7 Hot points for Building and Selling of Ebooks
Monday, 29 December 2008
By Bimla Sheokand

  Every part of your book can be a sales tool. When you include the essential "Seven Hot-Selling Points" before you write chapter one, you'll sell more books than you ever dreamed of!


1. Write for your one preferred audience. Not everyone wants your book. Find out what audience wants/needs your book? What problems does your book solve for them? Create an audience profile and keep your audience's picture in front of you as you write. Ask yourself, is my topic narrow enough? For more details visit to For more details visit to www.create-free-pdf.com .The Chicken Soup For The Teenager, For The Prisoner, and other specific groups sold far more copies than the original Chicken
Soup.

2. Write a sizzling book title including benefits. You have 8 seconds to hook your potential buyer. While an eBook cover doesn't need fancy graphics you will want to create one that can be printed both in color and black and white. It must be easy to see and read. Your title and cover should compel your audience to buy.

3. Write a thirty-sixty second "tell and
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Last Updated ( Monday, 29 December 2008 )
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Loosing Your Job: The Best Thing That Ever Happened To You
Sunday, 28 December 2008
By Scott Siegel

  You are one of the hundreds of thousands that have lost your job this year. You are upset, frustrated and scared. What are you going to do now? How are you going to earn a living? How are you going to take care of those that depend on you?


You may not think that loosing your job is something good, but it could be the best thing that ever happened to you. Think about your situation before you lost your job.

You went to work everyday and put in your eight hours. The work you did was most likely not your favorite thing. In fact you may have downright hated your job. But you stayed and did the work you hated because it was a job and you got paid for it.

Of course, you were most likely underpaid for the work you did. There is a good chance that the company you worked for only thought of you as a body that could get some work done for them. That is
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