Encountered a problem with your readers who are reading your E-book? You might need to expand your book,–if you want your audience to smoothly read your book. There’s ways how you can expand it.
Longer stories always gain more readers, if your book contains large amount of pages, you will gain some readers who are wanting to keep reading your books.
Note:
If you are just writing your book by hand, such as a pen or pencil with a composition book; you might need to convert it to typed text, by hand, or an OCR, however, you might need to convert your file into an editable file.
Instructions:
If you are using a computer, go to any of your files stored on your disk, or online. Be sure to Choose which book you’ve want to expand wisely.
If your book is a short story, and it’s too short, or fast, you can slow down your readers by expanding it by any of the following:
- Insert a new paregraph, and/or expand existing ones.
- Add new Chapters, and specify how many pages you are reaching for when editing your book.
- Add tables (optional).
- You can add subheadings to divide your content, that can expand your book even further. Contextual books have lots of text, if your book contain images; they can expand it all right, but the catch is; your book will be loading too slow on some reading devices, or apps.
Some authors didn’t even understand, your E-book must be long enough for the another reading platform, such as Scribd to include your books with their subscription service. If you want your short stories to be available, expand your books, and republish frequently to confirm if you can reach the subscription specifications for your books.
No matter how long your book is, you can still gain readership for your content.
Don’t give up, keep publishing useful and interesting content.
If you had a hand-written book, you might need to buy some more composition books to fix any errors, and recycle the older ones,–after you confirmed you had successfully finished your book.
If your book is licensed with an open license that allows reuse of your work; your audience will contribute to your book what you’ve just written. However; at the other hand, if you are reserving all rights for your book, and you’ve protected it with DRM; you might have some readership, but you’re not going to grow your audience what you’ve expected to. The following list contains information about this issue:
- Your readers might read your book, but they can’t even swap to the another reading device. They have to use Adobe Digital Editions to transfer it to the another device.
- Some operating-systems, such as Linux will not support DRM because, Linux relies on open-source software. Open-source content should not be placed under copy-protection of any kind.
- If your book is infected with DRM; you’re supporting the DMCA, and the anti-circonvention laws, treating your readers as criminals. That can also support Adobe too!.
If your work is DRM-Free; you are supporting your readers who don’t want to be infected with DRM-protected media. You might preserve your readership with any of the following:
- Your readers can read your book, even with open-source reading apps.
- If your work is licensed under Creative Commons license, you’re allowing them to reuse your work,–as long they give you credit for your original work.
- If you have over 22 books with an open-source license on each copy; your work will be safe to read, and reuse.
You can also expand parts of your book with a fix, and notifying your readers about a fix you’ve just provided. You can also write an author blog, and tell your readers about it.
If you want to be a good writer for your audience; do your homework, and explore other books written by other authors around the world.
If you are done editing your book; all you have to do just republish it, and wait for some changes to fully take effect.
Always respond to your viewers, read the reviews carefully, and inspect your work for any problems.