Mastering Writing For Mega Money Plr Ebook

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Table of Contents

Foreword
Chapter 1:
The Ins And Out Of Writing
Chapter 2:
Coming Up With Ideas
Chapter 3:
Figuring Out How To Present Your Idea
Chapter 4:
Putting Together A Draft
Chapter 5:
Rewrites
Chapter 6:
Mastering Style
Chapter 7:
Being Clear And Saying What You Mean
Chapter 8:
Discovering Your “Voice”
Chapter 9:
Supporting Your Statement
Chapter 10:
Some Final General Tips

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Chapter 3: Figuring Out How To Present Your Idea

Synopsis

Now that you have an idea… how will you present it?

An Idea Must Be Well Laid Out

Once you have an idea, you need to consider how you’re going to deliver it. Whether you do an outline before or after you begin writing, or whether you even do a traditional outline at all, doesn’t count much, particularly with short content. What is significant is that early on you step backwards and appraise how you mean to formulate it.

That’s the key purpose of an outline, to remind you of where you’re moving and why you’re choosing each step. All but the briefest of content require a written design or map, to help you recognize when you’re swerving off track and to bring out gaps, failings, and other troubles in the content.

Here’s an illustration of how a author might use a outline to survey and focalize content.

First view: Hmm, I want to discover more about the Internet, and I’m starting a business—how about writing on Internet businesses? First-(after reading, discussion, thinking): the speedy growth of the Net as a “new economy” (it comes out lots of individuals have thought of this—there’s a whole vocabulary I need to discover and use in good order, and a gang of articles and books I’m going to want to at least consider, hinging on whether I want to make this short content or a full book.)

Second – (more reading, etc.): there are major arguments among economists and industry scholars about whether the cyberspace is a “new economy” with fresh rules of commerce, rivalry, and success that differentiate it from the “old economy,” or whether it’s merely the same old economic rivalry armed with fresh technology Early draft: The “old economy”/”fresh economy” duality is an hyperbole.

Second-draft: Net companies face the same constraints as former companies—they have to turn up investment capital, work with providers, contend with one another, cut costs, acquire buyers, offer fresh products, etc. The Net hasn’t altered these basics.

Near-final draft: Net giants like Amazon face the same common challenges as other companies in core functions of organization, finance, R&D, logistics, promotion, and sales. The “fresh economy” is truly the familiar “old economy” adorned in the latest technologies and buzzwords.

Few people benefit from outlines as much as they could, for a few reasons. First, many people aren’t used to submitting the work to craft an outline; they instead get right to writing. If that works for you, alright—and it’s true that as word processing software gets more advanced, it gets easier (in theory, at any rate).

A more significant reason why many people fail to profit from outlines is that they’re used to thinking about outlines as exalted shopping lists instead of dynamic maps of content. After all, a beneficial map isn’t merely a list of A and B, but a picture of the orderly or spatial relationship between them—a design for how to move from A to B.

In terms of content, what this means is that good outlines should clarify the content flow and the links between logical steps. Yet most people’s outlines wind up with lots of nouns and few verbs, as they’ve been authored as strings of subjects instead of as an overview of the content.

Chapter 4: Putting Together A Draft

Synopsis

Oddly enough the draft stage is where you can relax a little.

Putting The Content Together Loosely

At this point you recognize what you want to say: Now just get it down in writing. Don’t concern yourself about style, elegance, mechanics or anything else having to do with the content’s last look. Just get it put down. There’ll be lots of time afterwards for rewriting and refining this rough draft. The target now is to give yourself raw material that you are able to shape and focus.

There’s no mystery in composition, as Thoreau says—unless you believe thorough preparation is a trick, so that once you start writing you’ve already put quite a lot of work into formulating and laying out good content.

A note on writing with a PC: Be overzealous about saving, backing up, and filing away your work. Save every 5 or 10 minutes.

If you’re working at a public terminal, hold a copy of your content on another medium, for example online—you are able to get 300 megs of free online storage at www.freediskspace.com, amidst other gratis storage sites.

Absolutely never store all your work in just one area, even your own PC. If you don’t keep up an up-to-date filed away copy, I assure you that your hard drive or Zip disk will blow up just as you go to publish that precious content.

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