![]() ![]() What I would have done for my book: My working title was Vegan Marketing Success, which I admit would have been catchier than what it is now with “Stories” added at the end, but it needed a subtitle I couldn’t nail quite the way I wanted.ģ. Don’t make it hard for readers to find your book! I’ve heard that the best titles are 1 to 3 words long, and then have a longer subtitle. If you don’t already have a website, the domain should be available for your book title too if you want to start one. Takeaway: You can research bestselling titles in your category, but the formula above is pretty damn good. And no one used that phase before the book came out. You know you’re going to learn habits that make a difference and hopefully improve yourself. The last point is really important because if you use a popular phrase or one another company is using, that’ll blow your SEO and make it hard for readers to find the book. However, trendsetter doesn’t equal bestseller.Ĭlear did the same research with book titles, analyzing what the bestselling titles in his category have in common. So it inspired me to move forward, but I’d say both of us were pioneering with our books. The only business book in the vegan world was Vegan Ventures, which confirmed the structure I wanted to follow for my book. What I would have done for my book: Nothing different, really. This research is also valuable if you haven’t written your book yet and you’re struggling with an outline. Books by publishers know the formula that sells books and they will repeat it. Takeaway: With bestselling books, there’s always a winning formula. One thing he found was that books usually had three parts. If you want to not only read about how to create life-changing habits and stick to them - but also put the lessons into practice - this workbook, as well as your own dedication, will help you do just that.The first thing Clear did was research other bestselling books in his category (Self-Help) and browse the Table of Contents to see what the reader’s journey was for each book. You’ll also notice the “Parts” and “Chapters” referenced in the book, so you can easily find the section if you need to look back on it for further context. This may come in the format of a table to fill in, space to free-write, or other exercise methods to provide space for reflection. In each section, we’ve extracted the main premise of the exercise, and then added space to respond and practice the lessons. Clearly organised and well-formatted so it's easy to follow.Lists, drawn lines and space for you to answer, journal and reflect.All exercises from Atomic Habits, extracted into one single place.In it, you’ll find exactly what’s advertised: the exercises from the book, summarised and formatted, with space to answer. This book is like a faithful companion to Atomic Habits. You want an organised, clear space to write your answers to the exercises, all in one place.You want to take action on what you read (not just read, nod, and move on). ![]() ![]() You've read Atomic Habits and want to implement the lessons into real-life.If you're a proactive 'do-er' and want to integrate the lessons from "Atomic Habits" into your daily life - this book will help you do just that. Instead, we found ourselves cobbling them together in various places - notebooks, journals, pieces of paper - all of which would eventually get lost, or at the very least, not be helpful in putting the lessons into practice. ![]() The exercises are excellent - but there isn't much space to actually write in the book itself. While reading the book, we found ourselves wishing for a place where we could write, process and practice the book’s exercises in a constructive, concise way. This workbook was created as a companion to James Clear’s "Atomic Habits". Now it's time to actually practice it - write, journal, put the lessons in motion each day. You've read James Clear's book about how to create great habits and stick to them. Don't Just read about how to build great habits and break bad ones: actually do it - put it into practice. ![]()
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