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message 1: by Erik (new)

Erik Kendall Back again here at the start of August!
This week, we want to dive into the purpose behind your writing. Our question for you: What problem does your book solve?
Does your book address a common challenge, offer a new perspective or provide a solution for a specific audience? We’d love to hear about the core problem it tackles and the impact you aim to make.
Drop your response in the comments! We’re excited to learn more about the difference your book is making!


message 2: by Philippa (new)

Philippa Gamse After analyzing over 5,000 websites across a wide range of industries, I’ve found a common pattern: even experienced business owners miss key profit opportunities—not because they lack data, but because they struggle to interpret it effectively.

That's why I wrote "Website Wealth: A Business Leader’s Guide to Driving Real Value from Your Analytics". It helps readers connect digital insights to business strategy. It’s not a technical manual or surface-level marketing guide—it’s written in accessible, practical language that supports deeper learning and decision-making.


message 3: by Kate (new)

Kate Baucherel Hey there! I have lots of books. My non-fiction helps decision makers to understand the applications, risks and benefits of blockchain technology and crypto assets. My big fiction series is a sneaky education in cybersecurity best practice. Everything else is just fun!


Your Financial Therapist I turn money anxiety into financial confidence—one awkward conversation at a time!

As only one of 100 certified financial therapist I wrote my book to help give people all over the world a tool to use and scripts to follow on how healthy financial conversations can look like including my own Money Mindset Method framework.

There is a big need out there to support people with talking not just about dollars and cents but all the other senses that are impacted when the topic of money comes up (or doesn't!).

www.c-yft.com to buy now or have me come speak to your group!


message 5: by Robyn (last edited Aug 13, 2025 02:22PM) (new)

Robyn Bolton It's been nearly 30 years since the publication of The Innovator's Dilemma yet the success rate of innovation hasn't changed.

Why?
That's the question my book - Unlocking Innovation: A Leader’s Guide for Turning Bold Ideas into Tangible Results - seeks to answer

I believe that our traditional approach to innovation is too myopic. We focus on strategy, structure, processes, and metrics. Yes, they're important but they aren't sufficient to change the game for one reason...

Innovation isn't an idea problem. It's a leadership problem.

Unlocking Innovation is about the ABCs of innovation - a holistic approach to Architecture (all the stuff above), unique leadership Behaviors, and essential Cultures that separate the successful innovators from those that try hard but don't get results.


message 6: by Tatjana (new)

Tatjana Genys The problem my books are trying to solve, is how, as a society we are becoming increasingly disconnected. From each other & ourselves. How many of us are in an identity crisis or totally lost at their job.

It was meant to bring hope & meaning (can be found here (https://www.tatjanagenys.com/books) and help others on the step of self-realization. Drawing on my own experience, I don`t hold back from sharing all it takes – from falling in love with myself to totally failing – and many attempts in-between that made it worthwhile.

I hope you enjoy!


message 7: by Gina (new)

Gina Riley Qualified Isn't Enough answers this job seeker question (the problem they have):

Q: I applied to 200 jobs over the last two months. I did not get a response from any of them, but I was qualified for all of them.

A: That is because being qualified is not enough to land interviews and ultimately job offers. This book provides the "what/why" of job search, acting as a workbook to guide readers through the "how" of crafting a Unique Value Proposition, self-marketing, and activating an effective interview story and job search strategy for today, not 1991.

The old way is not the new way.


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