7 Tips for Turning Your Blog into a Book

7 Tips for Turning Your Blog into a Book

I came across this and I felt I should share with you:

As the blog-to-book trend continues on its upward curve, more and more bloggers see their blogs as gold mines filled with nuggets of content waiting to be extracted, refined and cast into books (and, if they are doing it right, they’ve followed the rules on how to write a blog). Writers, on the other hand, historically have balked at becoming bloggers. Many aspiring and published authors turn to blogging simply because this technology offers a highly effective way to promote their work. They maintain the attitude that their blogs pose a distraction from their real writing endeavors—those that produce actual book manuscripts. These writers don’t realize the valuable commodity they leave unmined.

If you have a blog, there’s a high likelihood there’s a book in there somewhere—or at least the beginning of one. Don’t let that book go to waste. Turn your blog into a book, or “book it,” as author and book designer Joel Friedlander likes to say. Repurpose your blog content into a book.

Booking a blog may seem simple to do, and a variety of services and blog plugins allow you to go straight from blog to book. Yet, there’s more to turning a blog into a book than simply loading posts into a program and hitting a button that sends it to epub or print—at least if you want to produce a book that’s up to traditional publishing industry standards.  In fact, some of the things you need to know about booking a blog are inherent towriting books as opposed to blogs. This makes writers particularly equipped for the job.
Here are seven tips on how to book a blog and turn out a professional manuscript—one with a high likelihood of achieving self-publishing success or landing a traditional publishing deal—in the process:

1. Pick a unique angle for your book.

You may already have blogged a book if you’ve been blogging for a long time and have focused your efforts on one topic. Indeed, your blog may represent the foundation of your book. Even so, you might still need to choose a unique angle for your book based upon competing books. On the other hand, if you’ve jumped from subject to subject with no clear direction as you’ve blogged, your blog may be a repository for nothing other than a jumble of vaguely related posts. In this case, you need to hone your book topic and determining if you have previously blogged even part of a book.

2. Create a content plan for your book.

Begin your project by creating a mind map or conducting a brainstorming session to flesh out the content thatneedsto be in your book. Come up with a full table of contents or an outline based on the book you want to write and on the most marketable book, not on the blog you’ve already written. Don’t get stuck looking at what you’ve already published on your blog; this may not represent the best or most complete book.

3. Mine your blog for posts that fit the content plan of your book.

Once you have a content plan, find the published blog posts relevant to the chapters you’ve outlined. Search for them in the categories you’ve created, which is where most bloggers “file” posts by subject matter. Also search for them using the “tag” or “label” function in your blog program; if you’ve used them correctly, you should have assigned each post tags or labels when you published them. When you find an appropriate post, copy and paste it into a word processing document, thus creating a manuscript. When you are done with this process, you’ll know how much you need to write (or cut) to finish your book.

4. Blog your missing content.

If you find you must fill in large gaps in your manuscript, work smarter rather than harder. Blog those sections. By so doing, you continue to promote your book and build author platform—a fan base of loyal blog readers—as you arerevisingyour manuscript.

5. Edit your manuscript prior to going to print.

Don’t make the mistake of using one of the quick and easy services that allow you to just pick the posts you want in your book and then convert them into a book without ever editing or revising them. See your blog, and the manuscript you create from it, as the first draft of your book—and likely an incomplete one at that. All manuscripts needediting and revising. Edit it yourself, and then have it professionally edited.

6. Entice publishers and readers with unpublished material.

Include new content in the ebook or printed edition of your booked blog. A few new chapters, interviews with experts, case studies, or any special features that did not appear on the blog will drive book sales by loyal blog readers and make a publisher more interested in your blog-to-book project.

7. Blog your next book.

While booking a blog offers a superb way to repurpose your great blog content, the more efficient way to produce a book on a blog involves blogging a book—writing one from scratch. Searching out content for a book and then making it fit into your content plan can prove a long and tedious task. A booked blog manuscript can need a lot of revising and editing because you blogged content wasn’t originally written with a full-length book format in mind. So, next time you want to write a book, map out your content in post-sized bits in advance. Then write your book on your blog. You’ll produce a manuscript quickly and easily and promote it in the process. Plus, you’ll end up with a first draft of your book that needs much less editing and revising because you set out to write a book rather than a blog.

About the Writer:
Nina Amir (www.ninaamir.com), Inspiration-to-Creation Coach, inspires writers to create the results they desire–publishable and published products and careers as writers and authors. She is the author of How to Blog a Book, Write, Publish and Promote Your Work One Post at a Time (Writer’s Digest Books), and a seasoned journalist, nonfiction editor, proposal consultant, blog-to-book coach, and book and author coach with more than 33 years of experience in the publishing field. Additionally, she is a popular speaker on topics related to publishing and writing and the regular writing and publishing expert on the Dresser After Dark radio show. The founder of Write Nonfiction in November, she writes five blogs, including Write Nonfiction NOW!and How to Blog a Book, and has self-published 10 short books.  Also a popular human potential and spiritual writer and speaker, in all she does Amir encourages people to combine their purpose and passion so they Achieve More Inspired Results.

To your success,
Sam Semako Jinadu
Career Development Strategist and Lead, Career-Wise Consults
BB Pin: 281688A4
@careerwisenig

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People You Need to Know and Learn From: Japheth Joshua Omojuwa – Creating His Own Domain and Influence through Social Media

Japheth Omojuwa (born Japheth Joshua Omojuwa on 3 October 1984) is a Nigerian blogger, socio-economic and political commentator, environmental consultant and social media expert.

He is currently a lecturer (on Africa: Democratic prospects and challenges) at Free University, Berlin, Germany and a consul.

Omojuwa, through his social media presence, websites and articles, reaches some 500,000 people everyday and above that number across days during specific campaigns. He uses social media to good effect for advocacy, business and social commentary and his tweets have been branded by several brands and organizations,ref including Peak Milk, MTN,Interswitch amongst others.

Background

He was born and bred in Lagos, attending the prestigious King’s College between 1995 and 2001. His university education was at the University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Ogun Statewhere he studied Agricultural Economics.

Career

Japheth Omojuwa has graced economic, civil society and media development panels across several continents. He was a delegate at the 2012 UN Conference on Sustainable Development Rio+ 20 in Brazil. He attended the Open Forum Conference at Cape Town’s International Convention Centre on the invitation of the Open Society in South Africa and has led panels organized by the World Economic Forum (WEF), Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development(OECD),The African Development Bank(AfDB), the Germany Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development BMZ, Heinrich Boell Stiftung amongst other local and international organisations.

Omojuwa has graced speaking platforms on universities and in cities across Nigeria and around the world from Washington to London, Lagos, Accra, Cape Town, Abuja, Rio de Janeiro, Berlin, New York, Cologne, Dortmund and other cities.

In March 2012, he spoke alongside Wikipedia founder, Jimmy Wales at the Youth Marketer Converge Conference (YMC 2.0) in Lagos.

His pieces have appeared on several online and print mediums including Metropole Magazine, Sahara Reporters, BBC, Financial Times and ThisDay.
He is the creator of Naija Teenz, a platform of engagement and value orientation for Nigerian teenagers and the curator of Omojuwa which has since become a tool of expression for many Nigerians.

Advocacy

He was one of the outspoken voices during the #OccupyNigeria revolution of 2011, along with other key activists and coalitions, like Eggheader Odewale,Tolu Ogunlesi, Abang Mercy and Enough is Enough Nigeria.

He has been described as a “Force of Nature”, notably for his ability to create viral debates and campaigns on social media and he is a soldier in the quest of Nigeria’s Turning Point Generation to redefine the path for justice and development for the West African country.

Controversies

He was the protagonist in a protracted battle with Arik Air after losing an iPad while onboard one of its domestic flights. The iPad was stolen during one of his many trips, and he subsequently reported the issue to the management which was unable to recover his prized device. This culminated in a breakdown of agreement between the two parties, with him claiming Arik was high-handed and careless while Arik maintained that the matter be settled as quietly as possible.

Soon, himself and 26 others were banned from flying on Arik Air aircraft in September of that year, a decision that was later rescinded when, about twenty-four hours after the list was released, the airline’s website was hacked, with rumours flying around that pro-Omojuwa techies were the perpetrators or that he was personally involved, an allegation he flatly denied. In addition, a new iPad was purchased for Omojuwa.

Awards and nominations

In 2012, YNaija named him one of the most influential young Nigerians under 35 in Business, Fashion, Media, Entertainment, Technology and Politics! with writer, Ifreke Inyang describing him in particular as “king of the click.”

In July 2012, he and another leading Nigerian social media expert, Blossom Nnodim (She is popular across major cities in Nigeriafor her social media educative start-up known as #AdoptATweep), were named ProMaCon Project Management Ambassadors, to use the social media and other platforms to educate their fans and followers on the ideals of project management and its indispensability to national development.

Source: Wikipedia

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Japheth Omojuwa: Let me tell you what you need to know about blogging!

Japheth Omojuwa: Let me tell you what you need to know about blogging!

“Integrate your blogging to your overall business plan. Be subtle about it. Don’t go selling to people directly. Subtlety wins all the time.”

I am taking a break off my usual socio-political content to focus on something else. Nigeria @ 53 has earned us a deluge of that content. This my own birthday gift to those who have been by my side over the last 56 or so months when I started my blog, Omojuwa.com

Some of what I will share here if put to use could be the difference between blogging for fun, blogging for nothing and blogging to make a difference. If you don’t have guts, don’t start a blog except you intend to blog for your friends and family alone. As a blogger your currency is your believability, don’t trade it for anything. If you blog on entertainment you can make friends with the players in the industry but don’t go begging them for money. The same goes for political blogging, you should actually get close to your subjects across party lines but you must set a marker by not collecting a dime from them. That really is enough to set you apart because most people who get close are there for the peanuts; what they call kwa among Abuja journalists.

Money is not the only thing you can get from blogging. If successful, money is the least. There are 2 major ways to make money from your blog: you can do that directly & indirectly. You can also combine both. Your direct income will come through adverts and sponsored press statements. The indirect income is the most fun because it comes with several benefits. I will use a scenario setting to make this point. Imagine blogging on interior decoration. Compared to an interior decorator that doesn’t blog, your blog opens a new vista for you. As an Interior Decorator Blogger, you don’t need everybody to read your blog like the gossip blogs. You just need those who value the beauty behind the art of interior decoration. If you blog it so well, you will soon be on your way around the world speaking about the blog and the joy of decorating. If you do it well, you will be getting big time private and corporate clients who will need your expertise. It starts with them reading your blog, trusting your views, asking you questions about interior decoration. One day they will need an expert interior decorator and it is you they will call because blogging about something regularly gives you the aura of an expert. That is why you must know your onions. I meet a lot of Africans abroad who were solely there to speak about their blogs.

Integrate your blogging to your overall business plan. Be subtle about it. Don’t go selling to people directly. Subtlety wins all the time. That way, you are making money off your blog but not yet directly. A time would of course come when a company, specifically targeting your audience will come to you. You are not blogging to be liked. This is not a fashion show. Trust me, most of those who abuse you will be addicted to your blog. They are often the first to read your opinion on issues. How do I know? When I don’t say anything about something, they cry all day. This is not a job for being liked; it is a job for being real.

You will piss some people off, you will be cursed and abused by others, as long as you are not telling lies, keep it up. You need ability. Even your friends will not read your blog if it is loaded with poorly written grammar. You need to know what you blog about inside out. You must be able to speak about it too. Tell stories. Real people want to hear about your pains and successes and about failed (successful) relationships.

You need a niche. You must own a space. You may have the ability to write on many things but you must own something. Others may hate Facebook, your job needs you to love it. It is one of your blog’s major pillars. If you will be blogging professionally, start a Facebook fan page already. Don’t play around with @Twitter, it is your blog in a mini format. As a blogger, you have no business locking your tweets. It is like gating your clients. If people follow your tweets, they are likely to follow your blog. Tweet about what you blog about. Don’t blog about dogs and constantly tweet about trees. You don’t have any competition but yourself.

Don’t do clichés. Don’t say what everybody says. Light a fire. Don’t be controversial for the sake of it but don’t be afraid of being controversial. Don’t hate on more successful Bloggers. They are not the reason you are not yet successful. Start your own conversations on social media. It doesn’t matter if others don’t join, just do your thing. Join other conversations but don’t join if you have nothing unique to add.

Your uniqueness is what sells not your loudness. Learn to evolve. Evolve to learn. It takes learning new ways to be the boss for a long time. Buy a real domain name. Yourname.com is always better than yourname.blogspot.com . Domain names are very cheap. They cost less than $20/year. When you start succeeding on your blog, give others a chance. Let them use your platform to blog. Allow them add their blogsite to their blogs on your blog. Give back. When you get abused on your blog, don’t delete the comments. It is a sign of your blogging success. As a blogger, your haters are a reward for a great job, especially when you know their hatred is based on envy. Even in #Nigeria, there are now thousands if not millions of Bloggers, find what stands you out and hone your skills. No matter the heights you achieve, never think you have arrived. Tomorrow, today’s successes will be mediocre. If you beat your numbers everyday or every week, you will succeed as a Blogger. You can blog on ANYTHING. Even something you think no one blogs about. Bloggers don’t have holidays. If you don’t blog for a week, you’ve lost a week’s worth of old and new readers. You owe your friends your friendship. You owe your fans respect. You owe your haters more success.

You will reap some fruits when you start succeeding. You will earn more friends and lovers. You will earn more haters. You are your own competition. Don’t run other people’s races. Whatever you do, always have fun. Blogging is essentially about having fun. Seek ye first that fun part J. Should you write for others for free? Should you allow people publish your articles on their blog if they give you credit?

Source: Y!/YNaija

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Blogging and Nigeria Blog Awards 2013

Blogging is becoming an attraction to so many individuals now in Nigeria. In addition, people are carving career-path as bloggers.

On the 15th December, 2013, there was Nigeria Blog Awards.

I thought it good to share with you the list of the winners. So, here are the winners for Nigeria Blog Awards 2013:

Best Beauty Blog
Blog about makeup or other beauty products

Popular Vote: That Igbo Chick
Judges’ Choice: That Igbo Chick

*Best Book, Poetry, or Writing Blog
Blog that focuses on books, poetry, or writing, in particular the blogger’s original works

Popular Vote: Glowing Scenes
Judges’ Choice: Tommyslav’s Island

*Best Business or Entrepreneurship Blog
Blog that focuses on building a business or on entrepreneurship

Popular Vote: The Business Aim
Judges’ ChoiceUnder35CEO

*Best Career or Job Blog
Blog that focuses on developing career skills or on finding jobs

Popular Vote: Jobberman Insider
Judges’ Choice: Jobberman Insider

*Best Collaborative or Group Blog
Blog on any topic, written by two or more people

Popular Vote: 360Nobs.com
Judges’ Choice: 360Nobs.com

*Best-Designed Blog
Blog that is visually appealing. Although the design can be based on a template, it must be modified from the original template

Popular Vote: NaijaVibe
Judges’ Choice: Sisi Yemmie

*Best Educational or Instructional Blog
Blog that focuses on the education industry, or on instructing its readers through tutorials

Popular Vote: Campus Portal Nigeria
Judges’ Choice: Campus Portal Nigeria

*Best Entertainment Blog
Blog about the entertainment industry, including celebrities and gossip

Popular Vote: Linda Ikeji
Judges’ Choice: Linda Ikeji

*Best Faith-based Blog
Blog with a focus on religious beliefs or themes

Popular Vote: Kisses & Huggs Club
Judges’ Choice: Kisses & Huggs Club

*Best Fashion or Personal Style Blog
Blog about fashion, fashion design, or personal style

Popular Vote: Fashion Rehab
Judges’ Choice: StyleFash25

*Best Fitness or Health Blog
Blog that focuses on healthy living, exercise, or wellness

Popular Vote: My Big Fat Weight Loss Journey
Judges’ Choice: Health Save Blog

*Best Food Blog
Blog with a focus on food, cooking, catering, or similar

Popular Vote: 9ja Foodie
Judges’ Choice: Lohi’s Creations

*Best Humour Blog
Blog that is amusing or lighthearted in nature

Popular Vote: Sisi Yemmie
Judges’ Choice: The Sarcastic Center

*Best Movie Blog
Blog about Nollywood or other movie industry, or movies more generally

Popular Vote: Sodas & Popcorn
Judges’ Choice: Sodas & Popcorn

*Best Music Blog
Blog that focuses on music or the music industry

Popular Vote: Not Just OK
Judges’ Choice: Not Just OK

*Best New Blog
Blog established in August 2012 or more recently

Popular Vote: NaijaVibe
Judges’ Choice: Unilag Admissions Guide by Timothy Ozovehe

*Best News Blog
Blog with a focus on Nigerian news or current events

Popular Vote: Naija Gossip Blog
Judges’ Choice: News Bytes Now

*Best Parenting or Family Blog
Blog with a strong focus on parenting, family life, or the journey to become a parent

Popular Vote: Call me Mummy
Judges’ Choice: First Time Mom

*Best Personal Blog
Blog that focuses on the author’s experiences, or shares the author’s opinion on a variety of topics

Popular Vote: Sisi Yemmie
Judges’ Choice: Nelly Agbogu’s Blog

*Best Photography Blog
Blog that focuses on photography and includes the blogger’s original photographs

Popular Vote: Alakija
Judges’ Choice: OrionPixels

*Best Political Blog
Blog with a strong focus on Nigerian politics

Popular Vote: Omojuwa
Judges’ Choice: Omojuwa

*Best Relationship Blog
Blog with a focus on romantic relationships

Popular Vote: Kisses & Huggs Club
Judges’ Choice: Embodiment of Grace

*Best Science or Technology Blog
Blog about science or technology, including information technology

Popular Vote: Dayo Ibitoye
Judges’ Choice: Darlington Peters

*Best Sports Blog
Blog that focuses on Nigerians in sports, or on sports in general

Popular Vote: Soccer Fan Base
Judges’ Choice: Gooner Daily

*Best Student Blog
Blog by an individual currently enrolled in school

Popular Vote: Date360
Judges’ Choice: SirKenAyo

*Best Topical Blog
Blog with a clear niche that is not represented in any of the other categories

Popular Vote: Free Naija Lyrics (Niche: Song lyrics)
Judges’ Choice: Emeka Talks (Niche: success, personal development, self improvement)

*Best Travel or Tourism Blog
Blog about travelling within Nigeria, Africa, or elsewhere in the world

Popular Vote: FlyNaija
Judges’ Choice: Come to Nigeria

*Best Wedding Blog
Blog that covers personal preparations for a wedding, weddings in general, or industries related to weddings such as event planning or coordinating

Popular Vote: Wedding Digest Nigeria
Judges’ Choice: Aisle Perfect

Nigerian Blog of the Year
Best overall blog by a Nigerian or best blog with a strong focus on any aspect of Nigeria

Popular Vote: Linda Ikeji
Judges’ Choice: Sisi Yemmie

Do you have a blog? Do you have what it takes to become an award winning blogger? Keep blogging!

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