7
Title Templates That Go the Extra Mile For Your Book
by: Earma Brown
The
Information Highway has turned into a Sea of Information. It’s
teeming with information from every direction. So how does one make
a difference in such a vast medium? If you don’t want your book
and material in general to be lost in the sea of information streaming
into your reader’s consciousness each day, you must title them
well. In fact, all marketing material from your 5 page sales letter,
tri-fold brochure or email campaign to the 2 line classified ad needs
the attention grabbing power of a great headline.
Create sizzling
titles designed to hook your potential readers. One of the most important
skills to develop as a marketer of your book, product or service is
the skill of creating attention-grabbing titles. When you master this
skill you may use it in every aspect of your writing to attract more
readers, more sales, improve your cash flow and increase your profits.
You will need title
writing skill for your book titles, chapter titles, sub-heading. Even
bullet points will have pulling power if they are developed correctly.
Your website will need passionate headings to capture the attention
of your web visitors.
Titles set the stage
for your potential audience. They either will work to grab your potential
reader by the collar and pull them in for the read or they don’t.
Top titles create excitement, anticipation and enthusiasm for more.
You want your titles to express the heart and passion of your message.
Here are 7 top title templates to help create your best titles:
1. The Command. “Write Your Best Book Now!”
Most will say they don’t like being told what to do. But our human
psyche seems to respond in spite of what we like. The command has an
immediate effect. Why? It connects with the “Yes, I want that”
spot within us all. Commands reassure you that helpful advice will follow
that help you get what you want from the advice. It tells the readers
it’s possible to achieve the benefit the author is claiming.
2. The How
to. “How to Make Your Article Go the Extra Mile"
People love to learn with simple steps and fast. Combine it with a powerful
benefit and you will reel your reader in every time. You decide. Does
the title above, “How to Make Your Articles Go the Extra Mile”
or “8 Ways to Format Your Article”
3. The Provocative
Statement. “5 Mistakes That Drive Your Web Visitors Away In Less Than
2 Minutes”
You mean my site could be driving my visitors away that fast. Especially,
if you have been working hard to get site visitors you would want to
know what would drive them away fast. Provocative statements pull at
our attention like an electric shock. They make us curious. They sometimes
make us mad. They make us feel a lot of different things but most of
all they make us read.
4. The Question. “Do You Want More Traffic, More Free Publicity, More Sales?"
Most times people unconsciously answer the question you pose in their
minds. The key is to provide the answers in your copy including statistics.
For example, “Have you ever felt afraid to buy online? Like it
or not, many are still cautious of buying on the web. A Boston Consulting
Group Consumer Survey found that 70% of respondents worry about making
purchases online.”
5.
The Big Promise. “How to Increase Sales 400% by Using Short Articles”
People will click away from hype and never come back. But if you have
a big gun don’t be afraid to pull it out and use it. Consider
carefully and use sparingly; then make your big promise and deliver.
People will remember your promises and come back for more or purchase.
Don’t forget to include the specific delivery or ‘how to’
in the copy beneath your big promise headline.
6. The Confusing. “3 Little Pigs Went to Market but One Went Faster”
Develop curiosity into your title. A seemingly opposite simile works
like a charm. Sometimes the title that doesn’t make a lot of sense
will pull your audience in for the read. Would the title above arouse
your curiosity? The confusing title can capture the attention of your
audience just to see what it’s about.
7. The Top
Benefit. “Think and Grow Rich”
A winning non-fiction title immediately communicates the benefit readers
will gain after reading your book. Benefit-oriented books often use
the problem-solution approach. Master (A) this skill or technique and
get (B) this benefit. Readers buy non-fiction books for a “benefit”
for something that will help them, grow them, profit more, less expense,
less trouble, gain more time, less stress, better relationships, better
health, less drama, less trauma, more energy and vitality and less fatigue.
Develop
this valuable skill and you add magnetic pulling power and punch to
all your marketing documents including your front book cover and chapter
titles that will get your message read. Titles set the stage for your
potential audience. They either grab your potential reader by the shirt
or they don’t. Create your titles to be ‘the match’
that ignites your reader’s interest in reading your important
message. Title well and prosper!