u/kin_gexo777

What is your take on use Of Ai to write books

I'm not sure if using Ai is inherently bad, and I assume the vast majority may be in support of its usage, but it begs the question, what's yalls take on using Ai to write books. See I have been using Ai to optimize myself and try to guide myself and utilize my remaining years to achieve that which may be unfeasible, but in using it, I've wondered of my growing reliance amd contemplated on thoughts pertaining to the origin of these very thoughts. Yes I am aware that Ai writing is quite frankly visible and honestly, it may be easier to do so, looking past the tone and peering into the structure of the sentences and paragraphs.

Therefore I ask you, fellow Ai users, what is more important, the value you bring, or the Method in which you produce such value, I might even go as far as to say that, those that may oppose ai or its use are either incapable of producing the same, are insecure of the future due to Ai and have thus chosen to resent it, or are put off by the fact that Ai is able to do in five minutes, what they took five years to study and perfect. I've read Ai stories, and they were enjoyable, so therefore I say, what is your take.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 7 hours ago

Anyone know any good cover designs

Hie guys, I'm a young author and I published my first ever book, I was working on another and completed the manuscript— but I chocked. I didn't have a clue on how to design the cover. The first one was abit literal in its meaning but this one however confuses me. The book is Ai themed and I have an artwork that I'm quite fond of, but I'm not sure if I should theme it in that manner. I've seen alot of abstract things outhere and they look really cool. Therefore my question is, how do you go abstract, or down the abstract route without loosing the meaning of the message you're conveying. Same goes for my logo, how do you balance the two??

If anyone has genuinely useful advice on how they did it, I'd love to know. Also I wrote the books by myself, I didn't use Ai as that's lazy and the message in them isn't or rather doesn't convey me and the essence I wanted to share.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 8 hours ago
▲ 1 r/youngentrepreneur+1 crossposts

Anyone want to sample free books

Hello, I'm a young author and I'm trying to get my name out there, so I've decided to list a Masterpiece of mine for me. The 9.99 isn't as important as the feedback I'd get from yall so it'd really help alot. To anyone interested, the link is in my bio or whatever it's called here and just let me know what you think. The book is called The Common denokinatorz and there is An a manuscript I fashioned together in order to help more and more people adapt to the ai wave and learn how to survive and thrive.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 2 days ago
▲ 2 r/youngentrepreneur+1 crossposts

Books to read??

At 13 I decided to throw myself into the deep end, I flopped on my face and got booted out of the damn pool. Now bwing older I wrote a book about my experiences with my goal being:

To make the most useful guide book out there and eventually build a tribe and scale it. The command denominator is the first step. It maybe something about reading of someone who is in your shoes and watching them weave through daily life trying to figure it out. It maybe the ability to pick out lessons and frameworks that apply to you and applying them in your life, with the hopes and probable outcome of saving yourself years of failuer. It may just be a casual read. I don't know, but I do know that the common denominators audience is out there, and i hope they act fast. The book is out there and for now it's free, link in comments;

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u/kin_gexo777 — 5 days ago

Just released two of my manuscrips

I've been writing for afew months now but I haven't been getting any traction. I'm abit of a serious person so I've moved into the non- fiction space. I write three books in the span of about a year, well two actually but I'm growing and I really want some good input, so I've decided to release the manuscripts for free, the paid books are still there but I just wanted to get to see what I managed to cook up.

The first one is about my struggles in entrepreneurship. I failed consecutively for about 5 years and from that I learnt things that I felt were genuinely useful, I wanted to bring people closer to success by picking apart the things I and most people do wrong and building systems that actually work, then I wrote a second, I was listening to a podcast and for the past week all I heard was Ai, so I leaned into it. I went to Ai (ironically and gave it thirty days to make me an ai mastermind), it taught me work flow animation, agnetic tasks, promt engineering and so on. I really wanted the book to help people and ease the feelings of anxiety and fear I and the majority have.

u/kin_gexo777 — 6 days ago

What if this was ment for you

At age thirteen I started by pursuing dropshipping. It was a long shot cos I was in an unsupported country with like zero knowledge. Everything around me told me to quit. The friends the family, even the economy. It was kinda dumb to try and pursue riches in an economic recession, but I did anyway. I failed. Tried Forex trading failed again. Wrote a book, failed some more.

I will be honest with you, it was rough and I expected it. I mean I was 17 and I was trying to rewrite my lineage in the most ethical and scalable way I could. People called me slop, others called me a scammer, get rich quick guru, which is funny cos I've been burnt by gurus. People who I saw make it work, but when I tried, nothing worked.

That's when I discovered my real power, one I could exploit right now. Having tried to do somuch at such a young age, I've learnt alot, about running systems, building them, planning for scaling, managing people. Believe it or not, at 17 I was forced to manage people, when I couldn't even manage myself.

I was forced to grow up, at a rate that seemed unreasonable, and I still am, and honestly im glad. I mean I meet people who are trying to figure out what I did at fifteen. Who are twice as old as me, with a job and a 9-5 and kids, but still bounce from task to task before ever finishing anything. People who want to control the group, task force or whatever fraction their in (even at others expense). So I've come here. The book is called The Common Denominator, and though the finished copy with the frameworks and all is paid for, the manuscript is free. The raw, bled out version fo me and all the bits in the book that I didn't believe needed to be in there, you can find them at my website, under the posts.

I spent five years waiting for it to all click and it never did, I had to force it. I hope you start forcing It too.

The link awaits in the bio

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u/kin_gexo777 — 8 days ago

Book recommendation

To anybody in the finance niche or wanting to get started, or anyone with a thing for gritty reads about perseverance and the unwavering rejection reality poses. Where the protagonist doesn't get to bask in his glory, but rather witness first hand how he was the cause of his failure. The pain in his own behind, witness as the author disects his own failures and momentary triumphs. Five years of experience condensed into a 70 page manifesto. Why 70 — because life doesn't have the time to stretch out failure and write a novel. That's not how the world works, everything in life hits and hits hard, dig deep enough, and you will find me to be correct.

This isn't a mere story, nor is it just a manual. This is what happens when you peer behind the script of life, but accidentally fall into the void that lies behind it.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 9 days ago

Sales rep

Looking for someone who is good at marketing, preferably young cos I'm 17, and well who also wants to start a business, we are still figuring it out but yh we might be getting somewhere.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 15 days ago

Looking to collab

I'm 17 and I have a buddy of mine whose 14, were trying to make It in life the right way. We ain't looking for the fast money lanez we wanna build something real. Dm me if you interested.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 15 days ago

I'm 17 and I wrote a book, I'm not mentioning it I'm just here to learn. I didn't attend any classes and well in not on Amazon. I didn't invest any amount fo money other than that I saved up. I'm from a country where it's tough to get going and sell anything online, and even tougher to get visibility. This is my first book and no, I didn't scrap any because it's not good enough.

I made some mistakes growing up and some errors in thinking that cascaded into gaps in my logic. I'm here because I want to know, for each and every one of you, what did you do to get here. I assume some of you have sold alot of copies, I can't say howmany, but I bet some sold alot. Others I guess are where I am right now, trying to make it work because it had to work.

If you have some advice comment below and thank you.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 16 days ago

Maybe it's my niche but I am struggling with visibility, I mean my books are good but like nobody is buying, is my pitch wrong like how am I supposed to do it.

I wrote my book about a month ago, my first ever book. I finished it and I went on to finding an audience. My books title is the common denominator. If you wanna know more about it. You can dm me byt basically it's a book about how I failed on my entrepreneurial businesses and then I developed frameworks to help people not do what I did.

I want to know like how do yall do it, how did yall reach your target audiences and how did you convince them

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u/kin_gexo777 — 16 days ago

Everyone warns you about failure.

Nobody warns you about the first win.

I won $40 from $1 on my first bet, and i legit, felt like a genius. I thought I had an edge, then I unsurprisingly burned through everything. Im talking everything, from birthday cash, savings, capital I swore I'd protect, the lot.

Here's what I learned the hard way: The first win is the most dangerous win. It doesn't teach you anything useful. It just lies to your face when the means was as fraudulent as the outcome.

Failure humbles you, it even teaches you. The first win? It tricks you into thinking luck is skill.Everyone warns you about failure.

Nobody warns you about the first win.

Don't trust the first win. Trust the pattern.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 17 days ago

I assume the majority of us have atleast a framework, one which keeps us in check before making decisions but if I may ask, how did yall come across your frameworks or build your systems, and did any of you simply copy a working system.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 19 days ago

I nearly killed my book solo and I didn't even realise. So I'd spent alot of my time advertising and getting traffic but nothing worked. I then pivoted to making edits of my book and content that made the book cool. I didn't realise but the whole point of advertising wasn't to make the book look cool, but to make the book mean something. I'd always tell my brother, if only one person bought the book, he'd always comfort me till the day he said," why not post about what's inside the book. He said it casually but it actually made sense. So I did and I think people who are like fighting for visibility should to. I stead of making videos about your product you ought to make videos about the how the consumers issue or problem gets fixed through the product. For me it was quotes, lessons of small quips from the book that hit hard. For you it might be a genuine showing of a testimonial, or how the product fits into the user's routine in a sort of ugc format. It doesn't have to be a luxury video but like one where the user sees themself using the book

For me it was showing how the systems in the book could help people stress test their ideas, disect lessons from their failures and make the most of the time they have in terms of entrepreneurial progression.

If you wanna read, have a look ibe dropped the link below;

https://opusdevialiterary.lovable.app

u/kin_gexo777 — 20 days ago

When I first wanted to get into the business of making money, I tried everything. I knew that starting was the best way to actually get stuff done but the way I was doing it was dangerous. Not gonna lie I jumped in head first, I failed five times cos of that in five years. Only till I took a breath and actually made a checklist, something I found in a book called the common denominator did I actually get some traction.

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u/kin_gexo777 — 21 days ago