Book trailers can be a great teaser for your book. Necessary?
No. Fun? Yes!
Video watching continues to rise. 300 hours of video are uploaded
to YouTube every minute and almost 5 billion videos are watched on YouTube
every single day. Here are more mind
blowing YouTube
facts.
Last year I created my first book trailer for book one in my
Lightning Road series. Trailers can run
you from do-it-yourself bare bones price to thousands of dollars. I set a
budget of $500 and came in around $400, all-inclusive. Most importantly, I
wanted a trailer that had quality even within a small budget. What do you think?
I originally thought in creating this trailer that I could (ahem, meaning my techie husband
could) create my trailer in a movie making program. But we had a learning curve
and the clock was ticking with the book release, so I decided to create what I
could and enlist a designer/editor to put all the elements together. It worked out great! I had control of content
and design and she put it all together with tech glitz.
With book two in my series releasing August 30th, Joshua and
the Arrow Realm, I decided to re-visit the same process but go a step further with
promotion and have a book trailer reveal. You can signup here for my book trailer reveal with giveaway on August 15th. But first,
let’s talk creating.
WHAT I LEARNED ... TIPS TO CREATE:
Write a script and make it brief. Under two minutes. Read it
out loud. Some experts say even less than one minute. View two well done examples here of
a shortbook trailer and here,
and an example of a longer book trailer.
To see great book trailers done on small budgets by two of my friends,
check out the booktrailer for Kathryn Craft and the
book trailer for Kit Grindstaff.
Thrill viewers in the first few seconds.
Introduce the main character and setting and focus on their
problem or goal by creating a series of scenes that quickly show the story
without summarizing it.
End with a cliffhanger. Don’t give away the ending!
Script it with the theme of the book in mind. Time each
slide with the copy and music. My trailer for Joshua and the Lightning Road is 100 words.
Think of how to show the story while keeping excitement levels high. Less is
generally more.
On a budget? Simpler can be better. In Joshua and the
Lightning Road trailer I used one video and one song. My editor added in a few
other animated elements.
Purchase affordable video clips and music (or find for free.
See resources below) to incorporate after you’ve scripted. Keep in mind the approximate
length of your trailer before purchasing any clips.
Practice reading the script
aloud with the music, allowing a few seconds for each slide. Purchasing a
longer music track is fine as you can use what portions fit the trailer best.
Include your book cover, blurbs, and publication information at the end of the trailer.
Bottom line: go for simple and classy vs. complicated and
cheesy.
RESOURCES:
Music I use: 300Monks.
Can search by genre, mood, or setting. Most under $50.
For free music check out Free StockMusic.
Video/photos I use: iStock. For my recent trailer in production now, I purchased 3 video clips from Essentials Videos (lowest priced). The Signature Videos are more expensive. Total was $170 in credits purchased but I found a 20% off coupon and it cost me $136.
Other resources: ThinkStock, VideoBlocks, and Fotolia. For free photos search Unsplash and Gratisography.
Can search by genre, mood, or setting. Most under $50.
For free music check out Free StockMusic.
Video/photos I use: iStock. For my recent trailer in production now, I purchased 3 video clips from Essentials Videos (lowest priced). The Signature Videos are more expensive. Total was $170 in credits purchased but I found a 20% off coupon and it cost me $136.
Other resources: ThinkStock, VideoBlocks, and Fotolia. For free photos search Unsplash and Gratisography.
Editor/designer hired: Depends on time involved. It pays to have all
of your elements, copy, and vision prepared before working with an editor as more
revisions can mean higher cost unless you agree on a set amount. Feeling techie?
Than try a movie making program like
iMovie or watch a tutorial on Windows Movie Maker. Or tryFiverr!
Here is a great Pinterest board
with 1,000 book trailer ideas and tips. Check outfour well done book trailers that are professionally done but provide great
examples of what works well in a book trailer as far as timing, suspense, and
music.
I highly recommend my designer, AmandaFroehlich. She also created my bookmarks, business cards, and poster!
PROMOTION TIPS:
Host an onlinebook trailer reveal. Ask bloggers to participate in revealing your book
trailer on the same day. Include an excerpt and a Rafflecopter giveaway
(participants can gain more entries by following you on social media. Extra
bonus for you!). Here's an example of a giveaway in my book trailer reveal. All products I already have on hand for many uses, except for the gift card. See what you have on hand already of value to include!:
Upload your book trailer to Vimeo and YouTube (it’s the #2
search engine in the world because Google owns it. Yup, that’s the world’s #1
search engine).
Link your trailer in these places:
Website home page (having it embedded on your home page boosts your SEO which increases searchability for your website)
Thunderclap campaign (see example of mine)
LinkedIn Profile
Twitter profile
Amazon author page
Email signature
Instagram
Other social media!
Website home page (having it embedded on your home page boosts your SEO which increases searchability for your website)
Thunderclap campaign (see example of mine)
LinkedIn Profile
Twitter profile
Amazon author page
Email signature
Other social media!
Promote your trailer in your social media outlets, author
newsletter, and on your blog.
Play your trailer at book events and school visits, if a
children’s author. From my experience, including your trailer in your
presentation is a BIG draw at school visits and inspires students and
librarians to purchase your book. Tip: request that the teachers/librarians
coordinating the school visit play your trailer before your visit to introduce your book to them and get them
excited about it!
Research video distribution services. I haven’t used them
but hereis an article reviewing services, some free and some paid. Here’s one
company, COS Productions, that
focuses on book trailer production and you can purchase video distribution separately
if you create your own trailer.
Video has longevity. I still get mileage out of my trailer at school visits, re-posting on social media, and at book events.
Have fun!
And don’t forget, if you have a blog, I'd love for you to signup to be part of my trailer reveal for Joshua and the Arrow Realm on August
15th!
There is so much more to know about making book trailers and
promotion out there. Authors and designers, share your tips here! Readers, what do you like in a book trailer? Share a favorite!