Echoes are not fine: what you want to avoid are
“twice told tales” of repeating uncommon words too closely or
saying the same thing more than once. Word count
matters!
Sentence construction is also important. You
want your blurb to be a rollercoaster, not a pub crawl. People
shouldn’t “self-pace” when reading your blurb. You want to grab
them from the first line and propel them forward. You do this by
mixing short and long sentences and transition words like “and,
but, while, so.” Also, each sentence should contain up to one
comma. Two commas is too long, and it probably means you’re
stuffing too much info into a sentence.
Finish strong... always put key words and
phrases at the ends of sentences and the ends of paragraphs. “But
when she finds a corpse in the bathroom, she wonders if she might
stay a while in town.” vs. “But her visit might extend a few days
when she finds a fresh corpse in the shower.” This is part of the
rollercoaster, always propelling people forward.
CTA
goes at the very end... Have you ever received a long email with a
question buried halfway in the text, then you get to the end and
forget the question? Tell your audience what to do, then back out
like George Costanza. Don’t give them a CTA then dilute it with
reader reviews or a list of the books in the series.
Tune in next week to hear the final four lessons!
About the Podcast
A podcast for authors who want to improve their copywriting skills and create better book descriptions. Hosted by author Jim Heskett and copywriting expert Abigail Dunard.