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Ready to Write the Book?
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| Guest post by: Gary Kliewer |
Article Overview: The vision is to hear yourself interviewed on NPR? Hold to it! There are victories and frustrations to ride along the journey. Give us the context, share your conversations with the experts, convince us and surprise us. The world needs your story! Let’s take a look at what you may need as you start writing and editing.
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Free Download - Social Media for Business Authors Test By Gary Kliewer |
Ready to Write the Book?
You are convinced authoring a book would be great tool for your
business and boost your career. You have built up the expertise and
perhaps some articles or a history of blog posts to draw from. But you
are also overwhelmed by the prospect of putting a book’s worth of
content together. Right?
Well, if you just want another fluffy pep talk, you’re reading the
wrong article. Because I will tell you that if you do NOT feel
intimidated by it, then step back for a reality check. There are no
shortcuts, only techniques, skills, and resources to help. I’m starting
to see writers with 5,000 words written down who want to publish an
eBook. We used to call that a feature article in a magazine, not a
book. To gain the caché of being the leading author in your field,
you’ve got to deliver the whole package. And you can!
Right now, however, you are staring at your pile of notes, with your
head full of ideas. So let’s take a look at what you’ve got in hand and
what you may need as you start writing and editing.
Every story needs context.
You probably don’t have to rehash the entire history of your industry
or cause, but you do need to put your new contribution in contrast to
what’s come before and what’s happening now. This is a piece of the
puzzle you can nail down early. And this context will inform and
inspire the rest of your work.
Quotes bring it to life.
Get your interviews done early, so you have that grist for the writing
mill. One very strong quote from a revered expert can be enough to
frame an entire chapter. Likewise, sometimes a quote is so good you
need to adjust the trajectory of your message to seamlessly work it in.
On the other hand, you don’t want to write a section with the
assumption your source will give you a quote to hold it together later.
You do not have to use all of a long-winded quote, but you should
always be faithful to what the speaker actually said, even if that is
editorially inconvenient.
Build your case.
You have a position (guilty!) and a case to be made. Don’t let it
become an excuse for not writing, but get deep into the research you
need at the outset. First, what you discover may surprise you and
change the course of your story. Second, writing is much easier when
the characters and settings are already defined. Third, you are
building your case just like an attorney before a jury, so you want to
organize your argument strategically and tell the story for the best
effect.
A surprise in every box. It’s
the interception that makes the ball game exciting. It’s the unusual
goodies in the salad that make you say “Yum.” So, is your approach
honestly fresh, powerful, and creative enough to keep your readers
hungry? Build surprises into your text, like plot twists, to keep your
readers saying, “Hey, that’s a cool idea.” A good author knows that
plot twists are never accidental (though fiction characters do often
tell authors what to say) but are carefully planned. Done well, the
placement and pacing of key points and take-home messages will be
invisible to the readers. But you string them out for deliberate and
maximum impact. To do that, you need to plan ahead in your writing.
It’s in the story. Whether
you are writing an account of service work in Haiti or explaining a new
piece of software, your message will get through to your readers best
through stories and anecdotes. Is there a lot of human interest built
into the outline of your book? It’s a solid bet you do not have enough
material or a big enough concept to write an entire book on your
subject if you do not start with more than enough stories that connect
your ideas to your readers’ lives, extending the message well beyond
your personal narrative.
The vision is to hear yourself interviewed on NPR? Hold to it! There
are victories and frustrations to ride along the journey. Give us the
context, share your conversations with the experts, convince us and
surprise us. The world needs your story, so start writing!
Article Tags: book publishing, interviews, using quotes, writing
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About the Author: Gary Kliewer RSS for Gary's articles - Visit Gary's website Gary Kliewer is the publisher/owner of White Cloud Press and Confluence Book Services. Confluence provides print and social media support to independent authors, businesses, and the community of social entrepreneurs and activists. Contact Gary today for a FREE 1/2 hour confluential consultation for your book project. Click here to visit Gary's website Testing Your Book Idea You Must Tell Your Story The Power of Publishing for the Social Entrepreneur Business Author Websites But Wait Theres More Social Media for Business Authors Test |
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