Tag Archive for books that sell

How To Know What Books Will Sell

Square Foot GardeningMany people hesitate to write their books for fear of “wasting time” writing a book that never sells.

But how do you know in advance if there is an audience for your book? How do you know what people want to buy?

Fortunately, Amazon.com has solved this problem for us.

Before you decide to go hog-wild writing your book, you should do some research before you begin to get a feel for how well your book may be received by the public.

A good way to do this is to let the world’s largest book seller “tell” you what people are interested in reading. Not by some mysterious “poll” of readers, but by the only number that counts…dollars spent.

Amazon.com has a neat little search feature many are not aware of. But you are about to be one of the few in-the-know. You’ll kick yourself once you see how simple this can be.

Go to Amazon.com and in the search bar type in the topic of your book. As an example, because it’s springtime, I typed in “Gardening”. As you type in your topic, a drop-down box opens underneath making suggestions for you. You would like to select the option that includes your topic and some form of “books”.

Once selected, Amazon.com will display all sorts of books on your topic. However, this is not good enough for our research. We don’t want to know ALL the books there are on “Gardening” we only want to know what books are popular and selling.

Over to the right of the search input field, you will see another box labeled “SORT BY”. Here you want to select “New and Popular”. Now Amazon will display the most recent titles under the topic you chose AND the one’s that have sold the most. The most popular titles.

THIS IS WHAT PEOPLE HAVE SAID THEY WANT TO BUY! They voted with real dollars spent and Amazon.com was keeping track for YOU! Wasn’t that nice of them?

Now if my topic was Gardening, I could see that people are very interested in how to create a garden in a very small space. I would “look inside” at the table of contents and see what this successful author has written about. I would also think most about what he missed.

That’s the book I would write now if I wrote about gardening. People will ALWAYS be interested in gardening in small spaces, so if I could come up with 15 ideas that this author missed, chances are very good that my new book would be the best ranking (best selling) new and popular book in the gardening category.

Try this yourself now. Go to Amazon.com and search your field of interest or expertise.

Think about how you can improve on or create a better version of something that is already selling well.

Remember…you DON’T want to be a pioneer, writing about some “new thing” because you fear competition. Competition is GOOD. It means people are buying stuff. You are only redirecting their sales dollars to your account. You don’t want to have to create a whole new channel, and inspire them to try something different.

People will buy more of what they already are buying. Especially information.

That’s what you want to sell. More.

That said, there are no guarantees in business or life. So many factors go into the making of success and failures. We’ll cover more about this in future articles.

But if you will concentrate your efforts on researching what is already selling well and how you can create a better version of that, you will save time and have a much greater chance of succeeding than if you just took a shot in the dark and hoped you would be writing about something somebody would want to read.

by Bob Schwarztrauber

Writing Lessons from Scrambled Eggs

how to write

What’s Your Secret?

 “I like scrambled eggs and I eat them a lot. But I don’t like them green, or too runny, or too hot. I eat them with sausage, or a bagel, or toast. Served with hot sauce or herb’s how I like them the most.”

by Bob Schwarztrauber

 Yesterday I was fixing some scrambled eggs for breakfast after writing my blog post. I tend to write first because I find the early morning always has fresh ideas waiting in my head. Ideas are slippery things, if you let go of them even for an instant, you could lose them.

I like scrambled eggs. But fixing them the same way, day after day can get boring. After a while, I grow tired of the same thing. But here’s what I’ve found…if you add some tarragon to the eggs they taste great. Actually, I got that tip from Tim Ferriss in his book,  The 4-Hour Chef.

Sometimes, I slather them with Frank’s Hot Sauce. I just heard on the radio that putting hot sauce on your food helps you eat less. You could lose weight. Different way of fixing, different results. Pretty cool right?

And then I thought, I love many things in life, but with over-exposure to the same thing I get bored. How many times can I read one photography magazine, or one photography book. Or any book for that matter. I crave variety and I’ll bet you do too.

As long as we’re on the subject of photography, a subject I like very much, let’s stay with that and I’ll show you why you need to write your book.

I have TONS of books on photography. Do you know why?

It’s because I hope to learn something new from each book. No, wait, that’s not quite true.

What I want is for each new book to give me that ONE TIP, that ONE SECRET that will make my photography so good that people come from all over the world to view (and BUY) my work.

People buy golf books and magazines for the same reason. And cookbooks. And business books. And books of all kinds. A romance novel might even turn us into an ubber-desireable prince or princess, if only for a little while.

Even if we’ve read books by all the experts in our field, if a new book comes out, even by someone we’ve never heard of, often ESPECIALLY if it’s by someone we’ve never heard of, we often feel a compelling need to buy that book.

Why? Because this new book just might contain “THE SECRET” that will finally give us the edge or the means to be as good as we’ve always imagined we could be.

And it just might.

Malcolm Gladwell wrote about just such things in his best-selling book, “The Tipping Point, How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference”.

Often, all we need is that ONE detail we’ve been missing. Or that ONE way of doing things that we never tried before. Or that ONE way of explaining things that makes us finally “get it’.

You might just be harboring such a detail yourself. Or a way of explaining things that makes people finally get it.

We crave variety. We seek the secret.

The scariest thing in the world, and possibly the hardest road you’ll ever travel is to write a book on a subject for which you can find no other book.

Don’t be a pioneer. Search Amazon.com for other books on your topic. Search subjects and titles. Write your book FOR and sell it TO people who are already buying books on your topic. They’ll buy more books. They crave variety. They are already there on Amazon.com searching for “The Secret”.

One of the safest lessons in marketing, and I first heard it from the famous copywriter Gary Halbert, is you want to be selling to a starving crowd.

Your book should be written to feed the starving crowd.

Just like recipes, we get tired of eating the same old thing day after day. We crave something new. (Recipe books are some of the best-selling books on the planet for a reason).

How many ways can you fix an egg?

We crave new in our food. We crave new in our hobbies. We crave new in our business.

Guess what? We haven’t read YOUR BOOK yet.

Will you sit idly by and let us starve? Or finally write that book?

Let me know how I can help.