Stop Writing Descriptions and Write
Ads
Heres a suggestion for all booksellers.
Search for some of your own books on your listing site of choice. Look at your book in a field of 15 or 20 others
and ask yourself some questions.
Does your listing stand out?
Would you want to buy your copy?
Would you even notice your copy?
This page of book listings is a page of advertisements, and those other 15 or
20 books are your competition. You will sell
more books if your ad stands out and sells.
The major book databases offer a huge advantage over traditional print
media. When the listing comes up, we already
have the buyers interest and desire to buy. This
has allowed us all to sell many books, even with pretty poor ads. With the only copy offered or a significantly
lower price, the sale is easy.
However, we cant afford to be complacent.
Thousands of booksellers and millions of books have entered the market in
recent years. Its rare to have the only
copy of a book, and competition on price is fierce. Wed
go broke in a heartbeat trying to always offer the lowest price.
So what to do? Turn
your listings into ads that will make your copy stand out and attract the attention of the
buyers.
Here are some suggestions:
1) First, tend to the basics. Watch
for proper spelling and no typos. Dont
turn off your customer right from the start.
2) Use appropriate capitalization. A
sea of either all caps or all lower case is visually unappealing. Selected use of all caps can draw attention to
something special in your listing. Consider
all caps for SIGNED or POSTPAID or some other feature you want to emphasize.
3) Accurately
describe the books condition and do so without abbreviations.
4) Sell the book. Why is this book worth the money?
Tell the buyer something about the book, even if its
as simple as collection of short fiction from Hugo Award-winning author. A phrase like this does two things for the buyer. One, it suggests the author isnt just some
hack, and two, it suggests the seller might be a professional who knows his Edgars from
his Hugos.
5) Consider the audience
as you write your ad copy.
Is this a serious religious treatise? Keep your tone serious. Is it a vintage pulp crime novel? Have a little
fun. I sold an Erle Stanley Gardner mystery
and commented that the dust jacket was in almost as good a shape as the dame on the cover. Did that sell the book for me? I dont know.
Did it make my copy more memorable? Definitely.
6) Appeal to emotion. The love of books is rarely rational and
scientific, so dont be afraid to comment on the emotional aspects, be it the beauty
of the binding or the passion of the prose.
7) Watch your verbiage. Keep your ads snappy and write tight. Use the active voice. Use active, descriptive words. Avoid clichs.
There are a thousand books that can help you improve your writing, probably some in your
own inventory.
8) Read others ads. No, not to steal their copy, but to see what
works. When youre scanning a list of
books, consider what stands out, which ads catch your eye.
Those dealers are doing something right.
Book descriptions in an Internet database are
the most visible aspect a booksellers businesses to most buyers. More people will see your book descriptions than
will ever see your business cards, store fronts or traditional ads. Make sure your descriptions represent you well,
leave a good impression and sell your books.
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