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Monday, August 5, 2013

5 Ways To Create A Book In A Day (and profit from it for life) - Other

Five Ways to Create a Book In a Day and Profit from it For Life!

It sounds like a major challenge, but it can be done. And it doesn't matter that you never write a single word yourself, the book can still be exclusively yours, carrying your copyright notice, giving your name as author - or editor - and you'll be the sole supplier of a book that might sell thousands of copies and generate spectacular profits from now to forever.

So let us consider just a handful of many ways to create a book in a day, or less than a day, perhaps in just a few minutes!

1) Resell Rights Titles

Resell rights - a confusing term with conflicting definitions, is a great way to acquire best selling books quickly, at little cost, complete with marketing materials, web sites, representing the easiest and fastest way to start your publishing business.

You'll see products with resell rights offered from countless suppliers all over the world, but be warned, obtaining products this way might be a great way to make a lot of money, but it's also a place to become bankrupt seriously fast.

Let me explain.

There are resell rights products and resell rights products and what you describe as resell rights products might have a far different meaning somewhere else. The term resell rights is confusing, ambiguous, and is often used interchangeably with terms like reprint rights, reproduction and resell rights, master licence, master license, marketing rights, international licence, basic licence, basic license, shared copyright, master copyright, and more.

Way outside the scope of this manual is a warning that would take another manual to explain and it's this:

Whatever You Obtain Rights to Sell, Whether It's Public Domain Information, or 'Resell Rights' (or any of its pseudonyms), Check, Check and Check Again Exactly What Rights You Have in the Product!!

Never assume! Take nothing at face value. When you buy rights to market a product produced by someone else, ask for a full description of what you can and what you can not do with the product. Some products, for example, can not be bundled with others, some can't be offered at auction, some must be given free or as a bonus, others have minimum price restrictions, and so on, and so on.

Right, enough said about that, back to using those resell rights titles in your business. From here, let's assume you have rights to do whatever you wish with those titles which indeed are often the case.

WARNING - and it's a big WARNING - Using resell rights titles you are still selling the same product as hundreds or thousands of other people, so competition is rife. Why should customers buy from you, the newcomer, instead of long established firms with more marketing muscle, credibility, cash, experience?

Easy! You make your offer different, preferably unique, you do all in your power to:

Sell the Same Product as Everyone Else, Yet Make Yours the One People Buy!

Soon you'll realize that one book, belonging to someone else, can be a hot seller for life, and you'll learn how to build upon that one title, even write your own books and offer those with resell rights. The trick is to tackle different markets to your competitors, write your own ads. instead of using those supplied for you (and everyone else with rights to market the product), repackage your products, work hard at being different! More about this soon.

2) Repackage Currently Existing Products

Repackaging means bundling, recreating, producing something unusual from readily available materials, and ultimately creating a unique product, one only you can offer.

Various elements fall within the guise of repackaging, including:

* Repackage items with no special theme or concept other than offering a high price product at a bargain price. * Bundle items with a connecting or specific theme to appeal to a wide market audience. * Repackage for a niche market and watch cash pile into your bank account. * Bundle and give a great title which might prove more appealing than contents themselves.

* Add something unique.

* Use the package to sell something else.

3) Public Domain and Out of Copyright Works

Which essentially means the work is yours to use as you please! Legally that is, but there are ethical issues you might choose to resolve.

For example, because they're out of copyright, you could reprint and sell Shakespeare's plays. You won't be breaking the law, even though it might arguably be wrong to change the author's name to your own, not to mention making you look pretty stupid, and you might care to acknowledge and praise the original author of well-known and less famous titles.

Examples of public domain and copyright-free works:

* Some articles and books written before specific dates as determined by copyright law or a specified period from the creator's death. See Writers' and Artists' Yearbook published by A. & C. Black for an excellent guide to copyright law.

* Famous quotes and sayings are usually copyright free but can sometimes be defamatory.

* Some government information.

4) Obtain Marketing Rights from Writers

Another wide area covering royalty agreements, joint venture deals, resell rights (considered earlier), purchasing first or subsequent serial rights, dropshipping, question and answer sessions between yourself and well known authors, publishing other writers' articles, and more.

5) Off The Shelf Ideas

Old newspapers and magazines are a goldmine of ideas for you to profit from quickly.

Mark Waissen's book Mags To Riches focused on ways to capitalise on old papers, 'old' sometimes meaning recent, while more often referring to printed materials up to, sometimes more than one hundred years old. Most very old magazines are out of copyright and include tips, ideas and articles that can be lifted and adapted for today's reader with no comeback for you. Again, ethics might raise concerns, so in that book of Early Twentieth Century Love Poems you might like to credit the original writers.





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