Posted on 29 October 2009. Tags: book formulas, Book Ideas, creativity, human condition, needs, problems
Books To Solve Problems or Give Answers (How To)
This approach is the best way to come up with “How To” book ideas. I’d suggest using Brainstorming and Mind Mapping (see earlier) to generate ideas using the “Big Problem” as your central theme. Make sure it’s a problem people really want solving though else you’ll have a book that won’t sell. Here are the steps…
- Choose a Market
- Define Their Biggest Problem or Need they’re seeking
- Think of Ways To Solve/Answer It (Your Big Promise)
- Include Their Big Problem/Need in the Title
- Include Your Answer/Big Promise in the Sub-Title
No need for examples here – they’re all over the place!
Books That Appeal To The “Human Condition”
Most humans share many good and amazing traits – and on the whole I like humans – well I am one too!
However, there is also a dark side (although it’s just human nature) known as “The Human Condition” – which is a powerful place to dig for universal themes to base your book idea on. While not applicable to everyone, all of the time, we can all relate to many of the following:
- Greed
- Laziness
- Complacency
- Procrastination
- Superstition
- Aggression
- Jealousy
- Spite
- Self Interest
- Need to be liked/loved
- Insecurity
- Impatience
- Fear
- Nosiness
- Hate
- Schadenfreude (enjoying/being fascinated by another person’s mis-fortune) etc.

Pic by practicalowl
Making a book that appeals to one (or preferable many) of these human conditions is bound to get a good response, cause some buzz and provide you with a book people will want. Just think how popular Get Rich Quick Schemes are? Most of us know they’re rubbish but they continue to sell because they appeal to the greed, laziness and self-interest in all of us.
Examples of Books That Are Successful (Though Not Necessarily Good!) Due To Their “Human Condition Appeal”
- The Secret by Rhonda Byrne: Get what you want simply by thinking happy thoughts! (Laziness, Self Interest, Superstition, Greed)
- The 4-Hour WorkWeek by Tim Ferris: Enjoy the lifestyle of the rich without having to wait for retirement (Laziness, Impatience)
- The One Minute Millionaire by Mark Victor Hansen and Robert Allen: Become a Millionaire The Easy & Fast Way (Laziness, Impatience, Greed, Self Interest)
- All the Childhood Abuse Books: Tragic Stories of People’s Misfortunes (Fear, Schadenfreude, Nosiness)
- Pulp Romance: Mushy, Feelgood, Stories (Need to be loved)
- The Bible: Answers all our questions – about where we came from, why we’re here and where we’re going (Superstition, Fear, Insecurity)
- Celeb Books: Tells the story of their rise and fall (Nosiness, Jealousy, Schadenfreude)
- True Crime Memoirs: (Nosiness, Aggression, Schadenfreude)
I could go on but I think you get the point!
Posted in Authors
Posted on 24 October 2009. Tags: author creativity, Book Ideas, chunking, creativity, lateral thinking, nlp
The Author’s Creativity Matrix
This uses elements of matching and mis-matching as well as big picture and detail to produce lots of ideas and content to bring out a full range of creative flexibility you may not have thought you had. What you do with the resulting content is up to you but it’s likely that inspiration for the following elements of your book can all be covered…
- The big idea, benefits or promise
- A title and subtitle
- The main chapter headings
- Your target audience
- Words for the blurb
There are three main ways we sort data in our minds. They are:
- Chunking Up (where you’ll get all the benefits and reasons why)
- Chunking Down (where you’ll get all the detail)
- Chunking Laterally (where you’ll often find the weirdest stuff and metaphors)
This is useful to know because, what most people describe as creativity is really a form of chunking up and chunking laterally – and when you’re not feeling creative it’s almost always because the details are bogging you down.
So here’s what you’re going to do…
- Get a big sheet of paper
- Write a theme, topic, audience, main idea or your subject in the centre (draw it as a picture too if you like) – I’ll choose “Being An Author”
- Draw the lines as shown below
- Use the questions below to help you chunk in all the directions (up, down, lateral) and negatively (left) and positively (right) from your main theme

Here’s an example of a completed Creativity Matrix…

Now, if you’re more analytical and prefer to work to a proven formula then here are some other useful tools to spark your imagination to come up with potentially profitable and definitely brilliant book ideas…
Posted in 1. Get Book Ideas
Posted on 16 October 2009. Tags: Book Ideas, creativity, matching, mis-matching, motivation, nlp, pain v gain
Meta Program: Pain Vs Gain
Some people are more motivated by what they don’t want than by what they do. You’ll likely have a tendency to one extreme or another and this tendency can leave blind spots in your creative thinking. So follow these steps and see what comes up…
- Choose a target audience – we’ll go for authors again
- Divide your page into 6 columns – with Pain to the left and Gain to the right
- List all the things your audience “is afraid of”, “hates”, “doesn’t want” in the third column
- List all the things your audience “is excited about”, “loves”, “does want” in the fourth column – you should have something that looks like this…
Read the full story
Posted in 1. Get Book Ideas
Posted on 10 October 2009. Tags: creativity, product, productivity, publishing, Video, writing, writing a book, writing articles
In this 5-part video series, Rintu Basu, author of The Persuasion Skills Black Book introduces and illustrates 3 powerful creativity tools (Mind Mapping, 4MAT and Perceptual Positions) for generating and creating new content quickly and easily. Once you have discovered these approaches you’ll be able to devise and write books with ease, quickly come up with and produce high value information products in audio and video format, and also rapidly generate hundred of articles to help promote your book and yourself as an author.
Posted in 3. Write Books Easily, Video
Posted on 09 October 2009. Tags: Book Ideas, creativity, detail, external motivation, generalist, internal motivation, nlp
Meta Program: General Vs Detail
- Choose a main theme or topic – let’s say Publishing for this example
- List general words that define publishing at the top of your page (landscape format) with a row each
- Under each general word write down all the details, options and alternatives you can find for each main heading
- You’ll end up with something like this – and pretty much any one of these deeper topics could be a whole book in itself.
Read the full story
Posted in 1. Get Book Ideas
Posted on 08 October 2009. Tags: breath, breathing, creativity, insight, Inspiration, intuition, thoughts
Have you ever experienced a flash of inspiration or a so-called light bulb moment?
They seem to come in as fully formed ideas, in less than a second that might take a few minutes to fully appreciate. Apocryphally, Isaac Newton got the theory of gravity in this manner and took a whole life time to get it down in words and mathematics.
You probably assume that these illuminations are random when, in fact and with a little practice, it is possible to experience them on demand.
Now for a writer, and perhaps, one who is a little blocked, this could be truly a god-send.
The answer is perhaps surprising as it doesn’t lie being more intelligent or studying any esoteric practices. It involves doing something we all do every day, without thinking about it, and that’s to breathe.
Of course, this is quite handy as we all breathe anyway to stay alive.
What brought me to this conclusion was some research I did around the actual word, inspiration. Our words and our sayings give away much about their true semantics.
If you look up the word inspiration say at www.dictionary.com, you will see the following definitions:
The first four you will probably have expected but it’s maybe a surprise to see that there is a theological connotation for inspiration. The last definition is one that most people don’t think of even though it’s perhaps fairly obvious. Inspiration is of course one half of the respiration process.
Further insight comes from looking at its etymology, or root meaning. You find that the word ‘inspiration’ is comprised of the word “in” and the Latin “spirare” which meant “to breathe”.
You may not have noticed this but you always speak on an out breath. Almost certainly we aren’t consciously aware that we gather our thoughts for what we are about to say on the in breath.
So could it be that ideas come to us on the in breath? I did some more research and found that Eastern mystical practices such as Taoism use breathing exercises in meditation to both balance Yin and Yang energies and encourage the connection to the divine.
In summary, it appears that the key to tapping into inspiration is to be aware of your breath and pay attention to your thoughts. It’s entirely possible most thoughts aren’t what you think of as your own.

Posted in 1. Get Book Ideas
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