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Atticus Careers: The Complete 2026 Walkthrough for Coaches

Atticus Careers: The Complete 2026 Walkthrough for Coaches

Rachel Hines spent 11 years building a six-figure executive coaching practice without a single piece of published content to her name. In late 2024, a client recommended she write a book to attract higher-paying engagements. She agreed, hired a formatter, and got quoted $2,800 with a two-month wait. She found Atticus the same afternoon, paid $147, and had her first book on Amazon within six weeks.

That book now generates six to eight qualified discovery calls every month from readers who found her on Amazon. The author career Rachel built on top of her coaching practice started with a single $147 tool purchase.

If you are searching for "Atticus careers," you are most likely asking one of two things: are there job openings at the Atticus company, or can Atticus the book writing software help you build a sustainable author career as a coach? This guide answers the second question in full. For coaches, building an author career is one of the most practical moves available in 2026. A book creates search visibility you cannot replicate through any other channel, positions you above competitors who have only social profiles, and generates qualified leads while you sleep.

Atticus is the production tool that makes that career achievable without outsourcing your interior layout or buying expensive design software. This walkthrough covers every layer of the platform, the exact workflow coaches should follow, the pricing math, and the specific places where Atticus does not cover your needs and what to use instead.

What an Atticus-Powered Author Career Looks Like for Coaches

An author career for a coach is not a sideline project. It is a deliberately constructed body of published work that compounds over time. Each book you publish becomes a permanent asset on Amazon, Google, and every book retailer that carries your title. A reader who finds your book through a search query on KDP arrives already pre-sold on your methodology. They have read your framework, seen your evidence, and self-selected as someone who resonates with your approach. That is a fundamentally different prospect than someone who clicked a Facebook ad.

The typical Atticus-powered author career for a coach runs through three phases.

In the first phase, you publish your authority book. This is the foundational title that defines your niche, names your framework, and positions you as the go-to voice in your corner of the coaching market. For a leadership coach, it might be a 35,000-word book on executive presence. For a sales coach, it might be a 28,000-word guide to closing high-ticket clients. The goal is not a bestseller list; the goal is a permanent, searchable asset that attracts the specific clients you want.

In the second phase, you build adjacent titles. Once the first book is live and generating traction, you identify adjacent questions your ideal client is asking and fill those gaps with shorter, more targeted books. A health coach might follow a 40,000-word flagship book with a 15,000-word guide on habit stacking, and then a 20,000-word workbook on sleep optimization. Each title creates a new entry point for discovery.

In the third phase, you own the search category. A coach with four or five books on a tight niche dominates the Amazon KDP search results for every major keyword in that niche. Prospects who find one book and like it search the author name and find the others. The compound effect of a catalog is difficult to replicate through any other marketing channel.

Atticus is the production infrastructure for all three phases. It does not write the books. It does not generate the strategy. What it does is remove the production barrier between having a finished manuscript and having a professional book available for sale.

Inside Atticus: The Four Layers Coaches Actually UseAtticus is built around four distinct capability layers. Understanding each layer prevents the common mistake of buying the tool expecting it to cover everything, then abandoning it when a specific gap appears.

The Writing Editor

Atticus includes a full manuscript editor that organizes your work in a chapter-by-chapter binder view, similar in structure to Scrivener's sidebar. Each chapter, section, or scene lives in its own card. You can drag and drop cards to reorder chapters, write in a distraction-free full-screen mode, and set daily word count goals with a visual progress tracker.

The writing editor does not include AI writing assistance. It is a blank canvas for your words. If you need help getting from zero to a first draft, if you struggle to translate your verbal coaching methodology into written chapters, or if you have never written long-form content before, Atticus's writing environment alone will not solve that problem. That gap is covered in the section on where Atticus falls short.

What the editor does well is reduce cognitive load. Instead of managing one enormous document, you manage a visual stack of chapters. The chapter-level word count and the project-level progress bar keep your goal visible during every writing session. For coaches with busy schedules who write in 30-minute blocks, that structure is meaningfully different from staring at a blank Word document.

The Theme and Formatting Engine

This is where Atticus earns its price. The formatting engine provides 17 built-in themes with over 1,200 unique styling combinations. Each theme controls the font face and size for body text, chapter titles, and subheadings, the chapter opener styling (plain, ornamental, or image-based), running headers and footers, page margins and gutter widths for print, and ornamental section breaks between paragraphs.

Beyond the pre-built themes, Atticus includes a custom theme builder where you can define your own combination of fonts, spacing, and decorative elements and save it as a reusable template. For coaches building a series of books with consistent visual branding, creating a theme once and applying it to every subsequent title eliminates repetitive formatting work.

Two features matter especially for coaching nonfiction. First, Atticus supports callout boxes, which are styled sidebar blocks that work well for reflection prompts, exercises, action steps, and key frameworks. Second, it handles both print and ebook formatting in a single workflow. You format once, and Atticus generates a print-ready PDF and an ePub file from the same source. There is no need to manage two separate layout files.

Multi-Platform Export

Atticus exports to three formats: ePub for ebook distribution across Amazon KDP, IngramSpark, Draft2Digital, Kobo, and Barnes and Noble Press; PDF for print-on-demand via KDP and IngramSpark; and DOCX for sharing with copyeditors or importing into other tools.

The ePub output is clean and passes KDP's automated quality check without manual intervention for most standard coaching nonfiction titles. The PDF output includes proper bleed settings, trim size options (6x9, 5.5x8.5, 5x8, and several others), and embedded fonts, which are all requirements for print-on-demand manufacturing.

For a coach who wants their book available in ebook, paperback, and hardcover, all three export paths come from a single Atticus project file.

Cloud Storage and Cross-Device Access

Unlike Vellum (Mac only) and traditional Scrivener (desktop application), Atticus is a Progressive Web App that runs in your browser. It works on Windows, macOS, Linux, and Chromebook. Your manuscripts live in the cloud and sync across every device you use.This matters for coaches who move between a desktop at their home office and a laptop on the road. You do not deal with file sync conflicts or missing project files when switching machines. Atticus also functions in a limited offline mode for writing, with full formatting and preview features restored when you reconnect.

The Author-Career Writing Workflow in Atticus

The standard workflow for a coach building a book in Atticus runs through six stages. These are not rigidly sequential. Most coaches cycle between stages, especially between drafting and structural revision. But the sequence reflects how the software is designed to be used.

Stage One: Manuscript Setup

Create a new Atticus project. Enter your working title, author name, and target word count. For a coaching book aimed at a professional audience, a target of 25,000 to 45,000 words is appropriate. It is long enough to be substantive and short enough to be read in a weekend.

Set a daily word count goal and a project deadline. Atticus tracks your writing streak and shows your daily progress toward the deadline you enter. Build your chapter structure in the binder. Create one card per chapter and write a 50-word summary inside each card describing what that chapter covers. This step forces you to pre-think the argument before writing the prose, and it gives you a specific starting point for each writing session.

Complete your book's keyword research before writing. The primary keyword and subtitle you choose for your Amazon KDP title metadata should reflect what your ideal reader actually searches. Knowing that phrase in advance shapes how you title your chapters and frame your core concepts.

Stage Two: First Draft

Write chapter by chapter, using the full-screen focus mode when you need to concentrate and the split preview mode when you want to see how your prose will look formatted.

Keep a running "stories" card in your binder where you drop client examples and case illustrations as they occur to you during writing. You will pull from this card when a chapter needs a concrete example.

Use Atticus's note card feature to store statistics, research findings, and source URLs alongside the chapters they support. This makes the verification pass before final export faster and more organized.

Do not edit heavily during the first draft. The first draft's job is to exist, not to be polished. Set a daily word count goal of 500 to 750 words and protect one 30- to 45-minute writing block each morning. At 600 words per day, the first draft of a 30,000-word book takes 50 days.

Stage Three: Structural Revision

Once the first draft is complete, read it from beginning to end without editing. Note where the energy drops, where chapters are thin, and where arguments are missing. Do not fix these issues during the read-through. Just flag them.

Then use the binder view to evaluate your chapter structure. Are the chapters in the right order? Is there a chapter that should be split into two? Is there a chapter that should be absorbed into an adjacent one? Drag-and-drop reordering in Atticus is faster than doing this kind of structural revision in a word processor.

Add your front matter (title page, copyright page, table of contents, foreword if applicable, introduction) and back matter (about the author page, bibliography, and a call-to-action page directing readers to your coaching services) using Atticus's dedicated front/back matter sections.

Stage Four: Theme and Formatting

Apply a theme. For nonfiction coaching books targeting a professional business audience, clean themes with strong heading hierarchy and readable body fonts work better than decorative themes designed for fiction. Review the live preview at each formatting step to see how the book will look on a Kindle, an iPhone screen, and a standard print paperback before committing to any setting.Add callout boxes around your exercises, reflection prompts, and framework summaries. Name the callout box type consistently: use the same label ("Reflection Prompt," "Action Step," or whichever label fits your methodology) across every chapter. Consistency trains readers to recognize and engage with those elements.

Set your trim size (6x9 for most professional coaching nonfiction), verify your gutter margins (at least 0.625 inches for a 200-plus-page book), and confirm that your running headers show the book title on left pages and the chapter title on right pages. Atticus handles this automatically with most themes.

Stage Five: Export and Upload

Export the ePub and open it in your Kindle app or a free ebook reader like Calibre to verify it renders correctly before uploading to KDP. Export the PDF and inspect it at 100 percent zoom to verify that margins, headers, and page numbers are correct.

Upload both files to Amazon KDP. Complete the title metadata: title, subtitle, author name, seven backend keywords, description, and two browse categories. Price the ebook at $9.99 to access KDP's 70 percent royalty tier. Price the paperback based on your page count and the KDP manufacturing cost calculator, adding a margin that makes the book profitable while remaining competitive for its category.

Order a physical proof copy before approving wide distribution. Verify that the print quality, binding, and physical dimensions are correct. Once approved, the title goes live within 24 to 72 hours.

Stage Six: Iterating for Revision

When the book needs updating, which it will approximately once per year as statistics age and new examples become relevant, open the Atticus project, make the edits in the writing editor, and re-export. There is no version management complexity. The cloud file is the single source of truth, and re-exporting takes the same time as the original export.

Coaches who commit to an annual revision cycle keep their books current, maintain their keyword rankings on KDP, and signal to readers that the content is actively maintained.

Formatting Your Coaching Book: The Atticus Walkthrough

Formatting is where coaches most often make expensive mistakes or stall indefinitely. This section walks through the specific decisions that matter most for coaching nonfiction.

Choosing Your Trim Size

For a coaching book targeting a business professional audience, the 6x9 inch trim size is the industry standard. It reads like a business book from a traditional publisher and positions your title alongside established titles in your category. For KDP paperback, a 200-page 6x9 book can be priced at $16 to $22 USD and still generate meaningful royalties after print costs.

The 5.5x8.5 trim size is a reasonable alternative for slightly shorter books or when you want a format that feels more like a personal handbook. Avoid 8.5x11 for coaching books aimed at authority positioning. That dimension reads like a workbook or course material, which is a different product from a leadership book.

Set your trim size in Atticus before finalizing your theme, because the margin and gutter settings in each theme are calibrated to trim size.

Typography

Body text set at 11 to 11.5 points in a humanist serif font reads well for business nonfiction in print. Atticus includes several professional font options in its theme builder. Chapter titles at 24 to 28 points create clear visual hierarchy, and a secondary heading level at 16 to 18 points handles the subheadings within chapters.

Avoid overusing bold text. Reserve it for the introduction of a named framework term, a critical warning, or a pivotal distinction. When bold appears too frequently, it loses its ability to signal importance.

Callout Boxes for Exercises and FrameworksCoaching books typically include exercises, reflection prompts, or action items at the end of each chapter or within the body of chapters. Use Atticus's callout box feature to visually separate these from body prose. A bordered box with a slightly different background communicates "stop and do this" more clearly than a paragraph break.

Place your named framework components inside callout boxes when you introduce them for the first time. If your methodology has a five-step model, present the five steps in a styled callout box. Readers who skim (which most readers do on their first pass) will see the callout boxes and understand the structure of your argument even before reading the prose in detail.

Running Headers and Footers

Professional nonfiction convention places the book title in the running header on left (verso) pages and the chapter title in the running header on right (recto) pages. Atticus follows this convention automatically with most themes.

Page numbers go in the footer, centered or outside-aligned. Front matter uses lowercase Roman numerals. Body text starts at page 1. Atticus handles this pagination logic without manual intervention.

Front and Back Matter for Coaches

The back matter of a coaching book is a business asset, not an afterthought. Your "About the Author" page should include your coaching practice's website and a specific call to action: "If you are ready to apply these frameworks to your specific situation, visit [your website] to book a discovery conversation." Your copyright page should include the year, your name, and a note about permissions. A brief bibliography or recommended reading section adds credibility and signals thorough research.

Pricing, ROI, and What $147 Buys a Coaching Career

The financial math for Atticus is unusually straightforward for a software purchase.

The One-Time Price in Context

Atticus costs $147 as a one-time payment. The comparison set for coaching book formatting tools:

  • Vellum: $249.99 for ebooks only, or $399.99 for ebooks and print, Mac only
  • Adobe InDesign: $22.99 per month, which is $275.88 per year with a steep learning curve and no author-specific formatting features
  • Scrivener: $59.99 as a writing tool, but with no professional export formatting built in
  • Professional book formatter: $500 to $2,500 per book, with no file ownership on your side

For a coach publishing one book per year over five years, Atticus costs $29.40 per book. Adobe InDesign subscription costs $1,379.40 over the same period. The one-time payment model also removes the "is this worth renewing?" decision that subscription tools force annually.

The Career ROI Calculation

The business case for a coaching book is not primarily the book royalties. A coaching book that sells 500 copies at $17 USD on KDP generates royalties in the range of $1,500 to $2,000 at standard KDP royalty rates. That covers the Atticus purchase, a quality cover design, and a copyedit pass. Financially neutral at worst.

The real return comes from the consulting and coaching engagements the book generates. A coach with a $500 per session rate who books three additional discovery calls per month from readers who found them through the book is generating $18,000 per year in additional revenue from a single published asset. Over five years, a book that performs at that level returns more than $90,000 from a $147 production tool investment.

This math depends on the book performing: good cover design, correct KDP keyword targeting, a well-crafted description, and a title that matches what the ideal client searches. Atticus handles the interior production. The surrounding pieces require separate attention.

The Multi-Book Multiplier

The one-time payment covers unlimited books. A coach who publishes four titles over five years using Atticus pays $36.75 per book in production tool costs. The fourth book costs the same as the first in Atticus fees: zero additional dollars.A catalog of four titles on a tight niche creates an author presence that is difficult to replicate through social content or advertising. Prospects who discover one title and find three others by the same author are far more likely to book a call than prospects encountering you for the first time through an ad.

The WRITE Career Method: Five Stages of an Atticus-Powered Author Career

Coaches who build sustainable author careers move through a predictable sequence of stages. The WRITE Career Method maps those stages to concrete actions and Atticus workflows.

W: Write Your Authority Manuscript. The first stage is producing a complete, publication-ready manuscript. For most coaches, finishing is the hardest step. Atticus's goal tracking, chapter structure, and daily word count streak address the completion problem directly. Set a daily target of 500 to 600 words, protect 30 minutes before your coaching schedule starts, and the manuscript is done in 60 to 90 days.

R: Refine and Format. Once the draft is complete and has been through a structural revision pass and a copyedit, apply an Atticus theme and spend two to three focused days formatting. Choose your trim size, set your typography, add callout boxes around exercises, finalize front and back matter, and review the live preview. Budget one day for formatting decisions and one day for reviewing chapter by chapter.

I: Issue Across Platforms. Export your ePub and PDF and upload to KDP, IngramSpark, and at minimum one additional retailer. Issuing across platforms increases discovery and reduces dependence on a single distribution channel. Atticus's clean export files work across all major distributors without modification.

T: Track and Iterate. Review your KDP sales data monthly. Track which search terms bring readers to your book page, note which chapters readers mention in reviews, and identify gaps that a revision or a second book could address. The data from your first book shapes the strategy for your second.

E: Expand Your Catalog. The second book is faster than the first. Your theme is saved in Atticus. Your workflow is established. The variable is only the manuscript. Coaches who publish one book per year or one book every 18 months build a catalog that compounds in search visibility and authority over time.

Where Atticus Falls Short (and What to Use Instead)

Atticus covers the formatting and export phase of the coaching book production workflow cleanly. It does not cover everything.

No AI Writing Assistance

Atticus does not write with you. It will not suggest next sentences, help you work through a stuck chapter, or generate a first draft from your notes. This is the primary gap for coaches who come from a spoken-word background. If you can run a three-hour workshop on your methodology but freeze when asked to write it down, Atticus will not solve that problem.

Tools built for the coach-to-author transition, such as Built&Written, address this gap directly. Built&Written's AI-assisted writing workflow is designed for coaches who need help moving from outline to draft, with an AI collaborator that understands the structure of a coaching book and the specific challenges of translating frameworks into prose. The combination of Built&Written for the drafting phase and Atticus for the formatting and export phase is a practical stack for coaches who need support in both areas. You can read more about that approach in the coach's guide to AI book writing and publishing.

No Cover Design

Atticus formats the interior of your book. The cover design is entirely separate. A polished cover is not optional for a coaching book that competes on Amazon. Cover design signals whether your book belongs among professional titles or among self-published work that readers dismiss on sight.Budget $200 to $500 for a professional cover designer with experience in business nonfiction. Brief them on your title, your target reader, and the visual style of the top-selling titles in your category. A well-designed cover on top of an Atticus-formatted interior produces a final product that reads as credibly as a traditionally published book. See business book cover design for a full breakdown of what makes a cover work.

No Marketing or Distribution Features

Atticus produces files. It does not submit them to distributors, run Amazon advertising campaigns, manage review outreach, or track keyword rankings on KDP over time. You will need separate tools for keyword research (Publisher Rocket is the standard for KDP keyword analysis), post-launch price promotion, and building your reader list.

For coaches who want to understand the full publishing workflow before investing in Atticus, the self-publishing guide for coaches covers the end-to-end process from manuscript to launch.

Limited Collaboration Features

If you are co-authoring a book with a business partner or need a copyeditor to work directly inside your manuscript, Atticus's collaboration features are limited compared to Google Docs. The practical workaround is to export a DOCX after your first draft, send it for editing with tracked changes, then import the final version back into Atticus for formatting. It adds one step but works reliably.

Not Designed for Heavily Interactive Workbooks

Some coaches publish workbooks with form fields, hyperlinked sections, and interactive exercises that function more like a PDF course than a narrative book. Atticus is not optimized for that format. If your primary deliverable is a fill-in workbook rather than a narrative coaching book, InDesign or a dedicated course-material layout tool is a better fit for that specific product.

Your 90-Day Atticus Career Launch Plan

This 90-day plan takes a coach from zero to a published book using Atticus as the production hub. It assumes you have a topic, a target audience, and a rough chapter structure. It does not assume you have written a word.

Days 1 to 10: Setup and Structure

Purchase Atticus at the one-time price and install the Progressive Web App on your primary device. Create your first project with a working title, a target word count (25,000 words if you are unsure), and a 90-day deadline.

Build your binder structure. Create one card per chapter and write a 50-word summary inside each card. Aim for 8 to 12 chapters for a standard coaching book. This pre-writing step is the single most effective thing you can do to protect your writing momentum, because it eliminates the daily question of "what do I write today?" Coaches who skip this step spend the first 15 minutes of every writing session deciding what to write instead of writing it.

Complete your KDP keyword research. Finalize your title, subtitle, and seven backend keywords before writing. Knowing your primary keyword shapes how you frame your central argument and title your chapters.

Days 11 to 55: First Draft

Write daily at 500 to 600 words per session. Use each chapter's 50-word summary as your daily writing prompt. Do not edit as you go. A 30,000-word first draft at 600 words per day takes 50 writing days.

If you get stuck on a chapter for more than two consecutive sessions, skip to the next chapter and return later. Write a brief placeholder of key points for the stuck chapter so you can re-engage with it when the ideas are clearer.

Keep the "stories" card updated as client examples and case illustrations come to you. Pulling concrete examples from a pre-built card is faster than trying to recall them during editing.

Days 56 to 70: Editing and RevisionRead your complete first draft in one or two sittings. Note structural issues without fixing them during the read-through. Then reorder chapters if needed, expand thin sections, and add the client examples you queued in the stories card.

Export a DOCX on Day 65 and send it to a copyeditor. Budget 7 to 10 days for a copyedit of a 30,000-word manuscript. While the copyeditor works, brief your cover designer.

Days 71 to 80: Formatting Sprint

Import the copyedited DOCX back into Atticus. Apply your theme, set your trim size, add callout boxes to your exercises and framework sections, and finalize front and back matter. Review the chapter-by-chapter layout in the live preview.

Export the ePub and verify it renders correctly in your Kindle app. Export the PDF and inspect it at full zoom. This formatting sprint should take four to six hours for a clean, well-structured manuscript.

Days 81 to 90: Upload, Review, and Launch

Upload both files to Amazon KDP. Complete all title metadata: title, subtitle, description (at least 200 words, written as a sales page rather than a summary), categories, and backend keywords. Set your paperback price based on the KDP print cost calculator. Publish the ebook at $9.99.

Order a physical proof copy. Verify print quality. Approve for wide distribution. The title goes live within 24 to 72 hours.

Send a launch announcement to your existing client list and any professional networks where your ideal reader participates. Request five reviews from colleagues or past clients who reviewed the manuscript before launch. Those initial reviews are the most important factor in early Amazon search ranking for a new title. Without reviews, even a well-formatted, well-titled book stays invisible in KDP search results for the first weeks after publication.

By Day 90, your author career has started. The book is a permanent asset. Every day it sits on Amazon, it is discoverable by someone searching for exactly what you teach.


Key Takeaway: The biggest barrier to building a coaching book career is not writing ability, subject expertise, or time. It is production friction: the gap between a finished manuscript and a professional book that looks credible on a retailer page. Atticus removes that friction for $147. It does not write the book for you, but it removes every technical obstacle between a completed draft and a title live on Amazon. For coaches who have been delaying publication because they do not know how to format a book professionally, Atticus is the specific answer to that specific problem.


Answer Block: What Is Atticus and How Does It Support a Coaching Career?

Atticus is a $147 one-time-purchase book writing and formatting tool built for indie authors. For coaches, it handles the formatting and export phase of the book production workflow, producing print-ready PDF and distribution-ready ePub files from a single manuscript. It supports unlimited books across unlimited pen names with no additional fees. The author career case for coaches is straightforward: a professionally formatted book on Amazon attracts clients who are pre-sold on your methodology, generates qualified discovery calls, and compounds in value every year it remains live and current.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Atticus suitable for coaches who have never published a book?

Yes. Atticus is designed for indie authors without professional layout experience. The theme system handles typography decisions that stop first-time authors, and the one-time pricing removes subscription risk. If you complete a manuscript and later decide to hire a professional formatter instead, your DOCX export is ready for any formatter to work with.

**Does Atticus work on Windows, or is it Mac-only like Vellum?**Atticus works on Windows, macOS, Linux, and Chromebook. It is a Progressive Web App that runs in your browser rather than as a desktop installation. Vellum requires macOS. For coaches working on Windows, Atticus is the natural alternative.

How long does formatting a coaching book in Atticus take once the manuscript is done?

For a coach with a cleanly structured manuscript, formatting in Atticus typically takes four to eight hours for a first book. That includes theme selection, applying styles, adding callout boxes, completing front and back matter, and exporting both ePub and print PDF. On repeat books using a saved theme, the formatting time drops to two to three hours.

What is the difference between Atticus and Built&Written for coaches?

Atticus handles the formatting and export phase of book production. Built&Written handles the AI-assisted writing and drafting phase. They address different stages: BW helps you get to a complete manuscript, and Atticus helps you get from manuscript to a published book. Many coaches use both in sequence. For more on how to think about the AI writing tools available to coaches, see the best AI book writing tools for coaches.

Does Atticus offer a free trial?

Atticus offers a 30-day money-back guarantee rather than a free trial. You pay $147, use the software, and can request a full refund within 30 days if it does not work for your needs. For most coaches, this functions as a risk-free evaluation period.

Can I use Atticus for multiple books without paying again?

Yes. The $147 covers unlimited books under any number of pen names. A coach who publishes five titles over five years pays $29.40 per book in Atticus costs.

What formats does Atticus export?

Atticus exports to ePub for ebook distribution (Amazon KDP, IngramSpark, Draft2Digital, Kobo, Barnes and Noble Press), PDF for print-on-demand (KDP paperback, IngramSpark hardcover), and DOCX for sharing with editors or importing into other tools.

Does Atticus handle both print and ebook formatting in one workflow?

Yes. You build your manuscript once in Atticus and export separate ePub and PDF files from the same source. You do not manage two separate layout files for print and digital editions. For a detailed breakdown of what to look for in book formatting tools alongside Atticus, see best book formatting tools for coaches.


Sources

  • Atticus official product page: atticus.io
  • Kindlepreneur Atticus review: kindlepreneur.com/atticus-review
  • Self-Publishing School Atticus overview: selfpublishing.com/atticus-review
  • Reedsy Atticus review: reedsy.com/studio/resources/atticus-review
  • Amazon KDP royalty and pricing information: kdp.amazon.com

Sources & References

  1. https://www.atticus.io/
  2. https://kindlepreneur.com/atticus-review/
  3. https://selfpublishing.com/atticus-review/
  4. https://reedsy.com/studio/resources/atticus-review
  5. https://kdp.amazon.com

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