Steps to create and market an E-book?

13 replies
I'm in the process of creating an E-book in the IM niche.

Before getting too far in the project and realizing that I did all of this for nothing I need to figure out a few things.

- How can I find if my E-book is solving a common problem?
- How to find out if there are other successful E-books in the market solving the same problem?
- I think it could be a smart thing to use Google keywords to find out the popularity of the subject. But my problem is I have no idea how to read the results I get when I type in my keyword!!!

And of course...What would be the best way to market it once it's done?
#create #ebook #market #steps
  • Profile picture of the author Kim Phoenix
    You've got some good questions, all of which require longer answers. Personally, I like listening to James J. Jones to learn about ebooks and ebook publishing. I purchased a course from him a while back (can't remember its name) that taught many of the things you are asking about - such as how to do your research, how to increase your rankings on Kindle, etc.
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    http://www.BuyHealthPLR.com (PLR Written & Edited by a Healthcare Professional)

    http://www.TheOnlineChick.com

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    • Profile picture of the author roueric
      Thank you Kim.

      I'll try to find him and his product!
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      • Profile picture of the author sanhal
        That's sensible to find out if there is a demand for your book before writing it. You can go to internet marketing forums and find out what questions members are asking.

        Just do an advanced search on here and use your keyword to see what posts have been made.

        There are probably some YouTube Videos showing you how to read results of a keyword search using the Google Adwords keyword tool.

        To find out if there are other eBooks providing the same or similar information you can do a Google search for the keyword + eBook or report. You might get an idea if it is successful from testimonials on the sales page.

        You could set up your sales page on Clickbank or JVZoo to market it as you will get affiliates to promote it.

        You could write a short report and then get people to optin to your list and sell it to them from the free report or with follow up emails.

        As Kim has said this all requires more detailed explanation but you will find out a lot if you do some searches on this forum

        Good luck with your project.

        Sandy
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  • Profile picture of the author Chri5123
    Originally Posted by roueric View Post

    I'm in the process of creating an E-book in the IM niche.

    Before getting too far in the project and realizing that I did all of this for nothing I need to figure out a few things.

    - How can I find if my E-book is solving a common problem?
    - How to find out if there are other successful E-books in the market solving the same problem?
    - I think it could be a smart thing to use Google keywords to find out the popularity of the subject. But my problem is I have no idea how to read the results I get when I type in my keyword!!!

    And of course...What would be the best way to market it once it's done?
    First off, it sounds like you need to research the niche. My suggestion is to have a look on Google for info that is currently available. Before you even think about accessing keywords, just type in what YOU would type in if you had the problem and you were looking for a solution.

    Have a look through the first 2 pages of results, what sort of info is there?

    If there is a ton for free it might not be a good niche.

    If there are not a lot of Adwords it might mean that no-one is paying to be there, so there might not be a niche where people will spend.

    If you see a lot of ads and activity - take the keywords you had a look at and load it into Google Adwords.

    In my opinion - make sure you have exact or phrases match on - and anything over 8,000-10,000 searches a month is good - the more targeted the better.

    Then you need to work out how you can help the niche and the angle you are going to approach from.

    You will need to actually research, how to pick a good niche, how to access competition, how to write an ebook and how to write a good sales page.

    Good Luck!
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    • Profile picture of the author higherluv
      Most likely in your case it would depend on which niche in the IM category (IM is too broad to really be categorized as a "niche" per se).

      But doing market research prior to making a product is paramount. Ironically if there are numerous products on the subject, then that gives an indication that people are spending money on that niche, and that you should design your e-book and its marketing efforts accordingly. Just laser target your product instead of catering to a broad audience.

      You will also want to design a FREE gift of some sort just as an incentive to get people to sign up to your list.
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      • Profile picture of the author travlinguy
        Originally Posted by higherluv View Post

        Most likely in your case it would depend on which niche in the IM category (IM is too broad to really be categorized as a "niche" per se).
        ^^^This. IM isn't a niche. It's not even a market. The Internet is a massive venue. You can buy jet plains and islands on the Internet. Marketing takes place on the Internet. People that refer to IM as a niche are most often talking about MMO or other info products. MMO isn't a niche either. It's a massive market. The word niche refers to a subset of a market.

        People sometimes say, "well, you know what I mean..." No, it's impossible to know what someone means when the call Internet Marketing a niche. Flipping Websites might be a niche. Selling short reports would qualify. Offering solo ads... Get the idea? How would anyone know what you're writing about?

        So why does this matter? Because if you plan on being taken seriously about marketing anything at all the terminology becomes important. Put your best foot forward.
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        • Profile picture of the author roueric
          Originally Posted by travlinguy View Post

          How would anyone know what you're writing about?

          So why does this matter? Because if you plan on being taken seriously about marketing anything at all the terminology becomes important. Put your best foot forward.
          My mistake!...I was to vague about the subject of my future E-book.

          I get your point.

          So, here it is;

          I'm thinking about writing an E-book about outsourcing content writing
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  • Profile picture of the author jbsmith
    Congratulations, you have just realized the mistake that 99% of ebook writers/marketers make and you did it just in time :-)

    Let's try and knock these off one by one...

    1. You don't just want your ebook to solve a common problem, you want your ebook or information product to provide a SOLUTION to the #1 desire in a given marketplace. That is THE difference between an ebook that sells a few copies each month and one that sells dozens (or more) copies each day. How do you find these red hot desires? I explain it to people using the concept of "opportunity triggers" - here are some steps to take...

    - Go where your market is...online forums (pick the busiest forums and busiest threads), leading blogs in your industry (look for the ones that have lots of comments and participation), best selling books on Amazon (look at the problem they are tackling and also look at the comments people have left), social networks (use Twitter search, search Facebook, interest groups, Linkedin interest groups, etc...). Once you hang out in these areas (don't ignore offline seminars, classes, meetings, etc...too) - listen for the frustrations, desires, questions and opinions - if you pick the busy spots you will quickly figure out what the big desires are

    - Don't edit your thinking...so many people we have helped over the last year actually knew exactly what the BIG idea was, but they had already figured they couldn't tackle it so they ignored it...don't edit while you are finding that big idea, how you tackle fulfilling that desire is another step entirely

    - Look at what is already selling (books, ebooks, DVD's, membership sites, seminars, home study courses, workshops, etc...) and THEN dig in to find what is the desire these top products are addressing and why are their customers buying (get this and you have pure gold! )

    2. Once you have discovered your big idea (or even if you have narrowed it to 2-3 and aren't sure which one is the BIG idea) and you see products selling in these areas, then you want to figure out your offering in that marketplace. Basically you want to create your own value proposition (your advantage which could be simplification, a different system, more detail, different format, etc...) after which you are ready to test your idea

    3. Testing is what leads you to choose between multiple ideas, gives you the confidence in an idea you are not sure about, saves you a TON of time shooting blanks and can refine your ideas to make them even better. Testing can be done through various methods including using similar affiliate products, testing your own reports, putting up multiple landing pages, running "mini" ad campaigns and testing response, putting it in front of authorities in your market, running test campaigns, etc...Done correctly, this can happen within 1-2 weeks and can tell you a TON about your market potential.

    4. When you have done all of this, the good part is that you have created as close to a "self selling" product as can be done...it's now all about execution. Another couple of pages could be written on this....for now I think you have enough homework :-)

    Jeff
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    • Profile picture of the author roueric
      Originally Posted by jbsmith View Post

      Congratulations, you have just realized the mistake that 99% of ebook writers/marketers make and you did it just in time :-)

      Let's try and knock these off one by one...

      1. You don't just want your ebook to solve a common problem, you want your ebook or information product to provide a SOLUTION to the #1 desire in a given marketplace. That is THE difference between an ebook that sells a few copies each month and one that sells dozens (or more) copies each day. How do you find these red hot desires? I explain it to people using the concept of "opportunity triggers" - here are some steps to take...

      - Go where your market is...online forums (pick the busiest forums and busiest threads), leading blogs in your industry (look for the ones that have lots of comments and participation), best selling books on Amazon (look at the problem they are tackling and also look at the comments people have left), social networks (use Twitter search, search Facebook, interest groups, Linkedin interest groups, etc...). Once you hang out in these areas (don't ignore offline seminars, classes, meetings, etc...too) - listen for the frustrations, desires, questions and opinions - if you pick the busy spots you will quickly figure out what the big desires are

      - Don't edit your thinking...so many people we have helped over the last year actually knew exactly what the BIG idea was, but they had already figured they couldn't tackle it so they ignored it...don't edit while you are finding that big idea, how you tackle fulfilling that desire is another step entirely

      - Look at what is already selling (books, ebooks, DVD's, membership sites, seminars, home study courses, workshops, etc...) and THEN dig in to find what is the desire these top products are addressing and why are their customers buying (get this and you have pure gold! )

      2. Once you have discovered your big idea (or even if you have narrowed it to 2-3 and aren't sure which one is the BIG idea) and you see products selling in these areas, then you want to figure out your offering in that marketplace. Basically you want to create your own value proposition (your advantage which could be simplification, a different system, more detail, different format, etc...) after which you are ready to test your idea

      3. Testing is what leads you to choose between multiple ideas, gives you the confidence in an idea you are not sure about, saves you a TON of time shooting blanks and can refine your ideas to make them even better. Testing can be done through various methods including using similar affiliate products, testing your own reports, putting up multiple landing pages, running "mini" ad campaigns and testing response, putting it in front of authorities in your market, running test campaigns, etc...Done correctly, this can happen within 1-2 weeks and can tell you a TON about your market potential.

      4. When you have done all of this, the good part is that you have created as close to a "self selling" product as can be done...it's now all about execution. Another couple of pages could be written on this....for now I think you have enough homework :-)

      Jeff
      Wow...Jeff thank you very much for such detailed explanations.

      This is why I love this forum. People are taking time to help each other.
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  • Profile picture of the author Andy Fang
    My head was ringing SEO, SEO, SEO! while reading.
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  • Profile picture of the author clever7
    I believe that the first thing you must do even before following the bright suggestions you had is to study internet marketing.

    You don’t know many things. You don’t even know how to interpret Google’s keyword tool.

    How can an ignorant person like you give lessons about internet marketing to the public?

    Before trying to write whatever, you must have basic knowledge.

    Writers who are paid to write articles or ebooks for others about topics they completely ignore, make a research. They read a lot, and they collect a lot of information about their topic before writing down whatever.

    Without knowledge you cannot be an author.
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    • Profile picture of the author roueric
      Originally Posted by clever7 View Post

      You don't know many things. You don't even know how to interpret Google's keyword tool. [/FONT]

      How can an ignorant person like you give lessons about internet marketing to the public?

      Before trying to write whatever, you must have basic knowledge.
      I totally understand that I need to have knowledge to be able to share it.

      Yes, I don't know how to correctly use Google's keyword yet but I won't be making an Ebook on "How To Interpret Google's Keyword"!
      And this is why I asked about it on this forum.

      From my experience with this forum (I admit, I haven't been here for years!)
      people usually post constructive and helpful comments.

      I'm not sure about the word "ignorant" though!

      I probably don't know as much as you about IM but I still know more than somebody that is starting with IM.

      My Ebook would be targeted to help people starting with IM.
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      • Profile picture of the author jbsmith
        Since there is some discussion around SEO, Google Keywords and such I would relate one additional piece of advice to my earlier post...

        Between #1 (Market research) and #2 (Creating your value prop) there is a step 1,5 which is Keyword Research. It's a major step too...I don't do a lot of keyword research in FINDING my niche and topic - for that I focus mainly on looking at demand from forums, people I talk to in a niche and from looking at products that are already selling but when you do decide on your market and your hot topic you want to then use keyword research to find out how people are chasing down answers...that puts you directly in the path of their demand.

        For instance, if you have identified your desire to write a 30-day plan to lose weight and you have further researched the fact that there are a few "types" of weight loss that really sell (belly fat, hips, thighs, etc...) and you want to tackle specifically belly fat. Now, I would go and determine the keywords that focus on different ways people search for getting rid of belly fat - so it may be "lose belly fat" "melt belly fat" "get rid of love handles"...and so on.

        The idea is to find the most specific, most relevant keyword with commercial intent so you can draw the right traffic to your landing pages and sales pages.

        Jeff
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