Book Video TrailersBook video trailers are among the latest trends in book selling. Film previews have worked for years in helping to promote films, and book videos can do the same, capturing the attention of the Internet audience and people who are more visual and auditory in their thinking. By focusing on the images, narration, and music, authors can create an effective multimedia marketing piece in their book videos. Like a film preview, a book video trailer can effectively help you to sell books. The use of effective images, narration, and music can create a sensory impact beyond the mere written word. Think of a book video as similar to an elevator pitch but on a multimedia level. Readers are always curious about authors, and your video can provide a more intimate experience for readers so they feel “up close and personal” with the author and invited to read the book. Following are some tips to help you make the three key components of your video—the narration, images, and music—effective so they will resonate with your audience, and in turn, result in book sales. Narration In general, you want your video to cater to the short attention span of people on the Internet, so keep it to about two minutes. You will want to have a script for the video that is short and focuses on the book’s highlights—that may be your back cover copy, but you will also want it to match up with the images you will use. As you write the script for your video, think like a screenwriter and envision the images that will go with the words. You might want to map it out like it was a children’s picture book, with an image or two to match each sentence. You also want to keep the pace moving, the images changing, so that none stay on screen more than a few seconds, and so they can fade and zoom in and out so your video does not look solely like a slideshow or power point presentation. Your text should be timed to match the image changes and be relevant to those changes. Combine the written word with the spoken word. Your viewers want to see photos and illustrations, not text, but you can put a few words on the screen to illustrate your point or emphasize what is important. For example, you can ask a simple question like “What defines happiness?” or flash words that will segue into new parts of the video like, “A relationship broken apart,” “Brother against brother” or even single words like “Hope, Fear, Racist, Turmoil, War, or Betrayal.” Make sure your text remains on screen long enough for people to read it, but not so long that they get bored looking at it; timing will depend on the number of words and the expected reading level of your audience. In writing your script, you don’t have to tell everything. You just have to entice the reader to buy the book. Make sure the words you use are:
At the video’s end, be sure to tell readers your website address and have it written on screen so they know where to buy the book. Remember to leave room for pauses as well as time to keep an image on the screen long enough for it to make an impact before moving onto the next image. Timing is everything, and rather than overloading your viewers with language, restrict yourself to a few powerful and concise words. Images You will probably want somewhere around twenty different images, allowing for five seconds or so each on the screen. Don’t forget your book cover as an image as well as a photo of yourself as an author. Remember that the images will be viewed on a relatively small screen—on YouTube, the screen, unless enlarged, is about the size of an index card—3x5 inches, so find images that aren’t too detailed. You may want to crop your photos so you can focus solely on the most significant part of the image so you get the full effect. Music Making a video can be challenging, and unless you are super technically savvy and have good recording equipment, it will probably be in your best interest to hire a professional to put your video together for you. That doesn’t mean, however, you can’t be involved in the process. You can share your vision, write a draft of the script, provide images, and you may even choose to be the voice for your own video. Before you begin your video, be sure to watch other book videos to decide what is effective in them—what do you like, and what don’t you like about the videos? Would you want to buy the book based on the video? Do a little research and put time and thought into the concept for your video. Your readers will want to get the book they paid for, so make sure your video accurately represents your book’s content while making that content so intriguing, interesting, and appealing that you will turn viewers into readers. Irene Watson
|