Hi John. There are many things you could do with this. Firstly though, I would always advise against simply producing a product without actually knowing whether or not there is a market for it. Have you done any keyword research to see if anybody is actually looking for the information that you wish to sell? Do you know what keywords you are targeting? How many people a day search on them? Assuming that you are standing in the midst of a raging torrent of eager buyers, then a basic process for selling your information would be to set up a small website (with a blog would be good), set up a squeeze page, get traffic, convert traffic (good sales copy), test. One ebook is not a business though. You need to start thinking how you can get potential customers into a sales funnel and so you need to develop some back end products which have a higher perceived value than a simple ebook. For example, you could record video training, you could record audio interviews with other experts in your field (or indeed be interviewed yourself). Then you need to start building a list. Give the ebook away free to get potential customer's email addresses. Market yours and other people's products that you recommend to that list.

One tip I have for you - never call anything you sell an ebook! Ebooks are found littered all around the Web these days and have very low perceived value. Call it a "Special Report", "manifesto", "Missing Chapter", "system" or something like that.... in my experience that works much better.

Being lazy, I hardly ever try to sell my own ebooks. I find other people who sell the same type of information and sell mine to them with PLR rights (If you don't know what PLR is, you can google it). Basically, that means that the purchaser can edit your material and put their own name on it. They then sell that to their customers. For example, say you know lots about sales techniques, you could sell 500 copies to 500 marketers who are in the Sales niche - you have to limit PLR sales otherwise people won't buy. Because you are giving other people the right to use the material as their own, you generally charge a higher price than if you were just selling the ebook normally. There are a couple of interesting things with this method - 1. You can build a list of marketers who are interested in buying PLR on your topic 2. You can then write new material and market that to them too 3. You have bona fide scarcity built into this model - ie only 500 copies available or whatever. You don't have to limit yourself to writing either, you could sell them videos, tools, systems, audios etc etc. If you build a nice list, you could even think about getting some nice recurring income by offering a membership site where you produce x amount of new articles per month. You would be surprised what people will pay for PLR as savvy marketers know that they are paying for somebody else's research and knowledge when they buy it. But it has to be good quality and has to have a good keyword density.