Sunday, 4 December 2016

5 Rules to Write Book Descriptions that help in Marketing


Are you spending more time in creating and crafting your book’s description?
If you're an indie publisher, then it would be difficult for you to focus on presenting your description in an efficient way. If someone is reading your book, then your description gives him an annoying stop, and he will surely invest his time to only understand your description.
It should take a few moments for any buyer to check the consideration factors:

1.       Title/subtitle: Interesting? Focused?
2.       Writer: Who's this person?
3.       Cover: Does it have an attractive appearance?
4.       Reviews: Average and Number?
5.       Price: Is it within my spending budget?
6.     
  And possibly standard structure: Print, reader-friendly design, Book?
The next factor comes with the three-second pause when the shopper says: should I read the book description?

My main point is that a fabulous, well-crafted and an appealing book description will make a big difference in stimulating a person to buy your book.

Therefore, keeping this in mind I suggest five fantastic tips for creating persuasive and interesting book descriptions. These are following:
1.     
  The Description Is Created for Selling. For many writers, authoring their own description requires a different way of thinking. The authentic test should be taken to determine whether a reader will read your whole book after reading the description or not? This is certainly a standard copywriting material, therefore, do some research or consult with someone for guidance.
2.       
The Written Text Is Revised. Revise your written description again as per the quality standards you set when you wrote your book. Check every phrase structure, punctuation, transliteration, and so forth.
3.       
Your Book Description Should Be Appealing. Online reading is a lot more monotonous as compared to offline reading. So many people quit reading when they read long, unbroken sentences of unformatted wording. Cautious use of headings or titles, principal points, numbering, strong as well as italic textual content, and quotes let the people easily read your description. Each and every part provides the obvious meaning and draws your reader toward the next part.
4.       
The Writing Forms Appreciable Link. If you are crafting fictional or non-fictional work, you have to talk with your potential reader in a book that makes direct contact with him or her. Hook up your readers with the attractive storyline or a unique character.

5.      
It should be tried, plus re-tested. Your description could be informal or formal, but make sure both types are well inspected, and that you have made it very simple. Moreover, it should have some persuasive and reality-based facts that compel your reader to read your book. 

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