Wednesday, April 4, 2007

I have added 50 books a year to my reading intake ... without creating any extra time to read

Whenever I got together with friends and business colleagues they were often discussing the latest book or talking about a particular author they enjoyed. There were so many titles and authors that I wanted to learn from. I need to somehow find more time to read. We all lead busy lives yet somehow my friends and colleagues seem to manage it. I did not understand how they found the time to read. At a late afternoon coffee get together another friend was sharing how he had just finished a certain book. I blurted out in my frustration "How on earth do you find the time to read so much" It was a strange reaction. My friends looked at me, looked at each other and smiled. One of them said "These are Audio Books we're talking about. We don't 'read' per say, we listen, to an Audio Book" The penny dropped, I do remember one of them saying something about downloading. I missed the context of what was said that day and didn't pay much attention to it. They had been talking about listening to an Audio Book, downloadable Audio Books even. All this time they had assumed I had known they were talking about this new website they had found www.audioitnow.com where you could download an audio book instantly. One of my friends then pulled out her MP3 player. She then played an audio book for me to listen to. She explained that this was how she had 'read' over one audio book per week. She listened to an audio book while she prepared for work in the morning, while she did her exercises each day, while she commuted to and from work and any free time she had on her hands that didn't involve using her mind. I was surprised, to say the least, that I could have been doing the same thing in my spare time, instead of just commuting to and from work doing nothing. You see, my work is one that requires a lot of my time involvement. I have to leave home quite early, spend over an hour on the road because of the constant heavy traffic and when I get to work, I work all day until break time and closing time. From what this friend of mine explained to me, I knew I had to give audio books a try. I did and was very impressed. Now, I can proudly say I also benefit from the reading of up to 50 books each year. Still don't think it's possible? Fine, let's do the math: For an audio book that takes 4 hours, you can have it read to you in just two days - 1 hour each day while preparing for work in the morning and 1 hour each day while commuting to and from work. That's 4 hours in 2 days. So, if it takes you 2 days to have one audio book read to you, that will be 365 days in a year divided by 2. That will equal about 133 books each year! That's over double the original 50 audio books we were targeting, right? Audio books are indeed the secret formula that many people use to get the value from the best books they want to read. With an audio book, you can forget the frustration you always had whenever you force yourself to read any book. For the bookworms back in college that want to continue reading but can't afford the time anymore, you now have a solution in audio books. Whether you want to use your PC, MP3 player, CD or even a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant), it is now possible and within your reach for peanuts


About the Author

The Author is Peter B Butler. CEO of the Downloadable Audio Books at Audio It Now Network at www.audioitnow.com