The Business of Writing: Volume 3


Book Description

How do you arrange a virtual blog tour? When it comes to writing, are two heads better than one? How do you go about creating an audiobook? Should you produce your own author newsletter? Can poets earn a living from writing? Are there grants for writing projects and, if so, how do you get one? These, and many more questions, are answered in this third collection of articles that first appeared in Writing Magazine. Contributors include: Jackie Cosh, Julie Phillips, Rachel Gilbey, Bella Osborne, Lizzie Lamb, Dr Euan Lawson, Susi Holliday, John Pilkington, Burhana Islam, Chris Brookmyre, Marisa Haetzman, Ambrose Parry, Peter Jones, Della Galton, Mark Sullivan, Dan Blank, Cass Hunter, Tom Palmer, Anita Loughrey, John Adams, Sue Barnard, Wendy Clarke, Stella Riley, Roz Morris, Mandy Baggot, Samantha Tonge, Richard Vaughan Davies, Rachel Dove, Kristina Adams, David Gaughran, Vaseem Khan, Liam Livings, Peter Ralph, Adam Croft, Joanne Harris, Catherine Fitzsimons, Patsy Collins, Chrissie Gittins, James Nash, Daphne Gray-Grant.




Book Blueprint


Book Description

“A superb . . . how-to book for any entrepreneur who not only wants to get their thoughts down to share with the world, but to leverage off their expertise.” –Geoff Hetherington, JG Hetherington, The Clarity CEO With the availability of self-publishing services and the rise of the entrepreneur as a thought leader, writing a book is becoming more appealing to an increasing number of small business owners. The problem? Most businesspeople aren’t writers, have never written a book before, are time poor and don’t know where to start. While many want to write a book, they worry about investing months of their time and thousands of their dollars to write something that isn’t any good, or even whether they will finish. Book Blueprint gives a step-by-step framework that any entrepreneur can follow to write a great book quickly, even if they’re not a writer.




This Business of Writing


Book Description

Practical advice on succeeding as a writer--of fiction or nonfiction, corporate or commercial--including tips from professional writers in their fields. These informational tips are supplemented with anecdotes on all aspects of the writing business. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR




The Little Black Book of Business Writing


Book Description

Focuses on business documents and business-writing needs, making both the business writer's job easier, not to mention the reader of the final version.




The Business of Writing Books


Book Description

The Business of Writing Books is a Sequel to The A - Z of eBook Publishing by the same author. While the previous book showed how to become an author by guiding readers through the process of writing and publishing independently on Amazon, this book helps authors bring in the profits from their non-fiction book's sales, build authority, grow a loyal audience for the author's message and turn one book into a money machine as Edirin has done for herself and numerous clients she has worked with. It shows the opportunities that are available to non-fiction authors who want to grow influential personal brands, create extra streams of income by selling what they know, and build an online business empire, all from home.




Read This!


Book Description

Information overload. Everyone has too much to read. So, what's going to make people read what you write? Simple, clear, commanding writing - that's what. Here's how.




The Business of Writing: Volume 4


Book Description

If you self-publish a book, do you really have to deposit a copy with the legal deposit libraries? How useful are the AI (artificial intelligence) grammar checkers, and how should writers use them? What is comparisonitis, and how should writers treat it?How do you start advertising your books, and are those newsletter services any good? Can writers make money on online platforms like Medium.com and are letters and fillers in magazines still profitable? These and many more questions are answered in this fourth volume of articles. Contributors include: Faith Martin, Naomi Hirahara, Lisa Lepki, Claire McGowan, Sharon Booth, Elaine Everest, Heather Allison, Catherine Clarke, Deb Potter, Jill Cooper, Tony Mitton, Louise Rose-Innes, Craig Martelle, Emily Organ, Alison Morton, MJ Porter, Kate Walker, John Jackson, Anita Faulkner, Marianne Rosen, Elana Johnson, Connor Whiteley, Eric Thomson, Maria Frankland, Mario Lopez-Goicoechea, Gemma Amor, Jason Hamilton, Maggie Cobbett, Melvina Young and Gledé Browne Kabongo.




The Complete Article Writer's Box Set


Book Description

Here it is, in one box set: the two books every article writer needs to sell a complete words-and-picture package to a magazine editor. How to write magazine articles and how to take photos that will help you sell those words. The Complete Article Writer shows you how to come up with the right idea for the right market, time and time again. Don’t write one article - write six or more! It explores how to analyse a publication to identify its readership and the freelancing opportunities within it. Then it guides you into twisting your idea so it appeals to the core readership and the most important reader of all - the editor. With detailed advice about beginnings, middles and endings (the various middle structures can help you exploit your ideas even further), along with other pieces of page furniture, including boxouts, sidebars and photos, The Complete Article Writer will show you how to offer an editor the complete package. And to ensure you approach editors professionally, it gives advice on how to pitch (selling an idea to an editor before you write the piece), and how to negotiate the minefield of publishing rights. Whether you’ve always wanted to write an article but don’t know where to start, or have had some success and want to build upon it further, reading this book will make you an editor’s dream supplier. You will become The Complete Article Writer. Photography for Writers: Which would you rather be: the writer paid £200 for an article or the writer/photographer paid £600 for an illustrated article? Practically every magazine uses photographs, so why not make the editor's life easier and supply them with your words? Become an editor's dream supplier by sending them a complete words-and-picture package. Some magazines will only use writers who can supply the photos, so taking photos might open up new markets to you. Digital photography has made photography accessible to all and, even if you have a mobile phone camera, it is possible to take publishable pictures. Photography for Writers explains the basics of digital photography, the different markets available to writers with a camera, how to submit their images, what to do with their images afterwards, how to use photography for research, and even how to get photos to illustrate your articles if you don't have a camera. Take your writing to the next level ... with photos! Increase your publication opportunities and boost your writing income! Enjoy creative writing? Looking to get into freelance writing? Check out The Practical Writer Series for easy-to-implement advice.




The Book-Keeper and American Counting-Room Volume 3


Book Description

This book, first published in 1989, contains reprints of the early periodical on accounting, The Book-Keeper. It dealt with ‘historical reviews of methods and systems in all ages and by all nations. Elucidations of accounts, introducing new and simplified features of accounting. Problems from the counting-room discussed and explained. Instructive notes upon plans and methods of book-keeping in every department of trade, commerce and industry.’ The journal is a primary source for students interested in the history of accounting.