Your Words Are Your Own Creation.
If you've never created your own ebooks or digital products but have been writing articles, you're in for a big surprise. Creating an ebook can be a logical way to own a digital product. What you should do next is market your article as if it were an ebook and make sure as many people as possible read it. How do you create your own product? Use the questions from Google Analytics to find out how to get top rankings in search engines.
You could turn a few of your articles into a short report. Many people make images for their reports, and you can do the same.
If you've never created your own ebooks or digital products but have been writing articles and posting in forums, you're in for a big surprise.
You won't believe it when I tell you that you already have your own digital product in hand.
You may believe that your own product must be an ebook, a piece of software, or something of the sort.
That is typical.
Though you can't physically hold a digital product, the image of a book on a website appears appealing and enables you to:If you've never created your own ebooks or digital products but have been writing articles and posting in forums, you're in for a big surprise.
You won't believe it when I tell you that you already have your own digital product in hand.
You may believe that your own product must be an ebook, a piece of software, or something of the sort.
That is typical.
Though you can't physically hold a digital product, the image of a book on a website appears appealing and real enough to lead you to believe it's a tangible, physical product—even though an ebook is simply a PDF or executable file.
As a result, creating an ebook can be a logical way to own a digital product.
However, you have been missing the point.
As I mentioned in the first paragraph, if you've been writing articles and posting in forums, you almost certainly already have your own product.
Consider writing an article.
You can write a 500- to 600-word article on a specific topic and then include an affiliate link to the website you're promoting in the author byline.
Because no two authors can write the same article exactly the same way, unless you plagiarize word for word, your article is its own unique product—in this case, a marketing product on its own.
What you should do next is market your article as if it were an ebook or other digital product, and make sure that as many people as possible read it.
How do you promote your own work?
Submitting your articles to hundreds of article directories and thousands of ezine publishers is one method.
If you want a quick result and your article listed in major search engines in as little as one day, pay for an article submission service or use article submission software.This way, you'll get a wider distribution in a shorter period of time.
What if you haven't written an article but have been active in forums?
Use bits and pieces from the postings to create articles.
Post a question like "How do you get top rankings in search engines?" for example.
When you have a sufficient number of responses, compile them and write an article based on the information you have. Give the article a catchy title, such as "The 7 Sure-Fire Ways to Achieve Top Search Engine Ranking in Less Than a Week."
Include a brief promotional statement about yourself in the author byline, and presto! You've written an article. You have your own product.
Of course, you wouldn't normally create an image of an article cover (like an ebook normally has an ebook cover) and lose the feeling of a'real' product, but you could always turn a few of your articles into a short report. What's more, guess what? Many people make images for their reports. You, too, can do the same.
Can you now easily write a 500-word article?
How quickly can you compose a 500-word article?
Are you capable of writing more than one 500-word article?
Consider this. I just finished writing my own product, and you finished reading it in under 3 minutes.
Is this an excellent product? You'll have to be the judge, but more importantly, I've already successfully marketed "my own product" to you.
Didn't I?
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