32: What Nobody Tells You About Publishing Your Book with Anita Henderson

MAY 20, 202665 MIN
Standout Creatives: Business, marketing, and creativity tips for solopreneurs launching their ideas

32: What Nobody Tells You About Publishing Your Book with Anita Henderson

MAY 20, 202665 MIN

Description

What if the book you were meant to write has been sitting inside you for years and all you just needed someone to help you bring it out?That’s the question underneath everything Anita Henderson does.She calls herself the Author’s Midwife. And the more she explained what that actually means, the more I realized how perfectly it fits. She doesn’t write your book for you. She helps you bring it into the world the right way.In this episode, she walks us through everything that means.HighlightsThe myth that almost every first-time author believes.You write a great book. You upload it to Amazon. It finds its readers.If only.Anita has spent nearly 15 years watching that assumption cost authors dearly. Good content, she’ll tell you, is the floor. Not the ceiling.“The core of a great book obviously is the content. If you don’t have that in there, then a pretty cover can only take you so far. But it is a compilation of inputs that makes a book really good.”Structure. Story. Strategy. All three have to show up together. And most first-time authors only think about one of them.What readers expect, even when they don’t realize it.Here’s something Anita said that reframed how I think about nonfiction entirely.Readers come to a book with invisible expectations. They expect the structure to make sense. They expect chapter two to follow naturally from chapter one. They expect you to close the gap between the lesson you promised and the one you actually delivered.And if you don’t give them that, they feel it. Even if they can’t name why.“You can tell me your 12-point process all day long, but if I can’t follow you and the structure isn’t there, then I’m confused.”That confusion is the thing between your reader and your message. Remove it, and something opens up.The moment she stopped working for other people for good.Anita went back to corporate twice.She’s honest about it. Cash flow dried up, the business got hard, and corporate looked safe. Both times she went back, and both times she left again.The second exit was different. She hired a business coach who asked a simple question: what do you love? Writing and books, Anita said. And the coach told her something she hadn’t considered.“You know, there’s people who teach other people how to write their books. That’s a thing? An author coach?”She looked into it. She networked. She learned the space. Then she left corporate for the last time and built Write Your Life into what it is now.Sometimes the business you’re meant to run is sitting right there in the thing you already know how to do.Why panicking is the most expensive thing you can do.When revenue slows down, the instinct is to add things. New offerings. New platforms. A pivot. Something. Anything to make the numbers move.Anita calls it out directly.“We panic by adding new products. We panic by adding new platforms. We pivot when we shouldn’t, when we should stay focused on the thing we do best.”And here’s what that panic actually does. It confuses the market. It confuses potential clients. And it closes off the momentum you spent years building.The business you’ve been developing has a kind of gravity to it. When you scatter in every direction, you lose it.Your superpowers are probably hiding in plain sight.Anita has two superpowers she talks about that most people would overlook.The ability to see the big picture and the small details at the same time.And listening. Really listening to what a client isn’t quite saying.“I need to hear what they’re not saying in a way.”Neither of these sounds like a marketable skill on paper. But they’re exactly what makes her process work. They’re what lets her pull the right book out of someone who’s been sitting on the idea for five years.Don’t downplay the soft stuff. It might be the thing that makes you irreplaceable.The nine to twelve month process that changes everything.This is where the conversation got specific in a way I think a lot of aspiring authors needed to hear.Anita’s process at Write Your Life starts with a complimentary book strategy session. Then a VIP Day, six hours of structured conversation that generates the entire framework for the book, thousands of words of content pulled from the conversation itself.Then months of writing, revisions, beta readers, final edits, cover design, interior layout, and book launch.“Nine to twelve months from concept to completion, which is a drop in the bucket for most of my clients who say they’ve been thinking about writing a book for three to five, eight years.”One year. That’s all it takes when you stop going it alone.Embrace your comfort zone.Every entrepreneur has heard the opposite advice.Get uncomfortable. Push your edges. Do the scary thing.Anita disagrees. Or at least, she thinks we have the order backwards.“Get into your comfort zone before you try to get out of your comfort zone.”Find the process that works. Master it. Do it well enough that the results are consistent, that clients are satisfied, that you feel the flow of it. Then you can expand from there.Mastery first. Then iteration. Not the other way around.The challenge she wants to leave you with.Stop trying to do a million things.Stop trying to escape your comfort zone when you haven’t really found it yet.“There is a flow that happens when you develop a process or a system. It impacts who you say yes to as a client. It impacts your enjoyment. And it also impacts the quality of the output.”Find the thing you do well. Do it consistently. Let the momentum build.That’s the whole game.Closing ReflectionAnita just wants to see creative entrepreneurs profit from their genius.That’s the thing underneath all of it. The frameworks, the VIP Days, the nine to twelve month process. The years of figuring out her own comfort zone before she could help others find theirs.She’s watched too many talented people write good books that never found their readers. Or never got written at all.If you’ve been sitting on a book idea for three years, or five, or eight, this episode is the nudge.You don’t have to figure it out alone. You just have to go first.How long have you been sitting on your book idea? Drop it in the comments.