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18 Feb 2008 04:11:00 | Robert Brents
When I decided to write my first how-to manual, I was employed
full-time; I had a wife, and a pre-teen daughter who was in
every sport and activity imaginable, and I was delivering
seminars and training courses at night and on Saturdays. I had
no idea when or how I was ever going to get a how-to manual
written!
Then one of my mentors suggested that I carry a cassette
recorder in my car and dictate the entire first draft while
commuting to my (last) job. And that’s exactly what I did.
When I finished dictating the first draft, I gave the tapes to a
transcription service and they created an Microsoft Word
document from the tapes, which I then edited, published, and
marketed and promoted like crazy. And the rest, as they say, is
history. As was the job I had been commuting to while I was
creating my first how-to manual.
Nowadays, voice recognition software (like Dragon Naturally
Speaking, for example) is getting good enough that you could
dictate the whole manual, either directly to your computer, or
into a digital recorder that could then be plugged into your
computer to allow you to download the digital files into the
computer to be interpreted by the voice recognition software.
About Author :
Best Regards, Robert Brents, "The 80/20 Guy"
http://www.RobertBrents.com For your free four-lesson e-seminar,
How To Write, Publish, Market & Promote Profitable How-To
Manuals, email mailto:freehowtoeseminar@sendfree.com Copyright
2001 Robert Brents and Blue Gecko Press.
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