Education How To Pick A Topic For Your Next Book
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Not too long ago I got an email from someone who was wondering how to pick a topic for their next book. They were comfortable writing. There were a lot of possible topics they could choose. They weren't sure, however, that they knew enough to write a worthwhile book about any of the topics that interested them. Their problem was actually simple. They just didn't know how to pick the topic! In this article I'm going to give you an eight step technique to pick a topic for your next book. First of all, it doesn't matter that you don't know enough about any particular topic... what matters is that you know more than your audience. So put that idea away. Yes, how much you know does matter. But we'll address that later. So how do you pick a topic for your next book? 1. Grab yourself a sheet of paper. Put six columns on it. "Topic/Subject","I enjoy it", "I know a lot", "I'm good at it", "I want to learn more", and "Other people need it". 2. Now, under the Topic/Subject column start listing anything and everything that you know about. Hobbies, what you do for a living, skills, survival tactics. All of them are great sources of ideas. 3. When you finish your ideas, go to Amazon and look at their topics. Are there any there that you know about? If so add that to the list. 4. When you finish you list, take and put a check mark in the columns where the answer is yes. So for example if you have a topic of "Chicken Plucking" and you're the best dang chicken plucker in the state then you'll put a tick mark beside "Chicken Plucking" in the "I'm good at it" column. On the other hand the "Other people need it" column will probably be left blank. 5. If you answered yes to all the questions then that's a great candidate. If you missed only the "I know a lot" column... that's still a great candidate. 6. Now take your list and a separate sheet of paper for each of the great candidates. 7. Make a circle with the topic in the centre. Draw ten lines going out from the circle. At the end of each draw another circle. 8. Now, write in these circles something associated with the first circle. For example, if the topic subject was learning content, you might write designing, editing, writing, publishing, presenting, and so on. If the topic subject was motivation, you might write how, what, your own, customers, workers, and effective techniques, ineffective techniques and so on. If you can do that you know enough to write a book on the subject. The only questions left to be answered are "Who would want to read such a book?", "Why would they want to read that book?" and "Are there enough people who want to read such a book to make it a viable market?" how to buy an essay
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