Design a book cover that flies off the shelf!

Article Admin | Graphic Design, Graphic Designing, Technical Articles | Thursday, October 4th, 2007

By Karen Saunders
Reference URL: http://www.macgraphics.net

A book cover is like your bait.  You have four ways to get consumers to bite, which are the front cover, back cover, spine, and inside flaps (if your book is not a paperback).  E-books are changing the face of book sales a bit, which makes it even more important to have a powerful book cover.  If it looks good in the thumbnail on a web page, it will look great enlarged.

You can save a fortune by using the same design techniques that professional book designer’s use.  Let’s look at the four hooks.

Front Cover:

On the front cover you have your title, subtitle, and your name.  Pretty basic, right?  OK, so what if you add an endorsement or a short testimonial from a VIP?  Now your cover is working for you.  The whole design should give people, at a glance, a sign of what’s inside.

All of your graphics should be bold and colorful, but uncluttered.  Simple is better.  You also want to make sure the colors you choose are going to convert well to black and white.  That way you know your cover will still look good in black and white ads, catalogs, and flyers.

Spine:

This one’s for the library, folks.  Put your name, title and publishing company logo.  Again, bold, contrasting colors will show up well.  Use a clean font that is uncluttered and legible. 

Back Cover:

Help the bookstore out by putting a category name in the upper left-hand corner of your book so they know where to shelve it.  Now you do a little sales.  You need a great headline, addressing who should buy the book.  Then some sales copy, telling readers what the book is about.  Finally, a bullet list of benefits.

Testimonials are great, and can sell the book for you.  Keep it to no more than three, though.  And don’t forget your picture!  Readers love to see who’s talking to them.  Credit for your book cover’s illustrator, photographer and/or designer should also be included here.

Then you give them the “bottom line,” a line of sales copy close to the bottom that closes the sale, so to speak.  Position the price in the lower left corner and the 13-digit ISBN number in the lower right hand corner, and your back cover is complete!

Inside Flaps:

If your book is hard cover and you have inside flaps to work with, you have even more room for sales copy.  You can also do a short “teaser,” giving readers a small taste of what they’ll find inside – just enough to whet the appetite.  Now you put your photo and bio in, and give people the chance to get to know the author.

It’s all about presentation, and your book needs more than just a pretty package.  Make your book cover design as powerful as what’s inside, and you have a winning combination!

Karen Saunders is the owner of MacGraphics Services, a unique design firm for today’s entrepreneur.  Whether you outsource your promotional pieces or are a do-it-yourselfer, Karen takes the mystery out of marketing.  Learn the Top 5 Mistakes that can cost you money by signing up for her FREE e-course, available for a limited time.  To take advantage of this e-course and find out how easy it can be to attract more clientshttp://www.macgraphics.net/FreeStuff.php.

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