6 Things You Need to Do Before You Blog a Book
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,767 legacy views
Anyone can simply begin blogging. Blogging a book, however, that’s a different story. If you want to blog a book, approach the endeavor like you would any other book project you might undertake.
Here’s a list of 6 things you need to do before you start blogging your book.
1. Choose a topic: You can choose just any old topic and start writing, but it’s better to choose a topic that attracts readers. You also can—and should—choose a topic that interests you and that interests a lot of people. If possible, choose a topic you feel passionate about since you’ll be writing about this subject for a while. You don’t want to choose a topic you’ll dread blogging about each day. You want writing and posting blogs to feel fun and interesting. You want your subject to motivate you to post.
2. Hone your subject: Get clear about what you are blogging about, why you are blogging a book, and how you are going to move forward both with your book and blog. You can do this by developing a “pitch,” or elevator speech, for your blogged book. The pitch constitutes the starting point for your book. Once you can tell someone in a short, pithy statement what your blogged book is about, everything falls into place. You know what your book is about, for whom you are writing, what benefit they will derive from your book, and what you must deliver in its pages.
3. Map out your book’s content. You need to know what content will go in your book. The best way to discover this involves creating a “brain dump” of all the subjects you might cover in the book. If your brain dump creates a huge pile of topics, you know you have a book inside you. If, however, you end up with a tiny pile, you may realize you are only ready to write an article. Take the related topics you “dumped” and grouped them into chapters. This exercise most-commonly called “mind mapping.”
4. Break your content into post-sized pieces. Blog posts are short—between 250 and 700 words. The related topics from #4 that you grouped into chapters each constitute one or more posts. By organizing them further, possibly under subheadings, you continue mapping out your book’s contents.
5. Create a business plan for your book. Every book needs a business plan of its own. Every author needs to function as a business person. Everyone who wants to write a book—blogged or otherwise—needs to go through the book “proposal process”; this is how you create the business plan for both book and author. You don’t necessarily have to write the proposal, but you do need to go through the steps of compiling the information necessary for a proposal.
Plus, if your blogged book gets discovered by an agent or publisher, you might be asked to submit a proposal. Therefore, you want to be ready to write one.
6. Set up a blog. You will, of course, need a blog. If you don’t know how to do the techy stuff yourself, get help. You can start with a free blog, but I recommend a hosted one. Wordpress.org offers the best and most accepted platform for blogging a book (or blogging).
Article author
About the Author
Nina Amir, Inspiration-to-Creation Coach, inspires writers to create the results they desire—published products and careers as writers and authors. She inspires everyone to Achieve More Inspired Results by combing their passion and purpose and taking inspired action, thus fulfilling their potential. She is the author of, How to Blog a Book: Write, Publish and Promote Your Work One Post at a Time (Writer’s Digest Books), as well as a freelance editor, book and author coach, and blog-to-book coach who blogs at Write Nonfiction NOW, How to Blog a Book, As the Spirit Moves Me and writes the National Jewish Issues and the National Self-Improvement columns for www.examiner.com. She is also the founder of Write Nonfiction in November, a challenge and blog. Find out more about her at ninaamir.com.
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Workplace Romance - Should You Or Shouldn't You?
Dear Keith and Maura, Do you think it means anything if a guy you like at work happens to give you his cell phone number out of the blue, or if you ask that guy – joking around – if he can give you a ride home from work and he has a big grin on his face? I work at a grocery store ...
Related piece
Article
Would You Rather Be Right Or Happy?
This question was asked in one of the first self-improvement seminars we ever took, and it had quite a profound impact. It was mind-boggling to think about the amount of needless suffering we had inflicted upon ourselves in relationships, simply by being attached to our position. It must be ...
Related piece
Article
How Could This Be About Me?
Dear Keith and Maura, I just found your website and podcasts yesterday and they totally resonate with me. I am a very active youthful 55. I was widowed suddenly at 32 with 2 babies. My soulmate died and I was lost and devastated. I banged around for 10 years raising my boys, working and trying to find a similar loving relationship as I had. I met losers, liars, cheaters, alcoholics, and abusers.
Related piece
Article
The Problem With Right And Wrong
With the U.S. presidential election coming around again, there are now more and more political conversations going on around us these days, and politics – just like everything else in life – is all about relationships. You may hear people talk about ending conflicts and creating ...
Related piece