Simple Tips for Creating a Good Book Poster

Written by Laura Hickey


Posters can be a great and inexpensive way to promote your book. But don't rush right out until you knowrepparttar key items to include on your poster.

The Title and Author's name

Make sure to have a bigger font thanrepparttar 128484 rest of your poster to bring attention torepparttar 128485 title and author ofrepparttar 128486 book. This may berepparttar 128487 only aspect ofrepparttar 128488 poster they remember.

ISBN, Where to Purchase, Price, Pages and Cover

Be up front with where customers can purchase your book. Includingrepparttar 128489 ISBN number can also help with searching for your book on line. Many times a customer will look forrepparttar 128490 price and become annoyed at having to search for it and how many pagesrepparttar 128491 book contains. When having your book cover on your poster, you want it to be as clear and sharp as possible.

The Facts

Be straight forward on what your book is about. Mystery may entice a reader, but clear facts are more likely to progress to a sell if your content is whatrepparttar 128492 customer is looking for.

Are Creative Stereotypes Holding You Back?

Written by Michele Pariza Wacek


Here's a quick quiz:

1) When I see a see a sunrise, I'm moved to: A. Compose a poem. B. Try and capturerepparttar beauty with my paints and brush. C. Stumble drunkenly into bed -- boy that party was a lot of fun. D. Cover my face with my pillow and go back to sleep. Who in their right mind gets up early enough to look at sunrises?

2) At work, I'mrepparttar 128483 person my coworkers go to when they need someone to: A. Think up a new theme forrepparttar 128484 office party (especially if they want it to be a bit wild and offrepparttar 128485 wall). B. Get people excited forrepparttar 128486 party. C. Organizerepparttar 128487 party. D. Clean up afterrepparttar 128488 party.

3) In school, I was considered one of the: A. Brains. B. Jocks. C. Nerds. D. Nothing. I was kicked out my sophomore year.

Now take this test again and write down what you think a creative person would choose as his or her answer.

Scoring: Well, there's no real scoring here. The point is to get you thinking about creativity and stereotypes.

In another creativity article I wrote, "Quiz: Are Your Creative?", I pointed out thatrepparttar 128489 biggest difference between creative people and those who aren't is creative people believe they're creative and uncreative people believe they aren't.

But, it's one thing to say it and something completely different to live it.

I believe one ofrepparttar 128490 things that prevent people from fully realizing their creative potential isrepparttar 128491 idea of stereotypes. They think they cannot be creative because they don't look, act, live, etc., a certain way. And, unfortunately, that belief can become so powerful it truly does cripple their creativity.

Let's take a closer look at these three stereotypes.

1) When I see a sunrise…

You can still be a creative person and not be moved to paint a sunrise or write a poem about it. Everyone is different and everyone draws their creativity from different things. Me, you couldn't catch me anywhere near a sunrise without an IV drip of coffee in my arm. And even if that did happen, I'd be lucky if I could reachrepparttar 128492 creativity level of a turnip.

The point is every muse is different and every muse dances to a different drum (or maybe it's not even a drum, maybe it's a French horn.) Sunrises make you yawn? So what? Find what gets your muse dancing and go with it.

2) At work…

You don't have to act like a Bohemian to be creative. In fact, that image of a black-clad, beret-wearing, long-cigarette-smoking Artiste has beenrepparttar 128493 bane of many would-be artists. I can't tell you how many people I've run into who don't have time to BE creative because they're too busy trying to LOOK creative.

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