Posts Tagged ‘book title’

12 Tips for Designing A Bestselling Book Cover

July 2nd, 2009

Your book cover is an essential marketing piece.  Most readers decide to buy a book based on the cover and the table of contents.  When it comes to creating the design of your book cover, there are numerous do-it-yourself software programs available.  They consist of templates, which allow you to drop in an image and some sales copy and, voila, you have a book cover.  Well, not quite.

CONSIDER HIRING A PROFESSIONAL DESIGNER
Your cover is such an important element for the overall success of your book, unless you have a degree in graphic design from a prestigious art school, I don’t recommend designing your own book cover.  Before hiring an artist, review their portfolio and make sure you understand everything that is included with their fee (will they work with your interior designer, do they provide several mock-ups to select from, how many revisions are included?)  Expect to pay between $1,000-$4,000 for a professionally designed cover.  The cost is well worth the investment.  See the difference between using an unqualified artist and a professional book-cover designer on the “Before and After” page at George Foster’s website: http://www.fostercovers.com/before_after

Here are 12 Tips to help you create the best book cover possible:

THE FRONT COVER

1. KNOW WHAT YOUR AUDIENCE EXPECTS OF YOUR BOOK COVER
Book covers for specific genres have certain similar qualities.  Historical books use photographs on the cover.  Medical books usually have a white background and modern lettering.  Study other books in your category to get a feel for their design traits.

2. ATTRACT READERS WITH EMOTION
The goal of the front cover is to grab a potential reader’s attention and make him want to learn more by reading the back copy and the table of contents.  What attracts a reader to the cover is an emotional feeling they get from the visual elements (including the color, fonts, and images) and the title.  The cover should be minimal, not chaotic, and evoke an emotional response from the reader.  When the reader views your book cover do they feel comforted, peaceful, successful, motivated, inspired, hungry, secure, adventurous, interested, curious, concerned, empowered, intrigued?

3. MAKE THE FRONT COVER EASY TO READ
The front cover must stand out and be easy to read (think about what it will look like as a thumbnail on your website or Amazon.com).  Place the title near the top of the cover on a clean background (NEVER place your title over a busy background).  Don’t clutter the cover with several illustrations.  Use one strong image that relates to the book’s content.  Do not use the word “by” in front of the author’s name.

4. USE COLOR TO CONVEY THE RIGHT MESSAGE
Color is a powerful tool.  Choose your background color carefully to convey the right message.  White conveys credibility, purity, and health.  Red is warm, sexy, and exciting, and represents power, vitality, and action.  Men relate blue to dependability, trustworthiness, and intelligence, while women often view it as sad and depressing.  Black is authoritative, romantic, and mysterious.  Yellow is joyous and energetic, often associated with home and happiness.  Green conveys growth, prosperity, nature and leisure.

5. USE FONTS TO CONVEY THE INTENDED FEELING
The font you select for your title, subtitle and author name has a dramatic effect on the feeling of the book.  Check out www.my-fonts.com or www.store.adobe.com/type where you can type in your book’s title and see how it ‘feels’ with the different fonts.

THE SPINE

6. USE A STACKED TITLE ON THE SPINE
When your book is displayed in a bookstore, the first thing a potential reader will see is the book’s spine.  Ensure it is attractive and legible by stacking the characters of the book title on the spine.

THE BACK COVER

7. USE BENEFITS AND PROMISES TO SELL THE BOOK
You’ve attracted a potential reader with your cover design, now you need to hook them with compelling benefits by telling the reader what’s in it for them if they buy the book.  Will they become the best trout fisher they can be, learn how to navigate New York on $50 a day, be inspired and motivated by a memoirist’s triumphant story, or discover how the founding fathers created the Declaration of Independence?  Write a concise, brief (two to four sentences) statement describing the content of the book followed by several benefit bullet points and end with a ‘call to action’ that tells the potential reader why they need to buy the book.  The back cover of Dara Mark’s book Inside Story concludes with: “It is a must-have book for any serious screenwriter, playwright, or novelist” – wow, if you identify yourself as any one of those, you’re going to want to purchase the book!

8. CREATE AN ARRESTING HEADLINE
Write a powerful headline addressed to the reader that helps him or her relate to, and identify with, the content.  The back cover headline for Inside Story is: “What IS the secret to writing a great screenplay?”  Most potential readers who pick up this book are searching for the answer to that question.  The headline quickly and efficiently lets the reader know the answer is contained in the contents of the book.

9. USE ENDORSEMENTS AND QUOTES
Testimonials, endorsements and quotes are a phenomenal selling tool.  If someone else thinks a book is good, then it must have merit.  The back cover testimonial for Inside Story reads: “Destined to become the gold standard for books on screenwriting!”  That’s an impressive quote.

10. SHOW YOU ARE THE ULTIMATE EXPERT TO AUTHOR THIS BOOK
At the very bottom of the back cover (sometimes placed directly across from the ISBN), include a brief, one to two sentence only, biography highlighting why you are qualified to write this book and help the reader.  This is not a full biography – you will include that in the ‘About the Author’ section inside the book.  The goal here is to let the potential reader know you are an expert.

11. LIST THE BOOK CATEGORY
By listing your book’s category/subcategory (such as “true crime/current events” or “self-help/psychology”) on the upper left-hand corner of the back cover, your book will be properly categorized on the bookstore shelf (or virtual shelf, in the case of online booksellers).

12. INSERT AN ISBN & BAR CODE
You need an ISBN and Bar Code for your book to be sold through booksellers such as Amazon and Barnes and Noble.  You can purchase an ISBN at www.isbn.org and acquire a Bar Code from www.bowkerbarcode.com/barcode (you need to obtain your ISBN prior to getting your bar code.)

You, Too, Can Write A Bestselling Title

June 16th, 2009

The right title can make your book a success. Especially for the self-help and how-to genre, you need a title that readers can’t resist. The book’s title is the hook that grabs a reader’s attention. Nonfiction titles are usually five words or less. Some books use subtitles to be more descriptive. Here are six tips to create an intriguing title:

1. USE A PLAY-ON-WORDS
The Greatest War Stories Never Told (military history)
The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived The Great American Dust Bowl (American history)

2. USE A POPULAR PHRASE OR SLANG
All Over But the Shoutin’ (memoir)

3. USE THE SUBJECT’S NAME IN THE TITLE
John Adams (historical biography)
Billy the Kid: The Endless Ride (historical, biography)

4. EVOKE AN EMOTION
In Cold Blood (true crime)

5. HIGHLIGHT A UNIQUE SUBJECT
The Devil In The White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That Changed America (historical, true crime)

6. PROVOKE INTEREST
An Inconvenient Truth (current affairs, environmental commentary)
How to Make Love Like a Porn Star: A Cautionary Tale (autobiography)
Angela’s Ashes (memoir)
All The President’s Men (political history, investigative reporting)
The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea (true life story, current event)
To The Ends of the Earth (travel)

FOR SELF-HELP AND HOW-TO BOOKS, your title needs to do five things:


1. IDENTIFY THE READER’S PROBLEM
Entice a reader to look at your book by addressing their specific problem.
How To Repair Your Credit Score Now; How To Make Money in Stocks; Great Deals In Las Vegas.


2. SOLVE THE READER’S PROBLEM
Successful self-help and how-to titles let the reader know how they will benefit from reading the book. Sometimes the benefit is implied. What to Expect When You’re Expecting; Think and Grow Rich.


3. GIVE THE READER HOPE
The title should be positive and upbeat and convey a sense of hope. Stay away from prevention titles like “Don’t Be a Loser”, a better title is How to Win Friends and Influence People.


4. BE SPECIFIC
Readers buy the specific over the general, so keep your title focused and targeted – “How to Run A Home Business” vs. “How To Make $100,000 Your First Year by Running a Home-Based Business”.


5. BE EASY TO REMEMBER
Keep it short-and-snappy and easy for potential buyers to remember.


An effective exercise is to come up with 10 to 20 titles for your book and ask friends, family, and associates to vote on which one they like best.

STAY-TUNED: In my next post I will outline the elements of a nonfiction book.


    • About Me

        Laura Cross
    • I'm Laura Cross, author, ghostwriter, freelance book editor, writing coach, and owner of Scenario Writing Studio I have researched, edited, and ghostwritten more than 30 nonfiction books on various topics, and developed winning book proposals that helped clients land six-figure book deals. I specialize in helping business leaders, entrepreneurs, and experts develop bestselling nonfiction how-to and self-help books. My clients have appeared on "Oprah", and been featured in Publishers Weekly, and The New Your Times book section, and on Amazon's bestseller list.
      Contact me at: Laura @ ScenarioWritingStudio . com
      Check out my script writing blog About A Screenplay.

      Unless otherwise indicated in the individual post, I have no connection with the publishers or authors, nor have I received any compensation for the books reviewed on this site. The opinions expressed on this blog are my own.