A clever title is great if
it is clear, but a clear title is
always preferable. The best? A clear and clever title. A
shorter
title is better than a longer one. Your reader will spend
only
four seconds on the cover. While some long titles have
succeeded, usually the shorter, the better.
A title is part of your book's front cover. Busy buyers
including
bookstore buyers, wholesalers, distributors and your audiences
buy mainly because of the cover. Dan Poynter, author of
Writing
Nonfiction, says, "The package outside sells the product
inside."
Make your cover sizzle.
Start with a working title before you write your chapters.
Include
your topic, your subject and use the book's benefits in
your sub
title if possible. Here's your ten tips for titles that
sell:
1. Create impact for your title-check
out print and radio ad headlines. Check out other
authors' titles on the bookstore shelves. Your title must
compel the reader to buy now.
Which title grabs you? Elder Rage or Caregiving for Dad?
2. Include your solution in your
title. Does your title sell your solution? Make sure
it answers the question rather than asks one. For instance,
Got Minerals?, or Minerals: The Essential Link to Health.
Use positive language instead of negative. For instance,
Without Minerals You'll Die can be Minerals: The Essential
Link to Health.
3. Make it easy for readers to buy.
Readers want a magic pill. They want to follow directions
and enjoy the benefits the title promises. For example,
1001 Ways to Market Your Books by John Kremer gives at least
1001 ways for authors and publishers to market their books.
4. Expand your title to other books,
products, seminars, and services. Make sure that
your title will work well with the title of your presentations,
articles and press releases you'll need to promote the book.
Such seminars and teleclasses titled "How to Write
and Sell Your Book- Fast!" and "Seven Sure- Fire
Ways to Publicize your Business" come under the umbrella
"fast book writing, publishing and promoting."
5. Use original expressions--a
way of expressing one idea for your book--yours alone. Sam
Horn, author of Tongue Fú!, puts her special twist
on defusing verbal conflict.
6. Include benefits in your subtitle
if your title doesn't have any. Specific benefits
invite sales. For instance, Marilyn and Tom Ross' Jump Start
Your Book Sales: A Money-Making Guide for Authors, Independent
Publishers and Small Presses.
7. Choose others' book covers in
your field as models. Go to your local bookstore
with five-colored felt tips pens and paper. Browse the section
your book would be shelved on. Choose five book titles and
covers that attract you. Photo copy or sketch those, noting
the colors, design, fonts, and sizes of fonts. Add other
colors you like.
Place the book cover you love near your workstation to
inspire
you. For the final copy, use professional cover designers
if possible.
8. Be outrageous with your book
title. People do judge a book by its title. Your
reader will spend only four seconds on the front cover and
eight seconds on the back cover. It must be so outstanding
and catchy that it compels the reader to either buy on the
spot or look further to the back cover. Take a risk. Be
a bit crazy, even outlandish.
9. Be your strongest salesperson
self. Choose the strongest words, benefits, and metaphors
to move your audience to buy. Titles do sell books.
10. Include your audience in your
title. This gives your book a slant. When your title
isn't targeted other famous authors' titles win out. Always
make your title clear and make it easy for your audience
to recognize they need your book.
Your title and front cover is your book's number one sales
tool.
Short titles are best, say three to six words. John Gray
didn't
get much attention with his book "What Your Mother
Couldn't
Tell You and What Your Father Didn't Know." He shortened
it
to the now famous, "Men are From Mars, Women are From
Venus."
An outstanding title sells books. Make sure to give this
part
of your book, the number one essential "Hot-Selling
Point,"
some time and effort. |