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Writing a Book? Start at the End

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People occasionally tell me they're writing a book.
When I ask them what it's about, more often than not they begin by telling me it's totally different from anything ever before written about their subject--a truly unique approach.
And then they launch into a long-winded, rambling description that tells me they haven't yet figured out the most important aspect of the book: focus.
Leaving aside the possibility that their book might, indeed, be a radically new take on their theme, their inability to state a succinct premise means they're going to have a hard time writing it and a harder time selling it to an agent or publisher.
They're too caught up in telling me what they want to write instead of focusing on what a reader might want to read.
I don't mean to imply that every author must be so market driven that he or she can be successful only by pandering to the buying public.
Authors should not lose sight of the integrity of their work and the importance of their point of view.
But if they want their book to be read--and isn't that the reason for writing it in the first place?--they need to consider what will make their audience want to read it.
If you're a budding author, here's a suggestion that might help you get your book into the hands of your target reader: Write the blurb first.
What is blurb copy? That's the text you'll find on the inside flap of a hard cover dust jacket or the back cover of a paperback book.
It tells briefly what the book is about; it's the pitch that is intended to sell the book.
Blurb copy is an important element in the customer purchase process.
A customer entering a bookstore first looks around the store for orientation to decide where to begin browsing.
Once he or she gets to the section where your book is shelved, the customer scans the shelves looking for an eye catcher.
Some of the books will be face out on a shelf; most will be spine out.
For books face out, an attractively designed front cover will grab the browser's attention.
If the customer cocks his or her head to the right and reads the array of titles shelved spine out, he or she is most likely to pause at the quirkiest or most descriptive or most boldly legible titles.
Book designers who concentrate all their efforts on the front cover and add spine copy almost as an afterthought do their authors a disservice.
With the thousands of titles that even a small bookstore stocks, it's not possible to display every book face out; the spine has to help make the sale.
The purpose of a book cover is to encourage a browser want to pick up the book.
The design may be words alone or an illustration (photograph or drawing) that relates to and compliments the subject of the book.
The title and subtitle should pique the customer's interest.
What does a customer do after taking a book from a bookstore shelf? Most browsers will turn the book (paperback) over or open the cover (hard cover) to read the jacket blurb.
Imagine you're that browsing customer.
Ask yourself what would interest you enough to want to actually leaf through the pages and read a couple of sentences.
That's what you as an author should put in your blurb.
That's the focus, the appeal, the pitch that will help sell your book.
With luck the customer will go on to check the table of contents, perhaps read a page or two, and then decide to take the book to the cashier.
It's unlikely that the blurb you write now for the book you're planning will ever actually be used.
But you should still do it because 1.
It will help you make a sales pitch to an agent or editor.
2.
It will help you focus on target readers who will want to buy your book.
3.
It will help stay you focused as you develop your book.
Tack it above your computer and read it every day.
4.
It will help the marketing and publicity departments work out a sales plan.
5.
It will help you create sound bites to use during promotion appearances and interviews.
6.
It will give you a quick answer to the question: What's your book about? Unless you self-publish, in the end a new blurb will probably be written by someone in the publisher's marketing department.
Also the artwork you originally foresaw anchoring the front cover illustration and the title you've been using since the book's inception will undoubtedly be changed for marketing and promotion reasons.
None of your first blurb-writing attempts is wasted, however, because each step you complete on your way to a finished manuscript is an important component of your book as a final package, a package that will have maximum appeal to many book buyers.
It all starts with your blurb.
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