Tackle your Readers attention with a great Tagline! |
You need to hit
readers hard, blindside them with an awesome tagline in order to grab their
attention. I cannot overestimate the importance of this. Your tagline, blurb and excerpt are the most
important sales tools you have for your book. Choose them wisely.
Every author wants
people to read their book, right? Well, they aren't going to find your book
unless you put it out there and MAKE them want to read it. Throwing away your
tagline and blurb is just like taking your book and throwing it off a bridge in
the hopes that someone will fish it out of the ocean, find it, and think it's
great. So let's go over developing a tagline that will make readers care enough
to pick up your book and purchase it.
A tagline is—or
should be—one of the simplest things to create. A tagline is—plain and simply—a
one sentence summation of the theme of your book. Something quick and catchy. If
you're moving on through publishing by attending conferences and conventions, a
tagline is similar to what is called an elevator pitch. What you want to do is
to catch a reader's—or an agent's or an editor's—attention with a one-sentence
description.
Remember, a PITCH
and a TAGLINE are two different things. A PITCH is to get someone to buy your
book with the intent to publish it. A TAGLINE is to get someone anonymous, in a
bookstore or online, to buy your book to READ it. So your tagline should be
about your BOOK.
Here’s the tagline
for the first book in my middle grade/young adult time travel series, The Last Timekeepers and the Arch of
Atlantis:
“Children are the
keys to our future. And now, children are the only hope for our past.”
Is it the best
tagline ever? Nope, probably not. But it tells the reader exactly what the
theme of the book is. Look at the points it covers—what it tells you about the
book. What does that tagline cover?
Children. Keys. Future.
Hope. Past.
That's the purpose
of a tagline and how to make it work for you. Therefore—homework lesson number
one. Sit down and READ your book. You may think you know what it's about, but
if you're a writer like me—you don't. READ IT. As you read, jot down notes to
yourself. One. Word. Notes. Hit the high points of your book. What themes, what
high points do you think sell your book? No—even simpler: what tags or key
words are IN your book? Because those are what will sell your book. Readers
don't always know what they're looking for in something to read. Your tagline
will give them clues.
A few examples of
great taglines:
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman – It takes a
graveyard to raise a child.
The Maze Runner by James Dashner – Remember.
Survive. Run.
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson – Two lives
are bridged – and nothing will be the same.
Do you see what
all of these taglines have in common? They titillated enough readers to become
bestsellers.
So that's your
first job after your book is written. To sit down and read your book, and to pull
a tagline from it. And this is where the elevator pitch and the tagline come
together. In an elevator pitch, you've got maybe thirty seconds to gain the
interest of an editor or an agent—just as long as it takes the elevator to get
to their floor. With a reader, you have your book cover and one sentence—just
one sentence—to convince them to click through and read more. You cannot afford
to throw that chance away. So a tagline that's trite or vague or boring cannot
be an option.
BTW – Here’s a sneak
peek at the tagline for the next book in my time travel series, The Last Timekeepers and the Dark Secret
set to be released on October 17th 2016:
“Only a true hero can
shine the light in humanity’s darkest time.”
Hope I've done my job and piqued your interest! What are some of your favorite taglines? Cheers and thank you for your time and attention today!
Great post Sharon. Tagline are really hard! Still working on one for Mossy Swamp. Thanks for the clues :-)
ReplyDeleteYou're so welcome, Rita! I love creating taglines and blurbs, though I find blurbs tougher to nail down the whole novel in two to three paragraphs! Looking forward to your book in September! Cheers!
DeleteSome great tips, Sharon. It's definitely an artform to be able to create the perfect tagline.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Steve! It truly is an artform, but it's a fun artform! Wink.
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