Sentences with phrase «of potential readers just»

Most writers write their book and then realize, oh hey, there are millions of potential readers just waiting to buy my book.

Not exact matches

Because some groups have thousands of members or more — and are therefore filled with potential readers and customers — they are ripe targets for spammers, as well as for well - meaning content creators who just want to spread their messages as far and wide as they can, without due concern for where it gets placed.
The blurbs on the back cover of this book create in the potential reader an expectation of something new» a creative, original approach to the morality of homosexual acts, not just a rehashing of standard....
If to understand oneself is to understand oneself in front of the text, must we not say that the reader's understanding is suspended, derealized, made potential just as the world itself is metamorphosized by the poem?
In 2015, Trinity College developed a test - optional policy that allows application readers to get to know the applicant well beyond just their grades and test scores.This change in policy stemmed from growing research in the area of non-cognitive skills, which leads us to believe that there are alternative factors, besides just standardized test scores, class rank, grades, and essays, that are essential to understanding potential student success in college and later in life.
You will not miss out on a potential sale just because a reader would like a particular format, simply activate all three formats by clicking «Paperback, Hardcover and eBook» in the first step of the publishing process.
Rather than changing the title of the book, adding a subtitle that gives potential readers a better sense of what the book is helps not just ensure the book turns up in a readers search results but is also easily distinguished from what the reader doesn't want.
Initial Exposure — If a potential reader has never heard of your book, odds are they aren't going to just stumble across it on Amazon.
Just to recap, Part 1 focused on everything that I thought was absolutely essential to be on an author's website — the kind of stuff readers are going to be looking for and the kind of stuff that will give you the best chance of promoting your books to potential readers.
Why you need it: If you're an author you need to know how to distill your book down to its most potent form (just like a jug of moonshine), for both readers and potential publishers.
Remember, your website is not just a requirement of modern marketing — it's a launch point or endpoint for what a potential reader will do next after discovering your book.
While all of the above approaches to cover design will work, more often than not the result is a mediocre cover that just doesn't communicate well with potential readers.
This just means those articles will have the potential to receive more readers, who might otherwise never be aware of the subject matter that could interest them.
All of the books you cite are basically coming out of the «heavy reader» group — it's a case of chasing the current market instead of looking at the potential market (just about 100 %).
An informal series of guest posts and interviews with other writer - bloggers in your genre can get your book in front of just as many potential readers.
It's not fair yourself as a writer or to a potential reader to only slap something together that won't hold true just for the sake of following a trend.
Cinder by Marissa Meyer It was hard to choose just one YA series for this list — we seem to be in endless supply of stellar tales for younger readers that have high crossover potential — but you can't go wrong with the romantic, dystopian Lunar Chronicles.
Despite my budget ($ 0) and lack of manpower (just me), the challenge was to create an engaging, immersive experience for potential readers — that was still lovingly homemade.
Patience has already run very thin for many manga readers as a company directly backed by one of the biggest names in the industry has sat silent for so long, with it the potential promise of many beloved titles held just beyond reach.
When you factor in how many people read news, watch video and play games we actually have a direct route to Groups 2 and Groups 3 if we just got beyond our disregard of mobiles and got serious about reaching potential readers on mobile platforms and convincing them to read (our books) rather than watch or play, or listen.
Your review need not be long; just a couple of well - chosen sentences can be enough to help a potential reader decide whether or not the book is worth their time.
All of that Grammar, just lying there in your book and a world of potential readers, just waiting to stumble over that spelling error or even worse, that damned comma - splice.
I think of each bookmark as a potential reader, I just have to get it into their hands.
The thing to consider is when exactly potential readers are going to be looking through the front matter of an ebook: in an online store, where all of the reviews are already displayed — not just the ones from that site, but, hopefully, the juicy ones from elsewhere, which the author and / or publisher can almost always add either to a separate dedicated «Editorial Reviews» section or, at worst, to the description.
If you just have a dozen short stories out, a reader could blitz through the whole collection in a day; you aren't offering a huge supply of reading material as a potential reward if the reader likes your style.
But, if I take a step back, this is just part of the answer - one of the highlights of this long process for me is discovering who my readers are, who is a potential reader and what parts of my work are most appealing or attractive - in a magnetic way.
A title is sorta of the author's voice in miniature — it signals to potential readers the soul of not just the story but the writer himself.
It has the added advantage of allowing us, your potential readers, to â $ œsample the brew.â $ Just write a paragraph to set up the excerpt.
What's great about a virtual book tour is that it enables you to reach thousands more potential readers than any in - person tour, and at just a fraction of the cost.
A small hobby or interest could have hundreds of thousands of potential readers — and that's just in the United States.
If you just have a couple of books out, there isn't much potential reward even if the book turns out to be good (i.e. comparing a reader who likes your book to a reader who likes a book by an author who has a dozen books out, this second reader will be enjoying many more books).
Millions of potential readers are just a couple clicks away from every book.
If you have multiple books, you can do more of these, just one at a time, and it's a great excuse for staying in front of current fans and drawing in potential new readers.
Having your book only available in print will reach just half of your available audience, so it makes sense to have your book available in any format your potential readers prefer if your goal is to increase book sales.
No regrets about loss of potential sales revenue, or fear that readers won't value the book — just pure, glowing happiness at every name of a new reader and every email and @mention thanking me for the book.
The amount of resistance / difficult you face connecting with readers is a good indicator of the book's potential (not necessarily based on quality; it could just be that there isn't a big readership or market for the book you wrote.)
In my mind, a book with the potential to change the life of a single reader — even if that single reader is your child or grandchild — is just as important as a New York Times bestseller enjoyed by millions of readers.
In somewhat similar vein, you can obviously equate earnings yield to RoME, but that would perhaps miss the point — with an analysis, how you get there is often just as important as the end - result... If you re-read that section of my post, the important point is to force myself (or readers) to stop focusing on book value, or intrinsic value, or even the potential upside — and to re-focus more specifically on what kind of return may be on offer, based on the current market cap & ignoring any revaluation potential.
By WUWT regular «Just The Facts» With the help of an array of WUWT reader comments, which began on this thread on January, 15th 2011, and grew on January 22nd, 2011, February 10th, 2011, February 28th, 2011, June 30th, 2011 and January 21st, 2012, I have been compiling a summary of all potential climatic variables...
You'll have fun, you'll give that noggin a workout and the readers and potential clients might just think you're the cats pajamas, all that and a bag of chips, top drawer, and most importantly....
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