I earned $160k in passive income from writing non-fiction books

I earned $160k in passive income from writing non-fiction books

I love modules, because they are astonishing!
In about six years, I have sold over 40,000 books and earned over $160,000 (income) from selling non-fiction books on Amazon, all these while writing from the side.

I have a full-time job, am a father of three lovely young boys, and I don’t have time to spend 40 hours a week writing books. But in this article, I will share with you my journey.

I write mainly tech books:

Thankfully, my readers have been supportive and quite a number left good reviews. Quite a number have been Bestsellers

A few have been adopted by universities as textbooks:

The best thing about my books is the passive income that I get from them, allowing me to have more time freedom in spending it with my family.

It also led me to be more confident in myself, knowing that I can always quit my job and go full time into writing. But I love my job and find meaning from it (i am in full time church ministry).

I wake up daily excited to write. When work is a dread, or when something unhappy pops up, some writing will always bring in positive energy into me. I don’t dread writing. In fact, I can’t stop myself from writing!

Besides the income, writing has also established my authority in the tech field. As I have mentioned, universities have adopted my books in their subjects. I have been approached by traditional publishing houses to author books for them.

Here are some mindsets that have helped me get started on being a successful nonfiction author:

Yes, I have a computer science background, and I worked in the industry for a few years. But in no way am I an expert in the topics I write about. For example, in my most profitable book, “Beginning Node.js, Express & MongoDB”, before writing the book, I did not have experience in that before. I did have previous experience with older server-side technologies, but not Node. So was that going to deter me from writing a book about it? It can. But learning a new technology itself was interesting to me. So I read the top three selling books on Node, went through the top few online courses on Node, and compiled all that content into my very own compact book (which makes me know more than 90% of people already).

And because I was learning as I was writing, I didn’t have to worry about sounding overly advanced with jargon as I wrote from a beginner’s perspective. An expert sometimes forgets the struggle of a beginner.

C.S. Lewis says this, “The fellow pupil can help more than the master because he knows less. The difficulty we want him to explain is one he has recently met. The expert met it so long ago he has forgotten.”

I didn’t set out to create the ultimate guide on a particular subject. I instead found a market with many problems and wrote a book for one specific problem. For example:

Instead of web development, what about web development using Angular?Instead of Blockchain, what about Blockchain using Solidity and React?Instead of cooking recipes, how about a recipe for a specific kind of diet?Instead of Learning math, what about Learning Singapore Math?The above topics might still be quite a broad market with strong competition. E.g. React, Angular. To distinguish yourself, have your book address the latest versions of the technology, or address the latest trends. E.g. instead of Learning iOS development, what about Learning iOS 15 development. Instead of personal finance, what about personal finance with NFTs.

In this way, though you as a beginner author is not widely known, the topic you are writing about is!

This is a trademark of my books where I am straight to the point. I’ve gotten many good reviews for this:

Firstly, your reader will appreciate you for cutting out all the fluff and going straight into the good parts. And a reader can actually finish the book and leave you a good review.

Secondly, you as an author will find writing a short book much more achievable. Instead of writing a 500-page book selling for $50 (which probably few will buy), write a 100-page book (that solves a subset of the problem) and sell it for lesser which greatly increases the number of buyers! (yes, you profit lesser but that’s for another article). At least it got published rather than remaining in the procrastination void. As you spend less time writing a book, you risk wasting less time if your book is a failure. Using Daniel Vassallo’s terms, write a book portfolio of small bets!

Thirdly, it fits in Amazon’s price range of $2.99 — $9.99 (gets 70% royalties for ebooks). Anything lesser or more gets 35% royalty. For a $9.99 book, the word count is around 20,000–30,000 words. If you spend more effort writing and increase the price beyond $9.99, you only get 35% royalty. Why not split it up into another $9.99 book instead?

(Note: the above is for the ebook version. Paperbacks have a different price structure. You can price them higher with higher royalty rates.)

Enter your book idea, book title and related phrases in Amazon to see if there is a demand for it. How do you see? Look at its best sellers rank.

Preferably, it should be Read More
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Charlie Layers
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Charlie Layers

Fill your life with experiences so you always have a great story to tellBio: About:

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