WHAT NO ONE TELLS YOU:
TIP 1 – KEEP IT SIMPLE:
When new writers think about a book cover, they tend to want to tell the whole story on the cover. I still have this problem myself! This often turns out to be a block to great design. The main mission of a great cover is to tell the reader WHO the book is about, WHERE the story will take place, and WHAT the story is about. Here are some examples:
- Vampire – Modern Day New York City – Vampire hunters
- Gaslighting – Mansion and/or Hospital setting – Psychological Mystery
- Crime Mystery – 18th Century – Who Done it
- Cold case murder – Modern Day investigation – Secrets revealed
The purpose of the cover is to lure in readers who already read in your genre or find something about your cover that triggers their interest and they decide to give your book a try.
(Video of best seller lists showing which books catch the eye)
TIP 2 – COVER SIZE MATTERS:
When a person holds your book in their hand, they will be able to see every detail on the cover. If they look at the cover after reading your book, they may see many things that foreshadowed the story. However, if there is too much going on on the book cover, when the size of the cover is reduced into the size millions of readers see the cover — during a scroll at Amazon.com — then all of that same foreshadowing and complex design is being seen at a size where not much besides the color scheme and the title — if you’re lucky — can be seen.
Show the different sizes that people will see your books in. Point out how simple design is often more effective.
TIP 3 – THERE’S FANCY AND THEN THERE’S TOO FANCY:
The sci-fi and fantasy realm is an area where the covers can quite elaborate, very fancy, so to speak. Elaborate embossed titles, with dark backgrounds, smoke of glowing light, a sole figure who is reduced in order to get all the fancy background in, etc. In my humble opinion, there is such a thing as being too fancy.
It is possible to keep things simple even in the sci-fi and fantasy genres. Famous authors sell books to an already-established readership, so they can have book covers that are barely readable. They won’t sell one less book. However, if you are new and self-published, you will be relying more heavily on appealing to the tastes of book scrollers. eBook shoppers are not browsers who will see your book up close in a bookstore. They are Amazon scrollers which is a completely different experience.
This is a genre that sometimes less is more. Before you settle on a design, create the cover into the size that will be seen in the different scrolls on Amazon that I’ll demonstrate below. Make sure you can read the cover title, author title, and that the genre is clear. Those are the basics.
TIP 4 – NO DESIGN IDEAS? HERE’S A REMEDY:
If you have no creative talent in the area of graphic design, here is a tip that will help you. First and foremost, find the subgenre you will be choosing. Below are examples of sub-genres and how far they are from the top genre selection. This sub-genre is your reader pond. This is where you initial readers will be swimming and scrolling.
Pull up the Best Seller pages in that subgenre and record the amazon link address to that very page. Then go to fiverr.com and find the brand new cover designers, the ones who are really looking to establish themselves and they are willing to make a cover for $5 or $10. Hire three of them and give them the link to the best seller list with a brief synopsis of what your book is about. That’s all the information you should give them.
When they all deliver an eBook, this should give you at least a direction to go in. This is usually enough to give even a non-creative person an area to go in. Then once you are ready to have a real cover done, you can hire a book cover designer with more experience, either from a recommendation from a self-publishing group or by looking at all the portfolios at Fiverr.com.
TIP 5 – THE LAST AND MAYBE THE BIGGEST TIP:
Don’t use white as a background for your book. It creates problems with Amazon. First of all, Amazon wants you to put a border of a light gray onto your book cover which most beginners don’t think about until after their purchase. But it gets washed out against the white background at Amazon.
If you need a whitish cover for some unknown reason, choose a different white color so at least there is a difference between Amazon and your cover.







