7 Days to More Powerful Audio Information Products

When looking at the numbers of my own information products that get the most listeners, I’m fortunate enough to know how to go into my website’s C Panel. The C Panel is when you go into the back control panel of your website, and there’s an icon in there called, “Stats,” and you can click on the stats. It gives you all the statistics of how many people have clicked on a page.

It tells you how many unique visitors have come to your site. It tells you where your traffic is coming from, and then there’s a top ten. It’ll rank your interviews by the month, what are the top ten most listened interviews.

So, it’s really telling. It’s exciting to go in there and see what people are listening to. You can actually go into a section of that C Panel, and you can click on this thing. It’ll show you, if you had 300 visitors on your site, you can see exactly the path that someone has taken on your website.

They may come to the homepage. They may listen to an interview with Ben Settle, and you can see their traffic patterns. This really gives you a good idea of what is your market listening to on your website.

An interesting story, I just did an interview, it’s probably been two months. I did an interview with a lady named Elizabeth Hagen, and she is an organizing expert. She teaches ladies how to organize their life, and how to get rid of the clutter.

I was looking in the stats in January of 2009, and I couldn’t believe the traffic. On that mp3 file for January, it was hit on, I can’t say that all these people listened to it, but the mp3 interview had 4,304 hits. That’s a lot of hits.

It’s interesting that part two was listened to more than part one. Anyway, so I called Elizabeth and I was like, “Elizabeth, did you mail out to your list and promote that interview? The traffic on this interview is incredible.” She said she didn’t, and I’ll tell you it’s getting harder and harder for me to kind of nail down where all these people are listening to this interview.

I’m scratching my head still with the Elizabeth Hagen interview. It’s still getting a ton of traffic, but we can’t figure out where. The reason is recently I’ve been taking my interviews – and we’ll talk more about this – I have all my interviews on iTunes. I have ten minute clips of all my interviews up on YouTube. I have them being introduced on Facebook, on Twitter, on LinkedIn, and a lot of the social networking sites.

You may have someone who took some of the content from an ezine article on the organizing interview, and put it in their blog that has a large subscription base.

There’s an interesting point in this. As long as you start getting your interviews out there, and getting them on the internet, they’re going to go viral eventually. If you do it right and you provide good exciting and valuable content, these things will get passed around. So, you’ll never know sometimes where all this traffic is coming from, but I do remember that learning interview that I did with the gentleman. That was very popular.

I’m just looking here from January of 2009, the organizing interview was number one. An interview with Ben Settle was number two for January. There was one called The Obvious Expert with Elsom Eldridge, and that’s how to publish a book and become the obvious expert. That was number three.

This one was not that surprising. It was an interview I did with an expert on LinkedIn. It was a training on how to use LinkedIn, which is a business social networking site, and how to maximize that and meet people and network better. That was very popular in January.

These are just the top ten. Nick Gilbert, he’s the one who hosts my web server. We did an interview on internet security. That was one of the most popular ones. Then, there’s one more. A guy named Mark Imperial, it was on information product creation. That was very popular, too.

It’s great. Once you have a website, and once you start doing interviews, you will be able to track what’s hot and what’s not, and you can use that to your advantage when you’re marketing.

Is It Possible To Write a Book in Only 2 Days?

If you’re a writer, you’ll already know that writing takes time.

But do you also know that the ‘secret’ to earning money from your writing is to write a lot. And by ‘a lot’ I mean writing consistently.

You see, no successful writer ever made a lot of money from writing just one or two things, because earning money from writing is all about numbers. So the more books you write, the more sales you can make.

So if you’ve only written one book and you sell one copy a day, you’ll make a few dollars a day, depending on the price of the book and your profit from the sale. As for instance, if you’ve published an eBook (or a Kindle book) and you earn $2 profit from each sale, then one sale a day will earn you $2.

But what if you write 10 eBooks? If you can make one sale a day of each book, that’s 10 sales a day, and at $2 profit per sale, you’ll earn $20 a day.

So naturally, it follows that if you double the amount of books and you’ve written and published 20 eBooks then you’d be earning 20-times your $2 a day which is $40 a day (which, when you multiply your $2/day by 365 days a year, give you an income of $730 annually). And that’s passive income, meaning, you don’t have to work every day to earn that money because you’re not paid by the hour.

Now imagine what would happen if you could write books really quickly. What if you could write an eBook in just 2 days? Naturally, it would take quite a bit of practice to do this consistently, but it should be easy to write faster the more you do it because speed comes with practice.

Writing and publishing one eBook may take longer at first, if you’ve never done it before. But once you’ve done it several times, everything will be easier and quicker after that, because you’ll have a routine, you’ll know how to begin outlining and writing a book, and all your online accounts will be set up and you’ll know how to use them so that you just have to write, proof, publish, and repeat.

So this will mean that it wouldn’t be difficult for you to up your production to 50 eBooks a year which, at the same $2 profit per book per day, and assuming you were selling 1 copy of each eBook a day, this would give you a daily income of $100 (50 sales x $2/sale) and this would mean an annual income (365 days x $100/day) of $36,500 a year. And again, this is completely passive income because you only need to write each book once.

But before you can publish 10 or 20 or 50 eBooks, you first have to be able to write them quickly.

And this is easy to do because, as you’re about to discover, you can write an eBook in as little as 2 Days.

I know how quickly eBooks can be written and published because I do it myself all the time.

If you already know what you want to write about and have an outline ready, then writing a book in 2 days is simple.

My only caveat here would be to say that the 2 days need to be consecutive days, otherwise you’ll lose your train of thought.

So schedule 2 consecutive days to write your book. A perfect scenario would be to schedule 2 days every week to write a book. That way you could write one book a week which would mean that by this time next year, you’ll be the author of 50 published eBooks.

That’s the beauty of eBooks is that they are so fast to publish which means you can publish an eBook in minutes and then move straight on to writing the next one.

Now your 2 days of writing is actually only 8 hours of writing because you’ll only need to write for 4 hours a day.

Here’s how your time breaks down:

A “how to” eBook or a novella (a short fiction book), needs to only be around 20 thousand words.

So if you were writing for 8 hours (4 hours a day, 2 days a week) then you’d need to write (type?) at a speed of 2,500 words per hour (2,500 words/hour x 8 hours = 20,000 words).

Now if you divide 2,500 words per hour by 60 (because there are 60 minutes in an hour) it gives you a speed of 41.66 words per minute. Most people can average 60 to 80 words, so 41 words/minute is quite do-able.

And even if you include proof reading as well and cover creating (which can be outsourced so you don’t need to spend any time on it) and it’s still only 2 ½ days of time taken

Which means that you can easily write and publish an eBook every week and still have plenty of time left over.

That means it’s possible to have 50 eBooks selling online in just one year.

Of course, if you’ve written and published so many eBooks, you’ll probably sell several copies of each eBook every day which can multiply your income.

Now that’s not bad for passive income from working only 2 days a week, is it?

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