
Joel Omeike wanted to write a book, he attended BWC and wrote Fire Your HR.
Helen Majemite wanted to write a book, she attended BWC and wrote A Letter to All Women
Ejine Nzeribe, Phil Maduagwu, Kuby Uyanga, Binta Ibrahim, Florence Abenemi, Eric Ighalo, Christy Adeyemo, Charles Akoroda, all wanted a book to their name, and they attended BWC.
Yet, I’ve spent years watching brilliant people fail at the one thing they wanted most: writing their book.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: More than 80% of aspiring authors never write a word.
Joseph Epstein, author and book critic, documented this. Only 15% who want to write a book actually begin drafting. Of those who start? 97% never finish their manuscripts.
The culprits:
- Imposter syndrome
- Self-doubt
- Underestimating the difficulty
Steven Pressfield calls this “resistance.” I call it predictable.
Here’s what baffles me:
To become a brain surgeon, you study under professors for years.
To practice accountancy, you earn a BSc after 4 years of training.
To qualify as a nurse, you attend nursing school for two years just to learn injections.
So why do people think they can become authors without training on how to write?
The real reason hundreds fail isn’t lack of ideas. It’s believing you can just wake up and write without education on the craft.
What would change if you stopped winging it and started learning the craft intentionally?
Writing a good book is not guesswork. It is a meta-skill.
That is why I created Book Writing Clinic:
to help aspiring authors move from “I have a book inside me” to “I wrote a book worth reading.”
I created BWC to bridge the knowing-doing gap. I created BWC that has trained 450+ to show you how to move from talking about your book to actually becoming an author with something worth reading.
Hard work without structure is wasted effort.
Ambition without training is fantasy.
Ideas without execution mean nothing.
I help leaders now because I’ve seen what preparation delivers.
Your expertise, your insights, your story deserve to be in print, not trapped in scattered notes.
If you’ve ever started and stopped writing, you know exactly what I’m talking about.
Age is no barrier. Benji Ofungwu wrote REMINISCENCES aged 70 plus after building his business empire, ISN Medical.
Work is no barrier. I wrote my first two books, Credit Appraisal & Procedure Handbook and Bridges to the Customer’s Heart while working full time.
More importantly, Dr. Eniayewun Ademuyiwa Benjamin wrote TRANSFORMING while a Permanent Secretary overseeing more than 30 secondary hospitals in Lagos State.

What would change if you stopped winging it and started learning the craft intentionally?
If you’re interested in starting right now, here’s the full BWC, you can start learning right now.
The excuses people like you reading this have not to write a book are just that, excuses. Maybe you have one of these excuses:
- “I don’t have time.”
- “I’m not a writer.”
- “My story isn’t special.”
- “I’m still living my story.”
- “People may judge me.”
- “I don’t know where to start.”
- “I fear it won’t be perfect.”
- “I don’t want to reveal too much.”
- “Books don’t make money.”
- “Maybe next year.”
The last excuse is particularly dangerous: maybe there will be no next year. Make hay while the sun shines.
If you’re interested in starting right now, here’s the full Book Writing Clinic.
Not sure you’re ready to start just yet and require a little more guidance before you jump at it? Lets chat.