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book-ideation

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Book Ideation

Transform raw ideas into structured nonfiction book concepts through guided multi-session development.

Core Philosophy

Every decision serves the reader. The question is never "what do I want to say?" but "what transformation does the reader need, and how can this book deliver it?"

This skill sits between generic brainstorming and book architecture. Its job is to refine raw material into a structured concept that can be validated, market-tested, and architected.

The goal is not a book outline. The goal is clarity on eight fundamental elements that determine whether a book should exist and what it must accomplish.

Input Types

This skill accepts:

  • Raw idea (one sentence or paragraph)
  • Brainstorm document from the brainstorm skill
  • Zettelkasten notes or research collection
  • Existing partial concept needing refinement
  • "Shower thought" worth exploring

Session Flow

Session Start

Begin every session with:

  1. New or continuing?

    • If continuing: Request the latest Book Concept Document version
    • If new: Proceed to initialization
  2. What do we have?

    • Ask user to share their raw material (brainstorm doc, notes, idea)
    • Read and identify what's already clear vs. underdeveloped
  3. Session goal

    • Which elements need development today?
    • Deep exploration or quick progress?

The Eight Elements

Develop these through conversation, not interrogation. Surface insights; don't extract data.

1. The Reader

Who specifically is this for?

Go beyond demographics. Understand:

  • Their current situation (what's happening in their life/work)
  • What they currently believe that isn't serving them
  • What they've already tried that hasn't worked
  • What's blocking them from solving this themselves
  • Why they would pick up THIS book (the trigger moment)

Probe: "If your ideal reader walked into a bookstore, what section would they be in? What would they be feeling? What search would they have just done on Amazon?"

2. The Transformation

Where will they be after reading?

The reader starts at Point A and ends at Point B. Define both clearly:

  • What will they believe differently?
  • What will they be able to do?
  • How will they feel?
  • What will they stop doing?

The gap between A and B is the book's reason for existence.

3. The Core Thesis

What's the one big idea?

This is not a topic—it's a claim. A thesis takes a position. Test it:

  • Can someone disagree with this? (If not, it's too obvious)
  • Does it challenge conventional wisdom? (Contrarian theses are more compelling)
  • Can you state it in one sentence?

Template: "Most people believe [conventional wisdom], but actually [your thesis], because [key insight]."

4. The Author Angle

Why are you the one to write this?

Credibility comes from:

  • Experience (you've lived this)
  • Expertise (you've studied/practiced this)
  • Access (you have information others don't)
  • Perspective (you see what others miss)

You don't need all four. You need at least one that's compelling.

5. The Stakes

Why does this matter? Why now?

Articulate:

  • What's the cost of NOT reading this book?
  • Why is this moment in time right for this message?
  • What's at risk for the reader if they continue as they are?

Stakes create urgency. Without stakes, the book is a "nice to have."

6. The Key Concepts

What are the 3-7 major ideas that support the thesis?

These are the building blocks—the frameworks, principles, stories, or insights that make the thesis credible and actionable. They'll become chapters or sections.

Don't list 20 ideas. Force prioritization. What's essential vs. nice-to-have?

7. The Enemy

What is this book arguing against?

Every great nonfiction book has a villain:

  • A mindset ("hustle culture")
  • A practice ("inbox zero")
  • Conventional wisdom ("more information = better decisions")
  • A competing approach ("digital note-taking")

The enemy clarifies the thesis by contrast.

8. The Promise

In one sentence, what does the reader get?

This is the book's value proposition. It should:

  • Be specific (not "improve your life")
  • Be believable (not "become a millionaire in 30 days")
  • Connect transformation to method

Template: "This book will help [reader] achieve [transformation] by [method/insight]."

During Session

Collaboration behaviors:

  • Surface what's implicit: "It sounds like you're really saying..."
  • Challenge weak elements: "I'm not convinced this thesis is contrarian enough. Here's why..."
  • Connect elements: "Your enemy suggests your reader might be someone who..."
  • Push for specificity: "Can you give me an example of this reader?"

When stuck on an element:

  • Skip it and return later (other elements may clarify it)
  • Use the "Ideal Reader Interview" technique (imagine interviewing your reader)
  • Try the "Anti-Book" technique (what's the opposite book? who's it for?)

Session End

Always conclude with:

  1. Element status — Which elements are solid, developing, or still raw?
  2. Key insight — What did we discover this session?
  3. Overnight question — What should the user sit with?
  4. Version creation — Generate the next version of the Book Concept Document

Quick Capture Mode

For rapid concept capture when time is short:

  1. User shares raw idea
  2. Extract: Reader (rough), Transformation (rough), Thesis (rough), Promise (one sentence)
  3. Create minimal v1 document
  4. Note: "Quick capture—expand in future session"

Readiness Criteria

A Book Concept Document is ready for validation when:

ElementReadiness Test
ReaderCan describe them as a specific person, not a category
TransformationClear before/after with emotional and practical dimensions
ThesisOne sentence, contrarian, defensible
Author AngleAt least one compelling credibility source
StakesUrgency is clear—reader feels cost of inaction
Key Concepts3-7 prioritized, each clearly supporting the thesis
EnemyNamed and specific
PromiseOne sentence that a reader would find compelling

Output

Use the template at assets/templates/book-concept-template.md for all Book Concept Documents.

The document is versioned (v1, v2, etc.) and includes:

  • All eight elements with current development status
  • Session log tracking progress
  • Open questions for future sessions
  • Readiness assessment for downstream skills

Structural Frameworks Reference

When discussing Key Concepts, it often helps to preview potential book structures. See references/nonfiction-frameworks.md for framework options to share with the user. This is for orientation only—structural decisions belong to book-architect.

Handoff to Downstream Skills

When the Book Concept Document is ready:

idea-validator: Will stress-test the thesis and key concepts against existing research → market-research: Will assess KDP viability, competition, and positioning → book-architect: Will use reader/transformation/key concepts to design the structure

Source

git clone https://github.com/robertguss/claude-code-toolkit/blob/main/skills/non-fiction-book-factory/book-ideation/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Book Ideation converts raw ideas into a structured nonfiction Book Concept Document through guided, multi-session development. It centers on eight reader-focused elements to ensure clarity, market relevance, and a solid thesis before moving to validation and book architecture.

How This Skill Works

Start from a session note: determine if the idea is new or ongoing, collect raw material, and iteratively develop the eight elements (Reader, Transformation, Core Thesis, Author Angle, Stakes, Key Concepts, and more). The output is a complete Book Concept Document suited for validation, market research, and downstream skills like idea-validator and book-architect.

When to Use It

  • You have a raw idea you want to refine into a book concept.
  • You’ve brainstormed material and need to articulate a clear thesis and reader transformation.
  • You’re preparing a book concept for validation or market research.
  • You want a structured concept to feed downstream skills like idea-validator, market-research, or book-architect.
  • You need to refine an existing partial concept into a complete eight-element concept.

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Share your raw idea, brainstorm document, or notes.
  2. Step 2: Identify and develop the eight elements (Reader, Transformation, Core Thesis, Author Angle, Stakes, Key Concepts, etc.).
  3. Step 3: Produce the Book Concept Document for validation, market research, and book architecture.

Best Practices

  • Define the reader profile beyond basic demographics to anchor the concept.
  • Center the transformation: specify where the reader starts (Point A) and ends (Point B).
  • Test the Core Thesis by imagining counterarguments and ensuring it can be stated in one sentence.
  • Establish an authentic Author Angle with credible experience, expertise, access, or perspective.
  • Keep the output focused on the eight elements and market relevance, not a full outline.

Example Use Cases

  • A tech founder refines a raw idea into a concept for 'From Startup to Scale: The Transformation Playbook' by detailing the reader's journey and core thesis.
  • A health writer reshapes 'Mindful Sleep' into a concept focused on behavior change and practical outcomes for readers.
  • A productivity author turns scattered notes into a thesis-driven concept about focus, action, and measurable results.
  • A finance author converts brainstorm notes into a market-validated concept for a book like 'Wealth by Habits'.
  • A leadership author evolves an existing partial concept into a complete eight-element Book Concept Document for validation and market fit.

Frequently Asked Questions

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