The majority of aspiring authors don’t have a strong enough desire to achieve this status. This results in lack of action to manifest their dream of writing and publishing a book. That’s why, while 81 percent of the U.S. population wants to write a book, only two percent of those very same people accomplish that goal. You must have the…
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Evaluate Your Progress: Nonfiction Writing Prompt #39
It seems like just yesterday I composed my list of goals and wrote a vision for 2015. Now the end of January has arrived. It feels like the month flew by! It’s time for an honest evaluation of my progress: Have I made strides toward achieving my goals? That’s the focus of this writing prompt. The majority of people set…
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What Not to Do When Working with an Editor
No matter how you publish, you need to turn your work over to an editor. If you traditionally publish, the publisher typically provides editors. (Yes, more than one.) If you self-publish, you must hire a similar team of editors. Doing so ensures you produce a book that stands up to industry standards, which means your final product doesn’t stick out…
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Bestseller Status is Not About Book Sales
Lately, I’ve been writing a lot about how to write bestsellers and how to create a career as a bestselling author. I don’t want you to think, however, that becoming a bestselling author is all about money. Of course, for publishers (even indie publishers), success is equivalent to sales, which means money. But not every author defines success in this…
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Who Said Becoming a Bestselling Author Was Easy?
No matter where I teach or speak, writers meet me with the same complaints. Aspiring authors say the necessary tasks required to achieve their goals—and dreams—of becoming successful, bestselling, published authors feel too difficult, occupy too much time, focus on business more than craft, and, worst of all, put their writing on hold. I understand these arguments. I use to…
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