Related Links

Featured Links





Recommended Products



 

 
Featured Articles

Classified Ads - What Works & What Doesn’t
Do classified ads really work? Should you include an email address or fax number in them? How about a call to action? Questions like these are often brought to the attention of OhioHelp.net, an Ohio-based company specializing in helping businesses ...

eBooks: Free Marketing Tools That Promote Your Product
A brief article on how I put my eBook on the best sellers' list without spending any hard-earned cash. When I first decided to publish an eBook I wanted to test the market, so I produced a free eBook just to work through the process. My aim was to do ...

Starting a Small Business: Balancing Risk and Reward
In a perfect world, starting a small business would be risk free, but just as with everything else; the degree of risk determines the value of the reward. According to the National Commission on Entrepreneurship, at any given time, 6% to 9% of the United ...


Google
Do You Know How to Buy and Read eBooks!
 

Here’s what I mean… When you go to Borders to and pick up your favorite mystery novel you you’re not given a hard sell on the benefits of buying that mystery novel right before you make the decision to buy or not. At a book store, you buy a book because you decide you want it or YOU decide you need it for some particular task. No big promises are made as to the results that you will after you learn the books “hidden secrets”, so you take the book at face value.

Now, things are totally different when you buy an eBook. So, let me go through the steps and the psychology that I used to go through when I bought an eBook. I think you might find some this pretty familiar…

First I would happen across the sales page through some link, usually while searching for some sort of information that can help me earn money online. Then, I was hit with a powerful headline that says “Do XYZ after learning my SECRET and YOU to can make $1,000,000 TODAY!” I’d stop and say hmm… that sounds interesting let me read a little more about this secret to see if I can figure out what it is.

Next, I’d get sucked into the sales page which would take me on an emotional rollercoaster which left me a burning desire to know what this author’s secret is and led me to believe that I couldn’t live without this information. I would then ponder on the idea of making $1,000,000 today and ask myself “what if this information really will make me rich how much would it be worth?”

At this point I’d consider paying for the secrets, but only if the price was right. So, I start looking for the sales price which is always hidden deep in the sales page somewhere where you can never find to decide whether or not I was going to buy it (Finding the price of an eBook is kind of like playing “Where’s Waldo?” you know it’s there somewhere but you just can figure out where. )

When I finally found it, if the price was right I buy it. Then in a sort of nervous anxious rage I would download my new treasure and rip through it until I foundd the “secret” hidden deep within. When I did find the secret I was usually a little let down because it was either something that I probably could have figured out myself or it seemed to hard or it would take to long…. Then I threw the book aside until the next secret came along that struck my fancy.

Maybe this isn’t exactly how you approach eBooks, but it is how quite a few people do. I hope you see the flaw in this sort of information acquisition. Most people, in my estimation, buy


eBooks to find out the hidden secret within and not to actually learn and apply what’s in the book. The sales prose on the sale page does such a good job at selling the person that they need to know that secret that that ends up being the major reason they purchase the information, That is most people don’t buy eBooks as an information resource they are simple buying the secret. They rip through the eBook and when they find whatever secret it was they were looking for it’s almost as if they are satisfied with that alone.

Please never do this! You will find yourself wasting a lot of money and put yourself on an expensive and frustrating emotional rollercoaster.

So,

Here is the correct way to buy and read an eBook:

First:

Only buy an eBook if you are sure that it is something that will absolutely help with your task at hand. For example, if your in the process of creating an affiliate website don’t buy a eBook that will teach you how to create an opt-in list until the task at hand is completed. Buying extra information products will only confuse you and stop your forward progression in whatever task it is that you are currently doing if they are off subject.

Second:

When you do find supplemental information to help you with your task at hand save the sales page and wait a week before you buy the book. If you come back in a week and the you still feel the information will be extremely helpful purchase the book. (Tis is much easier said than done!)

• Tip: If the eBooks is on some sort of basic information there is usually a forum somewhere where you can ask an expert first hand your specific question and get real time valuable information for FREE. Try this first. You may be pleasantly surprised with what you learn.

Third:

When you do buy the eBook take it slow. Print it out. Pick up a highlighter and relax in your favorite easy chair. Take notes. Come up with your own and write down your broad takeaways. Then use the individual tips and strategies contained in the eBook one at a time. Track your results and trouble shoot.

That’s it!

If you follow the three simples steps above you’ll find yourself spending much less on eBooks and getting much more mileage out of those that you do buy. As a final word of advice, take eBooks at face value just like any other book and never buy an eBook just because you want to learn some secret and you’ll be just fine. Daegan Smith is the Ex-NCAA Wrestler Turned Webmaster of Perfect Home Based Business Opportunities - The Net’s Top Growing Source for Home Business Information.

Attention: Webmasters & Web Publishers Make Money with our Free Home Business Content for Reprint at Free Web Site Content



News



GigaOM

Apple: US e-book lawsuit 'fundamentally flawed'
Reuters
In a filing in US District Court in Manhattan late Tuesday, Apple said it has not conspired with anyone or fixed prices for e-books in an effort to thwart Amazon.com Inc's dominance of that fast-growing market. The Justice Department accused Apple in ...
Apple: US e-book lawsuit "fundamentally flawed"WTAQ
Apple Rejects Charges Of E-Books Price FixingTPM
Apple labels e-book antitrust lawsuit as "fundamentally flawed"Technology Spectator
Variety -American Libraries
all 36 news articles »

Slow economy prompts wave of liberal books
CBS News
NEW YORK — With a Democrat in the White House, a wave of books is coming out this year lamenting the slow economy and calling for substantial change. And those books are by liberals. "It's the story of the moment right now," says Patricia Bostelman, ...

and more »

The Hindu

Scrutiny of Reebok India's books ordered
The Hindu
The Corporate Affairs Ministry, on Wednesday, ordered a scrutiny of the books of accounts of sportswear maker Reebok's Indian arm over complaints of an alleged Rs.870-crore fraud. “We have ordered an enquiry under Sec. 234 of the Companies Act, ...
Reebok books former MD, COO on charges of financial irregularitiesDaily News & Analysis
Adidas books former Reebok India chiefs for Rs8700 crore scamBusiness Review India

all 223 news articles »

Huntington's exhibit hall for books to get $2.5-million makeover
Los Angeles Times
By Mike Boehm A change is in store for the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens' main display of its rare books, manuscripts, drawings, photography and other literary and historical holdings -- including a Gutenberg Bible from the ...


McEntee: Books for young readers can be gritty, but rarely damaging
Salt Lake Tribune
By peg mcenteE Evidently, swearing in books for adolescents is on the rise, particularly among characters who are rich, attractive and popular. That's the conclusion of a Brigham Young University professor who scoured the content of 40 bestsellers and ...