On the page attached to the link below, there is a video showing how to create a low-content book in under 3 minutes. The smart ones amongst you will want to put a good-looking cover on it, which will take you about 5 minutes more to create one in Canva. The question I always had about low-content books is, “Do people actually buy these?”. The answer is yes, thousands of them every day. People buy them from newsagents, bookstores, supermarkets, Amazon, Etsy, and any place people have them for sale. You probably have multiple low-content books in your home or on your desk. Just looking at mine there are at least seven that I can see without searching. Some I made myself by tearing up poor printer output and stapling them into small notebooks. Others I’ve bought. Why does anyone buy a particular low-content book over any of the others? It often comes down to the internal layout suiting your purpose, the cover, or the price. The potential market is massive, and there is a full-time living to be made. When you create them as digital files that the customer can print for themselves, you create them once and sell them many times. There is no issue with plagiarism because the content is created by you or you use material that is in the public domain. There is no copyright on lines on a page or even a particular layout. There may be for the words printed inside the book, but mostly not. There is no copyright on any image you create, even if you’re emulating someone else’s cover, as long as you don’t copy it. When you follow this link, you’ll find a link to a video of a book I made and a link to download it as a PDF. Warning, it’s rough. https://getupnote.com/share/notes/Nfn4ZrxerSOt6nHjocGVteZvec12/c446dea4-0ca3-493d-a41f-ef212670aca7. Regards, |