For anyone who thinks writing their own book, ebook or information product will take months of painful, hard work – the truth be told, that isn’t always the case.

Depending on your topic, research can take you some time, but you can easily limit your research effort for writing your book by 1) knowing exactly what facts and information you are looking for (rather than aimlessly investigating your general topic and 2) by having others help in your quest for information either as paid help or as interview subjects that build your base of information.

Here’s an example.

I recently helped a former relationship counsellor turn their lifetime of experience into a compelling topic and book outline in one afternoon.  After gaining clarity on the topic and outline, it took her less than 1-week to fill in the content that went on to be a top seller on Clickbank.

In another case, a marketer with some experience on using YouTube as a host for videos used mainly for marketing purposes packaged his tips into an e-learning manual in less than 24-hours and had his product to market within days of starting. 

Look for hot opportunities, gaps in information that you can quickly fill with information products, get the product developed – even if it’s just a 10-page report, then begin selling it.  Using this "quick release" method, you can quickly determine which markets hold the best potential and focus on those to further build your information publishing empire.

How do you learn to research marketes, test new ideas and topics, outline infoproducts like a maniac, little known content generation techniques that require little or no effort on your part, tools and templates that turn your words into professional looking ebooks…and more? 

Two ways really…

1. You can spend years figuring it all out on your own – chances are you will, but it will take you a few years based on my own personal experience.

2. You can benefit from previous experience and get it all over at InfoMarketer’s Zone – enabling you to reach your information publishing goals now rather than later.

Jeff