![]() ![]() Though the barrier to entry is low and the earnings potential is high, KDP isn't a get-rich-quick scheme. He fills out some data on the back end, and boom. He works up a cover with freely available art, a keyword-optimized title and a fun font - think " Nature Walks Journal" printed on a green-tinged illustration of leaves, " Blue Dinosaur Notebook" superimposed over smiling reptiles or " The Little Notebook of Big Ideas" in red-and-white block letters. Using software like Adobe Illustrator, Cubbon creates an interior with digitally drawn lines, dates and inspirational quotes. They're similar to the notebooks you see lining shelves at Barnes & Noble. Thanks to the Kindle Direct Publishing program, Cubbon can make and sell planners, sketchbooks and journals to customers all over the world, no writing experience or capital necessary. ![]() Neither is storing inventory or talking to customers. See, in Cubbon's universe, words aren't a prerequisite for a book. His books don't really have words in them. No, he's not James Patterson in disguise - as a low- and no-content publisher, there's one simple reason why Cubbon is so prolific. ![]() Rob Cubbon has roughly 1,800 books listed on Amazon, but you've probably never heard of him. ![]()
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