You market to a faceless 'audience.' You write to nobody.
The misdiagnosisThe misdiagnosis is that scale equals reach.
The real diagnosisScale is loud. Reach is specific. Writing to one specific reader — a real composite of the person who needs this book — makes everything sharper. The post. The email. The cover line. The dedication.
The One-Reader Sketch
| Trait | Specific | Useful |
|---|---|---|
| Age range | 32-44 | Yes |
| Time of life | Just had a kid | Yes |
| What they need | Permission | Yes |
| What they fear | Being seen too clearly | Yes |
| Where they hang out | Specific newsletter, podcast | Yes |
Three Audience-Of-One Questions
- What does this one reader need that they cannot find elsewhere?
- What is their specific objection to buying?
- What would change their week if they read it?
Writing to everyone is writing to nobody. Writing to one is writing to a room — because that one stands in for a thousand.
Build one sketch. Keep it taped above the desk. Write every marketing line to her.
The dare (not assignment)Sketch the one reader. Five lines. Tape it up. Write your next post to her.
Image promptA single chair facing a window, a book on the seat. Painterly. Cream and pink. No people.
— The Book Maven
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