How to write the perfect non-fiction book title which magnetically compels people to click & buy.

How to write the perfect non-fiction book title which magnetically compels people to click & buy.

Play all audios:

Loading...

YOUR TITLE, YOUR SUBTITLE, AND WHY IT MATTERS SO MUCH WHEN LAUNCHING A NEW BOOK. Most of you have had a title of your book in mind for many, many years, and I want to tell you that I respect


that… it might be a great title. But, it probably is not the right title for the short book I am suggesting you write for the ideal short book project as explained in my course the


Perpetual Lead Machine. But, before you get annoyed and defensive because your title is the perfect book title because all your friends love it, consider this article with a sober attitude.


I’ve written 10 books. All were best sellers in their niche. Titles are important. Challenge yourself with this simple question: what’s the purpose of your non-fiction book as it relates to


your business? I’ll give you a hint. Attracting leads and clients. Drat. I think I just gave you the whole answer. — — Webinar for Authors Happening This week — — Register now — — — — -


Remember that a short non-fiction book is to be used to get people interested in a having a longer relationship with you. This is the meet you and first date of the business journey. You


don’t tell your whole life story on a first date and you sure don’t want to in a short book. The fact is they don’t really care enough about you to care enough about your life story when


they just met you. Save that for the 10th date. Allow them to learn more from you, give them value, solve a problem. If you can help them solve one problem in under 60 pages… they will be a


fan for life. If you bore them with 300 pages of scientific data… they will never watch a video of yours, never open an email, and never buy anything from you again. A book they never read


is about a “useless as tits on boarhog.” That is a Texas phrase my Dad used to day. You might have to look that one up if you are not from the Southern part of the USA. The title should be


clear, simple, and easy to understand by your perfect customer. Most of the book authors I have consulting with come to me with a clever title that includes a conundrum, alliteration, or a


rhyme. It may be clever to you. It may be clever to your wife and your best friend. But it might not be something anybody cares about or even gets during the three seconds they look at your


book cover. More importantly, it might not contain any of the key words or issues that your perfect customer is searching for in Google or Amazon. Don’t be cute. Be direct and offer help.


The ideal outcome of most non-fiction author’s books get the book into thousands of people hands to build a brand and build an email list of people who know like and trust the author. This


get’s lots of people interested in who they are and how they can help them. This builds a virtual relationship with reader and gives them a chance to enhance their speaking career, get


coaching clients, fill seminar rooms, and offer other products. If nobody reads, downloads, or buys your book in the first place, what’s the purpose of it? You failed. That being said,


please don’t be married to your current title. The first book I helped somebody write, besides my own, was for my dear late friend, Phyllis Mattingly. All her life, she wanted to write a


book called _No Vaseline On My Teeth_. I helped her write that first book by recording her and interviewing her in her living room in Colorado on cassette tapes and microphone. Now for her,


that’s a great title because it symbolized her message about living freely and always smiling. If that same book was published today, I would implore her not to keep that title because it


would never be found by someone that didn’t already know who she was. Her goal was never to sell 100,000 copies. She wanted to print 500 copies and give them to her family and friend before


she died. I helped her achieve that goal. In her case, I did not fight her over the title. Unless you are planning on dying next year… I am going to fight you over your cute but meaningless


title. Unless you’re a celebrity, an ex-president, or a rock-star… don’t use a clever ambiguous cute title. You need to find something that matches what they’re searching in the search


engines. If you’re attached and married to your title, at least promise me this: the subtitle will be filled with words people are actually looking for. The process I am suggesting below is


to find the “working title”. Once you have the working title, then you can brainstorm other words that have the same meaning and intention that won’t seem so generic. For example. I wrote a


book about using your internal self-talk to help you achieve goals faster. The words goals, faster, or self-talk is not in the title or subtitle. But, the intention is filled in the final


title “The Magic Question. How to get what you want in half the time.” People want the outcome of getting their goals in half the time. The methodology is the features and not the benefit.


The word magic question elicits the emotion of curiosity. “What is the question.” You have to buy the book to find out. Oh, you can download the book as my gift at this url.


www.magicquestionbook.com LET’S PICK A TITLE THAT GETS PEOPLE STOP AND TAKE NOTICE There is a methodology to actually finding out what people are looking for and develop a “working title”.


You always want to name your articles, videos, and book titles that same thing people are already looking for. You want to solve a problem and get people stop and take notice. Search engines


and keyword research tools will be your best friend in this phase. Google.com has a free search term keyword called “Google Search Term Keyword Tool.” There are other services you can pay


for, keyword spy, keyword domination; there are lots of paid services. Unless you’re a professional internet marketer, normally there are two easy things you can do. First of all, put your


keyword into your Google Adwords account, which is the free keyword tool, and see what people are looking for. In most cases, it will be very simple, how to garden, how to improve your law


practice. Whatever the major benefit of your book is, type that in. If you’re on a desktop computer search a phrase or word… watch what happens. Google will show you a list of instant


suggestions to make your search term faster. For example, if you type in the word “Bart Baggett” in your key term, it’ll also drop down other Bart Baggett words people have searched. Bart


Baggett reviews, Bart Baggett credentials, Bart Baggett book, and Bart Baggett handwriting. I had no idea that people were searching Bart Baggett credentials! Well, now that I know, I made a


video and named it that exact title. That particular terminology was what they were searching for three years ago… so I created a page to help people get what they are looking for. So this


tool helps you to figure out what your future readers are looking for. Now, I guess they are looking for my Ted talk or my signature. Why? LOL Obviously if they’re searching for Bart


Baggett, they’re going to find it, because that’s a unique name and there are not 500 other people with that name fighting for the #1 spot in google. That’s not the audience I want to


attract with a new book I am about to publish. I don’t need people who already know me and like me to find me quicker. They already find me quickly. I want people that have no idea who I am


to find my book and be thrilled to have discovered “this guy who teaches exactly what I needed to know.” This article is part of three part article about, “How to Write a Book in Seven


Days,” and it will be filled with keywords like: how to write a book, how to market a book, how to successfully write a book fast, how to publish a book. I wrote a book with more content


called “How to Write a Book in 9.5 Hours”. Is there any confusion of what you are going to read about in that book? Nope. The only criticism I received was “That’s impossible. You are an


idiot.” Funny. But, most of my best selling books I transcribed from speeches and wrapped it all up in less than 9.5 hours of my personal time. So, who is the idiot now user name:


firstimeauthor1944? Then when people do a search for how to write a book, this book will pop up in the search engines in Amazon.com, or my own websites, from a search of those keywords. So


that is the easiest way to title and subtitle your book is use a fill in the blank formula to start. I highly recommend that if you’re writing a non-fiction book, do a subtitle with the word


phrase How _______ ______ in ____ days or less. > How to overcome sugar cravings in 3 days or less >  > How to lose ten pounds in 30 days or less. >  > How to master 


dreamweaver in 30 days or less. >  > How to (verb) (problem) in (short time frame). >  > How solve your legal problems in five days. >  > How to get a divorce without 


losing your shirt. >  > How to easily teach your kids to read without murdering your own > child. You get the point. Use Google search terms and the automated suggested terms as


your key to brainstorming ideas for the working title. The working title might be the final title.. just wait until you get the subtitle. You might find the How to title becomes the


subtitle. Here are two good ones from friends of mine: TITLE: TALKING TO CRAZY SUBTITLE: HOW TO DEAL WITH THE IRRATIONAL AND IMPOSSIBLE PEOPLE IN YOUR LIFE. TITLE THE BULLETPROOF DIET


SUBTITLE: LOSE UP TO A POUND A DAY, RECLAIM YOUR ENERGY AND FOCUS, UPGRADE YOUR LIFE. * *This is a “how to lose” title with the words how to eliminated. It works. Find the big problem and


include that word or phrase in the working title. PART TWO: SUBTITLE Part two is choosing the best phrase for the subtitle. You should have three to four phrases that you’re in love with and


here’s how you’re going to choose the best one..: you’re going to let the market figure it out. One of the best books that I’ve read is by a writer who is purely a writer, he just writes


books and he’s brilliant at it. His name is Timothy Ferriss, he wrote a book called _The Four Hour Work Week_, followed up by a book called _The Four Hour Body_. Both are good books, by the


way, very well researched, very thick, and very dense. He tested the title, _Four Hour Work Week_, among dozens of other titles and the research indicated that _Four Hour Work Week_ was what


people were interested in, that is the one that stopped people in their tracks and say, “Wow! A four hour work week? I love it.” So do what Timothy Ferriss did, do what I do, and test all


your titles before you spend $300 getting a book cover made. That being said, the book that you’re reading right now, we will test the title and that may take another seven days on top of


the seven days it took to write it. So while we’re formatting it and while we’re getting it ready for Kindle, I’ll run a test to figure out which of the variations of How to Write a Book in


Seven Days, How to Write a Book Over the Weekend, How to Write a Book Fast, How to Write a Book Quickly, How to Write Your First Book with No Headache — whatever title it will be, you can


guarantee that we will have tested that title and it will be the one that the most people care about because I am writing the book to attract people that want to write a book. Just like


you’re writing a book to attract people about your topic. IF IT’S GOOD ENOUGH FOR TIM FERRIS, IT’S GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU AND ME. You’re not going to guess, you’re not going to survey your


friends and your relatives and your mother. They are not someone who can be objective. You need people who don’t know you, don’t care about you, and don’t give a damn about anything except


what’s in it for them… in other words…people searching on google or Youtube.com What you’re going to do is take your credit card, you’re going to get a Google Adwords account and spend some


money on testing. You are going to create 10 different ads with 5 different titles and 5 different subtitles in the copy. Use the same image for each ad. The image doesn’t matter. Just use


the same image so that the words are the variable. Then, you create 10 different website pages with the exact title and a short article on that page. (The same short article for each title).


Just take a chapter from your book. If you want to make your money back, put an optin form on the page with this message: “This book is being released next month, please enter your name and


email to be on the early release free preview list.” You’re not even going to care whether they put their email in. All you are doing is looking at clicks. The results will blow your mind.


Here is a mock-up of what a test would have looked like if I had run traffic to various titles for the article you are reading. This is a mockup, the numbers are not authentic. The column


called CTR. Click Through Ratio indicates the winner. That is the best title or headline. I circled it in red. These are real results, I just cropped them from a different campaign for this


example. Run this all ten of these ads in one Google Adwords group or Facebook “ad set” in one campaign for one week. You can also use Facebook if you want to use an image and have more


space for longer subtitle or description. The process of testing is the same for both platforms. Facebook might get you better results since they are NOT looking for your key word, they are


getting your ad thrown at them and they might or might not find it interesting. Set your budget for $10 per day. All you care about it the click percentage that is the winner. CTR, Click


through ratio. The total number of clicks could be misleading if you got more views. You can confirm this by looking at the traffic on the ten different article pages with different titles,


assuming you installed a tracking service like google analytics before you started this campaign. You will be shocked to find that the one that you thought was the least interesting is the


best, or the one that you thought was the best, is number two. Let the market decide. So it doesn’t even matter what people do when they get to the landing page, you’re going to use Google


Adwords to test your top five or six titles and use the one that people are most compelled to click and read more about. Do not use a different image for each ad… this will ruin your test


data. So, that’s it! In summary, figure out your title, go to Google Adwords and keyword search tool, look what Google suggests as alternatives, and then test, test, test. Now you’re a


marketer who writes books. Want to learn more about turning your book into a real business with high-paying clients? Watch this webinar by the author, Bart Baggett. You will discover how to


turn your book into the perfect lead magnet while attracting high paying clients through automation. Register now