Using Metaphor Based Titles To Sell More Books
In this article, the author outlines the advantages of
using metaphors in book titles to help sell more books and get more
readers.
Book titles that find more readers and sell more books are often
based on metaphors. Adding metaphors to your book titles helps the
title immediately communicate the essence of your book.
Because of the power of metaphor-based titles, they often form
the basis of publishing empires. In these cases, the original title
becomes the basis of an entire series of books, as we'll see below.
These can grow to become world-wide brands, catapulting the authors
to success with dozens--even hundreds--of different titles based
on the same metaphor.
Advantages of Metaphors
- Immediate recognition - A metaphor communicates
at a glance. A well-chosen metaphor needs no explanation. It's
message immediately hits home.
- Storytelling power - Metaphors tap into the
power of stories to engage readers on an emotional, as opposed
to a "factual" basis. They engage your readers' hearts
as well as their brains. They strike chords within your readers.
- Multiple levels - A single metaphor can communicate
numerous attributes and emotions. When your title includes an
appropriate metaphor, your title taps into numerous nuances and
details associated with the metaphor.
- Comfort and familiarity - Titles with metaphors
immediately establish a comfort and familiarity. They're also
easier to remember and--hence--easier to recommend to co-workers
and friends.
Types of metaphor titles
There are as many different types of metaphors as there are emotions
and different ways to describe multiple aspects of a topic. Here
are a few of the different types of metaphors that have become the
basis of successful book titles:
Comfort. At some points in our lives, we all need
to be comforted. We may have lost our jobs, our spouses, our friends,
or our pets. We need to connect with others who may have experienced
the same loss, or are currently experiencing the same loss. Sometimes
our need for comfort can be very narrowly defined, such as "wives
with husbands overseas in the military,"
Philosophy, attitude, and resources. Metaphor-based
titles can also instantly paint a picture of the challenges and
resources of our intended readers. At a glance, an appropriate metaphor
can target selected types of readers in a way that immediately resonates
with them.
Complexity. A metaphor-based title can identify
a book's intended market as well as describe both the approach,
and the the level of information contained in the book. Without
using "obvious" words like "beginner" or "newcomer,"
a metaphor can communicate that the book is intended for entry-level
readers.
Style. Finally, the particular metaphor chosen
can not target the intended reader, but can communicate that the
author speaks the reader's language, and really understands where
the reader is coming from.
A Comfort Metaphor Based Series
One of the most successful book series in the world is Jack Canfield
and Mark Victor Hansen's Chicken Soup series. The first title in
the series, Chicken Soup for the Soul, was published on June 28,
1993.
The authors already had the materials in hand--101 story submissions,
but they lacked a title. They each agreed to meditate on the topic
for one hour. During one of his meditation sessions, Jack Canfield
remembered his grandmother telling him that "chicken soup can
cure anything!" Since the original title was designed to inspire
the soul, not the body, the obvious title was Chicken Soup for the
Soul.
By December, the book was a strong seller. By September of 1994,
Chicken Soup for the Soul was on every bestseller list in the United
States and Canada.
Today, there are over 200 titles in the series, and over 112 million
copies have been sold. The title has been translated into more than
40 languages.
More important, according to Harris Polls, 88.7 percent of the
public not only recognizes the Chicken Soup for the Soul brand,
but knows what it is.
It's impossible to conceive of success on this order if the original
Chicken Soup for the Soul title had been replaced with "conventional"
title like:
- How to Cheer Yourself Up
- 101 Inspirational Stories
- How Others Have Overcome Obstacles
The power of the Chicken Soup brand is based on the near universal
recognition, and accompanying emotional response, to feeling sick
and needing to be cared for by someone who loves you.
Attitude, Resources, and Philosophy
Jay Conrad Levinson's Guerrilla Marketing series is the world's
best-selling marketing book series. There are over 40 million Guerrilla
Marketing books in print around the world. The series has created
a market for Jay's speaking and consulting on every continent; as
this is being written, Jay Conrad Levinson is speaking in Poland,
Latvia, and Croatia.
The Guerrilla Marketing brand's strength is based on the immediate
recognition the title provides. Guerrilla Marketing resonates with
business owners who lack the unlimited budgets and resources of
major corporations. Guerrilla Marketers succeed by making the most
of whatever resources they have.
"Guerrilla" communicates the philosophy, "Marketing"
communicates the topic. Together, the two words tell the whole story.
Complexity
One of the most successful series of books in the writing and publishing
field is Rick Frishman and Robyn Freedman Spizman's Author 101 series.
There are several titles in the series:
- Author 101: Bestselling Secrets from Top Agents
- Author 101: Bestselling Book Proposal
- Author 101: Bestselling Nonfiction
- Author 101: Bestselling Book Publicity
The "Author 101" unites the titles under an immediately
understood umbrella. Traditionally, college freshmen level classes
are associated with "101" level identification numbers,
with advanced courses beginning in the 2 series. Thus, anyone who
has been to college can immediately recognize that these books are
for new authors who want to write a book.
Author Style and Target Market
A book title based on a metaphor can communicate the author's style
as well as target the intended market. For example, Peter Bowerman
launched a series of books using The Well-Fed Writer title. This
was quickly followed by The Well-Fed Self-Publisher and The Well-Fed
Writer: Back for Seconds. Consider what you already know about these
titles even before you glance at their back covers or their table
of contents:
Are these serious, or academic, books? Of course not.
The title communicates that the books are colloquial and informal.
Are successful writers the target market? No, again;
the market is writers who want to become successful.
Conclusion
It's fascinating just how much you can tell about a book from its
title, especially if it's a metaphor-based title. When a book title
is based on a recognized metaphor, the title--itself--can sell the
book. By instantly communicating comfort, philosophy, complexity,
or style, metaphor-based titles can sell more books and find more
readers by creating an immediate resonance with them on a deep emotional
level.
Ask yourself: How effectively does my proposed book title use the
power of metaphor to find more readers and sell more books by communicating
on an emotional level?
Author: Roger C. Parker is the
$32,000,000 author with over 1.6 million copies in print. Visit
the
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