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Easy Kindle Publishing: Get Paid to Write What You Already Know
Easy Kindle Publishing: Get Paid to Write What You Already Know
Easy Kindle Publishing: Get Paid to Write What You Already Know
Ebook43 pages30 minutes

Easy Kindle Publishing: Get Paid to Write What You Already Know

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About this ebook

The Kindle self-publishing revolution is going full throttle, and it's easy to see why. The platform allows regular people to create books and get them out to millions of customers in no time at all.

 

Relying on the immense power of Amazon, the largest retailer on the internet, individuals can create serious revenue streams by simply writing what they already know without having to waste time with schemes, scams, programs, promotions or social media.

 

This is not the first book on Kindle publishing. It's probably not even the one-hundredth. It's uniqueness comes in the fact that it's based on a totally honest account of a guy who found success publishing his own ebooks, broken down into steps that anyone who is even remotely computer literate can follow.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherTeddy Sulli
Release dateSep 16, 2020
ISBN9781393154211
Easy Kindle Publishing: Get Paid to Write What You Already Know

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
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    I often do not write reviews. But I must say in this case this book is worth a five star review. The author covers many points about publishing and writing a kindle book. His advice has encouraged me and I believe save me lots of time. Thanks to the author.

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Easy Kindle Publishing - Teddy Sulli

My story

I'm a fairly average American guy. I grew up in a middle class family on the east coast of the United States. From an early age I liked to create. I never planned on turning that interest into any kind of business, though as a kid that liked to do things on my own rather than be told what to do I did often imagine that I would be self-employed at some point in the future.

When I was around ten years old I received my first computer. It was a hand-me-down from an uncle employed by an accounting firm, but it worked well enough for my purposes. Even a big slow box like that seemed absolutely amazing back then. It came with plenty of games but those interested me less than some of the other software. I learned how to do things like create documents with word processing programs by making everything from party invitations for my mother's family get-togethers to fliers announcing an award for my lost dog (don't worry, Shadow showed up back at my door only a few days after she went missing).

When I reached my teens I managed to set up my first internet connection with the help of a much more technologically-inclined friend. Back in those days it was all rudimentary. The most I could do was chat with anonymous people or make a text based site.

As time went on, more and more people started to get online. I created several websites sharing my ideas and some of the skills I had developed, never intending to make money. The sites attracted a few readers but never really lead to anything of importance.

Later, as I finished high school and moved on to university, I discovered a real burning need to make money. Anyone trying to make it in the real world knows exactly what I'm talking about. I took on several odd jobs, but none really paid enough to provide me with the things I wanted and needed. Stuck in that situation, I decided to apply what I knew to try to make some money online.

I started out with an attempt at selling goods online through my own web store. A professor put me on to one of the earliest credit card processors and I built my site around its platform. I did make a little money selling boating accessories, but it was nothing to write home about. Things were different in those days. Payment processing was difficult to manage and most people still weren't online, let alone willing to enter their credit card information into a form on a website. Even when I made sales, my profits were shredded by the expenses involved in packaging and shipping items, not to mention dealing with inevitable returns and chargebacks.

After about a year went by, I decided to wrap up my attempt at making my own online retail outlet and instead started looking at various advertising and affiliate programs. I figured this would be more effective, and at least wouldn't require me to do as much leg work. Then as now, there were all sorts of websites and books around purporting to teach people how to get rich quick with the internet, all for one low price. I tried most every type of program that existed, from affiliate marketing and pay-per-click advertising to drop shipping and selling on ebay. I even tried promoting adult websites.

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