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5 Book Back Cover Mistakes & How
to Solve Them

by Judy Cullins
Did you know that your 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 back cover—a
great opportunity to convince them that your book is necessary
for their success.
Does your back cover pass the test?
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 back 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 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 back 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 AARP 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
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 back 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 back cover of a
galley is left blank. Failure to realize the value of the back
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.
Judy Cullins ©2004 All Rights Reserved.
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