So you want to write a book?

BY TJ Walker

You won’t make money as an author. Don’t think of yourself first and foremost as an author. Books are expensive business cards. There, that’s the ugly truth, but it had to be said.

There is a vast, shadowy cottage industry that exists for the sole purpose of tricking would-be gurus and experts that their key to success is having a book. Fact: having a bad book will not help you one iota. Having a mediocre book will not help you much. Having a great book and no distribution or promotion will not help you at all; instead it will frustrate you and suck up your money.

“But TJ, that’s insane! What about Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen and their Chicken Soup of the Soul series? What about Stephen Covey’s 7 secrets to Success? What about Zig Ziglar’s best selling books?” Continue reading

When should you create and market your own products?

BY TJ Walker

In MOST cases, you should wait until you already have a successful business based on one strong financial driver, i.e. you’ve developed a high end, expensive one day workshop or you’ve created a consulting practice where numerous clients are paying you substantial monthly retainers for the right to call you and get your insights.

Then, and only then, should you think about writing books, producing videos for sale (simple YouTube videos you can do anytime) or packaging sophisticated fancy information products.

Yes, there are exceptions. Occasionally, someone will have a “day” job and then write a runaway bestseller. That book then propels them financially and in every other way to top-level guru status, including top speaking fees and other lucrative businesses. But this is as rare as winning the lottery.

The far more likely scenario is for would-be gurus to splinter and fragment their time by trying to create eBooks, CDs and video products to sell when they have no clear expertise or audience of followers in that niche yet. The result is that you can easily spend 500 to 1000 hours creating, producing, marketing and distributing a product and make virtually no sales, or sell so few units of a product that it is a complete waste of time.

In the long run, yes, you will need products. You will have to have products. But in the short run, products are a sucker’s bet. It is extraordinary unlikely that product sales will amount to much unless you have a large database of people who know you, love you, admire you and are used to paying you money for your expertise. If you put the cart before the horse, you will fail. It’s only in fairy tale movies that people just write a book in their free time, mail it off to a New York City publisher, go on Oprah once and then become rich and famous. It just doesn’t work that way.

Look at overnight sensations like bestselling author Malcolm Gladwell. He wrote for years and years at the New Yorker before his first book ever came out. He gained a following. He built a reputation. He didn’t simply spring from nowhere—sadly that’s what too many aspiring gurus try to do.

My advice on products is don’t create any products for sale until you’ve figured out your one big thing that is earning you enough money left over to pay your bills, make you happy and you have enough to reinvest into your business for promotion, infrastructure, and yes, into products. (Of course you do need free products such as newsletters, YouTube videos and other digital products that can be given to prospects and clients.)

Another mistake many would-be gurus make is to create too many products. Just because you have expertise on a subject and just because the means of production for video and audio and books has become quite inexpensive, doesn’t mean you should produce a product on that subject. If you don’t have a mass following for a particular subject, plus a lot of time and money for each product too, you probably should do it. Of course all bets are off if outside publishers or producers are coming to you and are willing to pay you money up front for your creative efforts—then you should produce away!

Products are rarely the launching pad for gurus. Products will rarely make someone successful who wasn’t already successful. But products can be a great accelerator and a way for gurus to get to the next step and to cement their relationship with a wide audience. So it’s never too early to start planning, strategizing and dreaming about products.

Gurus Party

BY TJ Walker

Many would-be gurus are so focused on twittering, blogging, podcasting and other technologies they can do from their bedroom, that they overlook the importance of socializing with other key influencers. This may sound silly considering I just wrote a chapter on why networking is a waste of time. But it’s not a waste of time once you have established your niche and a degree of expertise.

 

The reality is that most gurus and experts I know are highly social people. And people connections are often what make one person pole-vault over another. In an Internet age, people often look down on old fashion social networking, but a case can be made that when everyone gets a thousand emails a day, the personal connection is more important than ever. It goes back to the old New Yorker cartoon of a dog typing on a computer with the caption reading “on the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” Well that’s not true in the real world. If someone meets you at a cocktail party, they can tell if you are a dog or not and they can tell if they want to spend time with you and associate with you.

 

William f. Buckley was the guru of modern conservatism of the 2nd half of the 20th century. He was a multimedia phenomenon with best-selling books, top rated TV shows, syndicated columns, magazines and lectures. What else was he known for? Buckley and his wife went to parties every night in Manhattan. He knew everyone in the media and they knew him. Even people who disagreed with his politics loved him personally.http://www.mediatrainingworldwide.com/blog/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif Continue reading

REAL GURUS DON’T USE AOL.COM OR GMAIL ACCOUNTS

BY TJ Walker

 

Why not? Because if people receive an email from you at it is a Gmail, hotmail or AOL account you are sending a message that you can’t afford $6.95 a month for your own email account. Are you that poor? Are you that unsure about your identity? Can figure out this web thingy? It doesn’t matter what your answers are, you are in trouble if people are asking them, and you have already destroyed your credibility.

 

Gmail and AOL accounts are fine for students and they are fine for adults who wish to email friends, but they don’t send out a message that you are credible or serious about what you do. My 2 main email addresses at tj@tjwalker.com and tj@mediatrainingworldwide.com. Sure I have a Gmail account and I used AOL from 1995 until the turn of the century. But no one in the business world or who contacts me regarding my expertise ever receives an email from me with a big web service provider name attached.

 

It is critical that you protect and preserve your brand and image in the online world because that is increasingly the dominant way people will experience you for the first time and how they will make judgments about you.http://www.mediatrainingworldwide.com/blog/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif Continue reading