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15 Tips for Great Book Cover Design by Book Publicist Scott Lorenz
After their book is written and editors sign off on the final rewrite,
authors often turn their attention to what will become one of their most agonizing tasks
in the entire process – deciding on a book cover design.
One reason the task becomes so daunting and painful is that authors
too often wait until the end of the process, instead of nearer the beginning, to think
through book cover design.
As a book publicist and book marketer I cannot caution authors enough
– do not underestimate the importance of a book cover’s design. Not only do potential
book buyers judge a book by its cover but so do members of the media.
I have personally seen a major book reviewer for a large magazine hold
a client’s book, run her fingers over the cover and say, “I’ve not heard of this author
or publisher, but this book looks very nicely done, tell me more about.” Conversely,
I’ve heard a reviewer quickly respond “We don’t review self-published books,” because
the cover screamed cheap!
While we often hear “You can’t judge a book by its cover,” everybody
– book buyers, reviewers, media and consumers alike – most certainly do judge a book
by its cover.
Here are some important items to consider when making decisions on book
cover design:
- Use a subhead to create more description. If you have a 10-word title, you have
not properly named the book in the first place.
- Check with Google on the words that are most searched on your topic. To do this,
type in the word that best describes your book in the search box and then see what
the next most important or popular words are in that list. That ranking is very
relevant marketing- wise so try to use those words in your title or subtitle.
- Visit book stores and look at the covers of all types of books. What catches
your eye? Look at the book face and look at the spines. Which ones are readable
and why?
- Will it play on Amazon? Go to Amazon.com, BN.com, Borders.com and search on
competitive books in your space. Notice the book covers that catch your eye and
the ones that do not. If your cover does not show up well in an Amazon thumbnail
then you are going to lose sales.
- Contrast. Don’t let your graphic designer get started without keeping contrast
in mind. The reason black ink works so well on white paper is because it produces
the best contrast possible. Yellow ink on green paper in a small font simply does
not work.
- How does your book look in black and white? Not every publication will be printing
it in color.
- Font size. Many designers are young with great eyesight. But your buyer may
not be able to read the tiny font some designers insist upon using. Be practical.
- The spine. Can you read it from five feet away? If not, neither can browsers
in a book store.
- Blurbs. Keep them relevant and short. The best highway billboards are 5-11 words
because motorists are driving by at 70 m.p.h. Guess what? Consumers are driving
by your book sitting on a table at the same relevant speed. The human mind cannot
comprehend too many words at a glance. So give them short, sweet blurbs. If you
are in love with your blurbs, than print them all in full on the last inside pages
of the book.
- Consider including a mention on the cover of a forward written by a famous person.
“Forward by Barack Obama” or “Forward by Oprah Winfrey” or “Forward by Best Selling
Author John Grisham.”
- Do not overlook creating content on the back inside flaps because consumers
pick up a book after looking at the spine, front cover and back and then open the
book to find the price or more information.
- Print your cover out on a laser printer. Don’t just review your cover on a computer
screen which will make it look considerably better. Print it out actual size and
make a determination using that printed version.
- Pictures are worth 1000 words. Use photos and illustrations to describe what
would take too long to explain.
- When choosing a book design ask yourself how the cover will look on your website
home page. Consistency and redundancy are important so you’ll want to use the same
design elements on your website that you do on your book cover. For this reason,
I suggest using the same designer for your book cover and for your website if possible.
- Show your cover designs to as many people in your target group of potential
readers. Get their reactions and opinions. It costs you nothing and you’ll likely
find out something you did not realize before.
Bottom line: Get involved early in the entire book publishing design
process and get at least three creative concepts for the front cover, back cover, and
spine. Don’t let it be the ‘last thing’ you do.
And finally, the most important rule in book publishing and marketing
– Know Your Reader! All books have a target reader and in all genres there are varying
degrees of readers. Targeting the reader who is most likely to purchase your book is
critical. Authors who know the demographics of their readers are equipped to assemble
the fonts and graphics best able to grab the reader’s eye and instantly convey the message
that “this book is for you.”
When you work with your graphic designer on the book covers and spine,
your chances of success are greatly increased. If your designer does not welcome your
participation, hire another designer.
About the Author
Scott Lorenz is President of Westwind Communications, a public relations and marketing
firm that has a special knack for working with individuals and entrepreneurs to help
them get all the publicity they deserve and more. Lorenz has handled public relations
and marketing for numerous authors, doctors, lawyers, inventors and entrepreneurs.
As
a book marketing expert Lorenz is called upon by top execs and bestselling authors to
promote their books. Learn more about Westwind Communications’
book marketing approach
at www.book-marketing-expert.com or contact Lorenz at
scottlorenz@westwindcos.com or
by phone at 734-667-2090.
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