Archive for the ‘Articles’ category

Book Cover Tips That Sell

April 19th, 2011


Did you know that your book back cover information is, after the cover, the best way to sell more books? And, that most authors, emerging and experienced, miss this opportunity to engage more potential buyers?

Your book’s front cover and sizzling title must impress your buyers in four-eight seconds. If they like it, they will spend ten or so seconds on your cover-a great opportunity to convince them that your book is necessary for their success.

Does your cover pass the test?

Book Cover Tips – Best Solutions to the Biggest Mistakes

1. Mistake: Too many non-powerful words and too busy to have a focus.

Solutions: A back cover of 6 by 9 inches should have fewer than 70 words. Use sound bites; picture and emotional words; benefits, not features; and testimonials to capture your readers’ attention to keep your message focused. Make every word count and be willing to get five-fifteen edits.

2. Mistake: Too much superfluous material on it such a long author’s bio or large photo. Potential buyers want to know how the book will help them, teach them a skill, or entertain them.

Solutions: Print only a one or two-line bio on the back cover. Put your photo and more bio on the inside of the cover. Omit features such as format information, which belong in the mini sales letter short introduction.

Connect with your buyer emotionally with specific, powerful ad copy. For self-help books use bullets with specific benefits, and enough of the right kind of testimonials to sell your book in under 15 seconds. For fiction, modify to include a startling scene with snappy including a bit of plot, and maybe a powerful quote. Use bookstore models to assist you.

3. Mistake: Repeating the book’s title at the top of the book back cover.

Solutions: Since your potential buyers already know the title and are stimulated enough to look at the back cover, hook them with an emotional question or headline that gives them the #one benefit of your book.

Create a “Hot Headline” that compels your reader to buy. Notice the headlines in your newspaper. Visit your bookstore and notice other best selling authors’ headlines. “What’s So Tough About Writing?” by wordsmith Richard Lederer, author of The Write Way; “Imagine Being an Author,” in Dan Poynter’s Writing Nonfiction; or “To Age is Natural…To Grow Old is Not! In Rico Caveglia’s Ageless Living.

4. Mistake: Omitting testimonials.

Solutions: Testimonials sell more books than any other information on the cover. Put at least three up. Contact a variety of people. Use one from a top professional in your field, one from a satisfied reader, one from a celebrity who cares about your topic, and one from a top media person. These can be local contacts.

In her book, A Kick in Your Inspiration, Ruth Cleveland got one testimonial from an ex convict! Jacqueline Marcell, author of Elder Rage, took eight months to get forty testimonials from celebrities. Her book is endorsed by: Steve Allen, Ed Asner, Dr. Dean Edell, Dr. John Gray, Dr. Nancy Snyderman/ABC, Regis Philbin. Jacqueline Bisset, and Phyllis Diller.

Worth the effort? Yes, because in April 2001, she made the cover of the American Association of Retired Persons Bulletin distributed to over 35 million readers. It included a feature story, some how-tos and contacts and pictures of the author and her book. She had to dance fast, and order 10,000 books to get distributed by the time the piece came out. After it came out, she was inundated with speaking engagements. There’s a problem you might love to have!

After you write several books and become rich and famous, you, like other professionals, will fill your book back cover with testimonials. You won’t even need to add benefits, because people have already bought your other books and liked them.

Potential buyers will purchase when they see people they trust and know recommend the book. Besides filling the back cover with testimonials, you may want to even add extra testimonials in the front pages of the book. The more testimonials, the better!

If you are unsure how to ask for testimonials the easy way, contact a professional book coach.

5. Mistake. Independent publishers submitting galleys to reviewers, distributors, and wholesales without ANY cover information.

Solutions: “Make the back cover your first area of concern,” says Susan Howard, Director of Consulting Services at top publishing firm, The Jenkins Group Inc., who write “The Publishing Connection” She adds, “Waiting for testimonials is generally the reason the book back cover of a galley is left blank. Failure to realize the value of the cover seems to equate with the failure to realize that the text for the finished back cover can always be changed before the printing of the book.”

It’s important for writers to “market while they write” with the “Essential Hot-Selling Points”– To make each part of their book sell copies. The book’s back cover is all-important.

By: Judy Cullins

About the Author:
Discover more ways to propel your book writing and finish your nonfiction project with book coach Judy Cullins!



How to Print and Bind Your Own Book and Cut Out the Expense of Printing and Book Binding Services

April 17th, 2011


Self publishing is one of those activities where the old saying is true – “if you want a job done well, do it yourself”.

Consider the stages in self publishing: You write the book, you send it to a publisher or maybe to an independent printer and book binder. You collect the books and then try to sell them. Or maybe you leave the whole publishing job to a specialist publisher.

Look at the possibilities for something to go wrong: The printer is behind time, the costs per book are high, the appearance of the book is not to your liking. You are left with too many unsold copies. If you use a print on demand publisher they take a large cut of the price, and so on.

Now look at this scenario. You write the book. You market it. As you get orders you run off a copy of the book on your home printer. You create a cover for the book using card and do the artwork using a simple desk top publishing program (you can get one free). You bind the book using a simple wooden jig you can make yourself or get a handy woodworker to make for you for a few dollars. Each book takes only about 5 minutes to bind and the whole cost of the book is normally only about one dollar depending on the quality of paper used!

This is the ultimate simple, easy self publishing and self book binding dream.

The beauty of this method is that you are totally in control of everything. In fact if you are a fast writer you could have a book written, printed and published and in the post or the shelves in less than a week.

We are not talking here about some shoddy looking bunch of papers stapled together or a few sheets pressed into one of those school or office type binders. We are talking about an attractive, normal sized paperback book which can stand alongside normally published books and be practically indistinguishable from them. Except it will have your name or logo on it.

By: Joseph Kerrigan

About the Author:
Joseph Kerrigan is an experienced writer and self publisher, both online and offline. He writes, prints and binds his own books and encourages others to do the same. Easy, simple bookbinding does need a course of instruction and on the author’s web site is information about a superb, inexpensive course teaching easy book binding. This inexpensive course includes full illustrations, details of many free resources and lots of extras. Please see it at http://easy-bookbinding.com



Book Cost

April 17th, 2011


How much should a print on demand book cost?

Book cost is critical to your success as an author. If the self-publishing company you choose charges too much for your book, you will be priced out of the market.

You need to know how to calculate a fair print on demand (POD) cost for your book. Most POD printers charge about $.015 per page plus $.90 for the cover for paperback books. Mark Levine, in his book, The Fine Print of Self Publishing, says authors should memorize this formula.

Mark is right. You should not only memorize it, you should pass it on to every author you meet. If every author knew how to calculate the cost of a POD book, they could put a stop to price gouging.

Self-publishing companies are entitled to charge reasonable fees for their services, but they should not increase book costs to the point they can not be sold. Using the formula that you just memorized, a 150 page book would cost $3.15 (150 X .015 = 2.25 plus .90 = 3.15) to print.

Add 15 percent service charge and your book would cost $3.62. To discover how much you would make, you have to subtract the standard discount of 55 percent (15% for the distributor/wholesaler; 40% for the bookseller) and the cost of your book from the retail price of the book.

For example, if you set the retail price of your book at $12.95, subtract the standard discount: $12.95 – 55% = $5.83; then subtract the cost of your book, $5.83 – $3.62 = $2.21. You would make $2.21.

But what if your book cost $8.00. Not unheard of, and some companies charge even more. That is why it is so important to know what your book is going to cost and do the math before you settle on a company.

Look at what happens: $12.95 – 55% = $5.83; $5.83 – $8.00 = – $2.17. You just lost $2.17. And remember, the standard discount is a percentage. If you increase the price, the amount of the discount also increases. For example, raise the price to $16.95: $16.95 – 55% = $7.63; $7.63 – $8.00 = $0.37. We still lost 37 cents. At $18.95, you would make 53 cents.

How much is your book worth?

The $8.00 is a real world figure. So, how do they get away with it? First, they stress how much you will make in their online bookstore. In other words, they act as the bookseller and share their 40 percent with you.

Second, they offer the distributor a short discount. Some publishers are getting discounts as low as 20 percent. Remember, it does not cost anything to store digital book files and we calculated around $3.15 to print our sample book. Bottom line: You will most likely make a couple of dollars even with outrageously priced books, but be careful with book signings.

A long time ago, I paid $8.21 each for my books that retailed for $14.95. I sold 29 copies at my first and last book signing. The bookstore made $5.98 on each book for a total of $173.42. I made $0.76 on each book for a total of $22.04. It was a valuable lesson.

Bookstores, of course, will not carry books that only offer a short discount. That is okay. They do not like self-published books anyway. Some self-publishing companies will explain this to you. Some will not.

By: David W. Griffiths

About the Author:
David Griffiths, author of, http://www.self-publishing-solutions.com
Publish your book for free, promote it online, and sell in on Amazon.com.



Advantages of Print on Demand Publishing

April 16th, 2011


Print on Demand or POD is a very popular way of printing books such as ebooks or other types of books. Print on demand publishing is really growing into its own industry. This type of printing allows you to print one book at a time versus having to print a thousand books at a time with traditional publishers. Print on demand publishing also has the advantage of not needing a warehouse or storage for books. This is also very cost efficient. While it does have a set-up cost, for many, it is the best way to publish their books.

Print on demand publishing also reduces the cost for book publishing. You don’t have to sit by the phone and fill orders which are a great relief. You also don’t have to go and collect the money that you have made from book chains. You get it immediately. Print on demand publishing also doesn’t require one big investment as far as getting your books printed. A book printed in this fashion is the same as one that has been published by a traditional book publishing company. You don’t have to store books, period.

So you can see immediately why print on demand publishing is running away with the crowd. Not many people in this economic time have a lot of money to put up to publish a book in the traditional fashion. Here is another thing that will make you smile about POD. Once it is set up in this fashion, for each copy sold you will receive more income from it. Smiling already? Here are more advantages to using print on demand publishing is that you can keep your book in stock and not worry about being eaten alive by publishing cost.

Print on demand publishing also is being used by major publishing houses to keep their books in stock, so it is a very viable way to keep your book out there in the public eye without costing a small fortune to produce and publish. With the advent of computer technology, it is also easier to print these books. So you really don’t have the drawbacks of using traditional publishers to market and sell your book. It also costs much less to do a POD than it would for a traditional publisher to get your money’s worth from publishing.

So you can see why it is simpler to use a print on demand publishing firm to publish your book and keep it. It can be ordered one at a time so no storage is needed. You can also have many different sites that will link your book to the POD so that anyone that wants one just needs to pay for it and poof, they have their book and you have money as a writer. So between publishing traditionally and using POD, POD is the best way to go for anyone wanting to publish a book. If you are interested in POD for yourself, then check out many different POD publishers listed on the internet.

By: Bill Boor

About the Author:
To learn more, visit the ebook publishing software website, where there are useful articles on how to write ebooks and information about a wide range of ebook software solutions, such as ebook cover software, and more.



Publish Yourself With a Saddle Stitch Stapler

April 16th, 2011


Even with the rise of the Internet, most people still turn toward printed materials for their day to day lives. Granted, print media are an age old craft that has persisted through such technological advances as touch screens, remote controls and e-books such as the Kindle. Indeed, printed calendars, booklets, brochures and other media, in addition to not needing any electronic know how to use, are also advantageous in the sense that they do not run out of batteries or electricity, as is sometimes the case during blackouts. Enter the saddle stitch stapler, undoubtedly the most powerful tool in the creation of both commercial and personal printed material.

This special stapler, which also goes by the name of the saddle stapler, is a very powerful little device used in the practice of bookbinding. It is used to stick staples into the spine of the book, which is also called the saddle (hence the name). This makes it a handy tool not only in most craft projects, but also in many different forms of print media. The following are just a few uses of the saddle stapler:

Brochures – These are always important in outlining the ins and outs of a business, in order to explain to potential customers as many things as possible without having to waste too much saliva on doing so. Fire up the layout software in your computer, or even write and draw it out by hand if you like. Once you have everything laid out, simply fasten everything together with your saddle stitch stapler. Easy, cheap advertising; is there anything to not like?

Calendars – These may be considered a step up from brochures, in the sense that they can also be given away, but unlike the former they are actually useful around the home and the office. Having a calendar advertising your business hanging around homes and offices of your clients may serve as a subtle yet very powerful form of advertising. Just remember to take note if you are planning to draw up a calendar of a leap year, though!

Independent comics – Feeling creative? Then try your hand at creating and putting together your very own comic book with the help of a saddle stapler. Whether for further promoting a business or simply for personal pleasure, comics are a contemporary medium that have the potential to entertain a huge audience, the perfect combination of writing and graphic art. Simply draw your comic, scan and print duplicates, and use the saddle stitching technique to bind them securely. Distribute to your friends and family, or even sell them for an honest buck or two.

There are so many other uses for a saddle stitch stapler; you are only confined to the limits of your imagination. Anything that requires the easy, clean and proper fastening together of pieces of paper will find an easy solution in the technique of saddle stitching.

By: Frank K Cobert

About the Author:
Frank has been writing articles online for nearly 4 years now. Not only does this author specialize in fashion, you can also check out his latest websites on buying a fine wire stapler and buying a saddle stitch stapler.