini books.
Your solution is very important because it speaks a lot about the content of the book.
If you are having trouble knowing what solution or category your book should fall into, you may be trying to write the wrong book. The problem you are helping someone solve should be one you've already solved yourself. Then, the solution and category you are writing about should be the way that you solved that problem!
This is how you take the mystery out of writing a non-fiction book.
The book will practically write itself if you are just telling someone how you solved a problem in the past with a particular solution.
Timeline
Determine how soon the reader can expect their problem to be solved with your solution.
Going back to the "smaller is faster" point, it is easier to sell a book on how to write a non-fiction book in 7 days compared to how to spend 2 years writing your next book. You'll want to set realistic expectations and have real-world experience showing that their problem can be solved or at least begin to be solved in the amount of time you promise. Look back through your journey and see how fast you solved it. If someone else you know solved it quicker, then look at why and try to incorporate how they got faster results into your book.
Determining how fast someone can accomplish this, along with the problem and category of solution, will prepare you to come up with a killer title and subtitle in the next section of this chapter.
Title & Subtitle (Words & Expectation)
Title
A good title is the hook of your book.
Think of some of the greatest books of all time: Tipping Point, Snow Leopard, Start With Why. Each of these titles drives your curiosity and pulls you in, making you want to know more. Just like a good copywriter knows that a headline makes a sales page or that a headline can make an ad, the hook of the book—your title—can make or break the book.
This is why I believe you must start with the title & subtitle before you ever type a single word.
Having a good hook or a good title can actually birth a book all by itself.
I've written several books that were inspired by simply coming up with a hook. My books PDR Cash Box, Simple Online Business Model, and Misleading Money Mantra all began because I stumbled across these titles or hooks. This proves that the title is more than just a title; it's a hook for the reader and a hook for the author.
You will find it much easier to write a book when you are captivated by the title.
3 Different Types of Titles
There are 3 common types of titles I see expert-based nonfiction books utilize:
Picking which of these to use will eliminate the name overwhelm many first-time authors face.
(Framework titles can be an awesome launching point for a new business or a new product. If you don't have your own framework, you can easily create one based on the topic you're looking to write a book on. Download my FRAMEworks worksheet to create your own at Minibookstraitjacket.com.)
Subtitle
While the title, as a hook, can be vague, the subtitle must be clear.
This is where you clear up any confusion or ambiguity in your one-word title. Even with framework titles like Simple Online Business Model, you need to clarify what will happen when your framework is applied. The reader wants to know: if I follow your framework and read your book, what will happen?
This is the job of your subtitle, to eliminate any questions that remain after the title.
The ambiguous one-word titles become perfectly clear when you add the subtitle:
领英推荐
You might have been unsure what you'd get out of "Ask," but now you know exactly what the author is promising.
Our framework and brand titles zero in on the transformation someone will experience if they apply their framework:
A good subtitle offers a clear transformation that the reader will experience if they pick up, read, and apply your book.
Cover
Your book cover reveals to the reader the genre, theme, and feel of the book.
Is it going to be a female power book? Or a book written by a manly man like Bear Grylls? Is it an intellectual or a straightforward how-to book?
Letting the potential reader know will help them decide if this is the right fit for them, which increases the number of happy readers and the average rating of your review.
My framework for creating book covers is the QUICK Book Cover Model:
Let's run through these quickly.
Q – Qualify a Best Selling Book Cover
Head to Amazon and search the non-fiction best selling books in a broad category like business or self-help, that will match the big category of your book.
Find three books with hundreds if not thousands of reviews. These will serve as your bestselling models. If your title is one word, try to find one-word titles.
Once you find a title that you feel you'd like the look and feel of something similar, right-click and save it to your computer.
U – Upload Designs to Canva/BookBrush
Take your three designs and upload them to your design software of choice, something like Canva or Bookbrush.
You're going to select an ebook cover as the template and dimensions. You'll use each of these designs you've downloaded as the background of your design. Simply lock it in place so you can manipulate things on top of it without moving it around.
This will serve as something you can model after.
I – Insert Elements
You'll add text and images to recreate the book cover.
You'll need to determine the style and size of the font. Match the colors on the background, images, and text. Find images that match any on the cover.
Most book covers are simpler than you first imagine, so get it really close to the original, but don't stress if it's a little off.
C – Customize the Cover
Now you change everything to make it your book.
Change the words to be your title, subtitle, and author name. Change the images to be your own unique ones. Change the colors to match your brand and vibe.
In the end, you'll have something that drew inspiration from but doesn't look exactly like the original cover, like the ones I did for my friend Jeff below.
K – Kindle (KDP) Ready
You'll need to make sure your cover is ready to upload to Amazon's publishing service called KDP:
Download your file, make sure it meets those requirements, and you have your book cover DONE!
You now have a POWER promise to your reader. You are hooking the potential reader with your title, communicating a clear transformation they will experience if they buy, read, and apply your book. Plus, you have a cover that communicates all of that and the theme and feel of your book in an instant.
This will guide you every step through the rest of your book creation journey.
Action Step: Craft Your POWER Promise
By completing these steps, you'll have a strong POWER promise that hooks your readers and sets clear expectations, making your book more attractive and compelling. Share your progress with the Mini Book Masters community to get feedback and refine your promise even further.
(This is a chapter from my upcoming book Mini Book Straitjacket: How to Finish Your Non-Fiction Draft in 7 Days or Less available for pre-order)
2X Entrepreneur || Ultra Runner || I write about systems and growth principles for Solopreneurs & B2B
3 个月Whoa man, this article is gold!