I went from corporate → 6x author + TEDx → helping coaches/experts publish books that actually bring clients.
Most people think writing a book is the hard part.
Wrong.
The hard part is making it build real authority & revenue.
Here's how I do it (and help others) →
The best compliment an author can receive isn't a 5-star review.
It's this.
A book covered in highlights, notes, questions, and tabs.
It means someone didn't just read it. They wrestled with it. They challenged it. They wanted to talk about it.
That's the goal!
@kathrynhall_ I think it depends on what kind of book you are writing. If you are writing a fiction book to entertain, sure, take your time.
But a nonfiction book that will help others, or build your speaking/coaching career. You don't want to spend over 3 months getting it done.
Coaches: Your book is the best lead magnet you'll ever have. But 90% write it wrong.
The fix? Stop writing 'information', write transformation.
One chapter that makes them say 'this guy gets me' = inbound clients.
Who's writing their book in 2026? 👇
I went from corporate → 6x author + TEDx → helping coaches/experts publish books that actually bring clients.
Most people think writing a book is the hard part.
Wrong.
The hard part is making it build real authority & revenue.
Here's how I do it (and help others) →
Books aren't just "nice to have."
They're your best salesperson that never sleeps.
My clients are seeing:
- Speaking gigs
- High-ticket closes
- Authority that compounds
1. Full Authority Outline: Turn your expertise into a book that positions you as THE go-to.
2. Done-For-You Systems: Website, funnel, lead magnet, podcast outreach.