Low-Content Product Bootcamp PLR; Learning Craft
Published: Fri, 02/04/22
I was sitting here trying to do work this morning but baby Daisy had crawled up in my lap and laid down with her tummy up and wanted me to hold her like a baby. So I did, rendering my arms useless. I had to wait until she woke up from her nap to work but it's worth it. They're so cute when they just stare up at me and drifts off to sleep.
FYI: Tomorrow's email goes out at 9 AM EST and if you need to see what limited PLR is left and see what big, discounted store bundles are available, go here.
Low-Content Product Bootcamp PLR
Sharyn Sheldon has a new bunlde of PLR called Low-Content Product Bootcamp and it's 50% off right now through Wednesday the 9th.This is a pack about how to create low-content products that you can create quickly to earn easy income.
She has a launch bonus built in, too - a low-content product planning worksheet. And there's an expansion bonus if you get the expansion pack with module quizzes and sales copy (of social media images for Canva).
The pack includes:
Student Materials
- Course Book (6542 words, 44 pages) – All the content and activity instructions you need to create a comprehensive self-study eBook, online course, bonus resource, or handout for a live workshop.
- Action Guide (38 pages) – A complete set of worksheets which helps your students take action on what they learn in the Course Book, so you’ll have happy, successful students.
- Low-Content Product Creation Checklist (3 pages) – To help your students stay on track while creating their low-content products.
- Summary Cheat Sheet (2861 words, 22 pages) which includes the main takeaways, key points, and action steps from the course. You and your students can use it as a quick reference to save time, versus having to refer to the course book every time. (TIP: Our customers love using the cheat sheet to identify what they want to customize in the course, and for sales copy snippets.)
- Graphics (14 colorful graphics that are used in the course book and slideshow, .pdf, .ppt & .png). These give a snapshot view of concepts, as well as adding some visual zing.
- Course Overview Infographic – A 1-page at-a-glance visual of the course, so your students always know where they are in their progress (.pptx, .pdf & .png).
- Course Roadmap Infographic – A 1-page at-a-glance visual of their path through the course (.pptx, .pdf & .png).
- Slideshow (117 Slides) – Ready to fire up your recording software or share on webinars, online classrooms, and live presentations or workshops.
- Speaker Notes (in Slide Notes below slides) – Use the script under the slides (in the .pptx) to guide your presentations and recording. Ready to customize for your language.
- Top Ways to Deliver Your Training Program – Use our tips for picking the best way to deliver your course, based on your audience and your own skills.
- Instructions for using your new content – Step-by-step tips for getting started, customizing, and repurposing your content.
- Social Media Posts (10 Tips for sharing on social media) – Use these to get more traffic to your content
http://www.contentsparks.com/1232-288.html
Learning Your Craft Means More Than Just Writing
The first piece of advice you may hear about writing is to learn your craft. What that basically means is that you need to know what you should do in order to tell a good story.But it’s not just about the writing. It’s also about selling. The more that you learn about the art of writing and selling that writing, the more money you’ll make and the better your book will be received by readers and reviewers.
As a self-published author, it’s going to be up to you to make sure your book sells. But that doesn’t mean that you have to reinvent the wheel. There are already so many ways that you can get your book in front of an audience.
You need to make sure you have a strong online presence. This means you have social media accounts that you update regularly. Each social media platform has ways that you can use them to promote your book.
Part of your online presence means having a website or blog where people can visit to find more information about your current books, upcoming books, etc. You want to be sure that your book blurbs are spot on.
The best way to write a blurb is to write one that’s geared toward your genre. For example, if you’re writing suspense, go look on Amazon’s top 100 bestselling books in that category.
Study how those blurbs are done. What you’ll usually find across all the genres is that the blurb introduces the main character, the trope or inciting event and the conflict. You should also learn how to use ads to market your book.
There are low-key or free places you can use to place ads, such as with sites that are open to self-published authors. These might be places like blogs with decent followings, influencer’s social media platforms, etc.
But you can buy ads on places such as Amazon. A word of caution: don’t just slap up an ad and hope it does well to advertise your book. If you don’t know what you’re doing, you’re wasting your money.
Learn how to do Amazon ads. That means you should know your target audience. You should understand and use relevant keywords. You need to know how to analyze your ad campaign to see what’s working.
You can also advertise on Facebook. You can set up your author page and then create your ad campaign. Though the site will walk you through it step by step, just like with Amazon, if you don’t know what you’re doing, you need to learn.
Otherwise, you’ll waste your hard-earned dollars. You can find free tutorials on ads for authors simply by doing an online search. Branding is something else that you need to learn about the craft.
This is a term that just means it’s what your readers can know or expect from one of your books. For example, if you’ve built a readership by writing sexy or steamy novels, it would be out of your branding to suddenly introduce a sweet novel.
When an audience of readers sees your name on the cover of a book, they know exactly what kind of story they’re in for. Across your books, you may have similar colors, fonts or book covers as part of your branding. It’s something that unites your books.
That's it for me today - y'all have a great rest of your day!
Tiff ;)
P.S. Prefer a weekly digest?
http://www.tiffanylambert.com/weeklytiff.html