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If you’re old enough, you might remember when there were just two flavors of coffee—Maxwell House and Folgers. Not so anymore.

Not only has the number of large coffee distributors expanded, so have the blends and flavor choices! Hazelnut Creme, anyone? How about a dark Sumatra or Guatemalan blend? 

Why is this? Why do grocery stores show us so many options?

They’ve figured out if we have options, we’re more likely to buy one of them.

If all you see is one coffee option, it’s a yes-or-no proposition.

If you see four options, the question shifts from “Do you want coffee?” to “Which sort of coffee do you find most appealing?”

Why It’s Smart to Include Multiple Titles and Subtitles in Your Nonfiction Book Proposal

The same is true for books. When you’re submitting a book proposal, you could include just one title and subtitle on the cover page. That’s the yes-or-no proposition. I suppose if you can’t stomach the idea of any other title and subtitle, go for it.

But if you want to quadruple your chances of getting published, include three alternative titles and subtitles. (A mediating position would be to include one title but a number of alternative subtitles.)

I encourage using your top pick on the cover page and up to five alternatives on the reverse side of the cover page. You might use a simple heading like “Alternative Titles and Subtitles” and then list them out as a bulleted list.

[Tweet “How to Quadruple Your Chances of Getting Published via @ChadRAllen #askeditor #amwriting”]

When More Becomes Less

You might wonder, “If five alternatives are okay, why not ten? Why not twenty? Why not a hundred?!” I would avoid including more than five alternatives because doing so can give the impression that you don’t really know what your book is about.

That’s not good. You want to let your proposal reviewers know you do have a clear idea of what your book is, but you’re also flexible enough to see multiple ways to position your book in the marketplace. Including three to five solid title-subtitle combinations gets you there. More than that, in my opinion, is when more becomes less.

Ahmad Ossayli

How to Do It: Brainstorming Alternative Titles

Let’s say you’re writing a book on how listening can revolutionize your reader’s ability to connect with a conversation partner. And let’s say your top working title-subtitle is:

Connecting: How Active Listening Will Revolutionize Your Ability to Communicate

Fine. Now brainstorm a bunch of other titles.

As you do this, it might be helpful to imagine the multiple facets of a diamond. If you hold up a diamond to the sun and slowly turn it, you’ll see the diamond’s many different facets. But it’s still the same diamond. Your brainstormed titles will bring out different aspects of the same essential concept.

Having said that, when it comes to brainstorming alternative titles, don’t overthink it. Let your mind go, like this:

You get the idea.

Now narrow down the list to your favorites. At this point you may want to poll your audience and see which ones they like best. After going through this process, let’s say you end up with the following alternatives:

Now you need some subtitles to go with these.

How to Do It: Brainstorming Alternative Subtitles

Your original subtitle, “How Active Listening Will Revolutionize Your Ability to Communicate,” may work with all three alternative titles. That’s not the point. The point is to present to the agent or publisher multiple ways to conceive of your book idea.

Let’s give it a shot:

Do you see how these alternatives do not stray very far from the original concept? Do you also see how they bring out different nuances of the concept? That’s the goal.

When you present your book proposal reviewers with multiple ways to conceive of your book and position it in the marketplace, you’ll be dramatically improving your chances of getting published.

[Tweet “Editor @ChadRAllen says he can quadruple your chances of getting published with this simple method.”]

[reminder]Can you see how this approach can make your own book concept more attractive to a publisher?[/reminder]

12 Responses

  1. This is super helpful, Chad. I wrote down so many notes from the FFW 2018 but not sure I heard you say this one. I think I would have assumed this would be overkill and been afraid to get extra creative in my proposal. I am so thankful for you openness here!!

  2. Thanks Chad, I can vouch for this process, I have used it to get feedback on cover designs, business names as well as titles for articles and landing pages. You guys have to remember that just because you are the expert on something you are only seeing your information from your point of view. Some of the popular titles, designs or tag lines may not feed your ego but if they attract paying clients that is the ultimate goal.
    Frederick , if you have 10,000 followers your process will be much easier as you will be getting true feedback from your own tribe 🙂 . Just do it guys its simple and effective ( and profitable )

  3. What about the 10,000 email subscribers/Twitter followers? Isn’t that still the most decisive factor?

  4. Thank you for this advice! I don’t consider myself good at titles and I’ve thought about mine for a REALLY long time (like, years) but I can see the value in offering multiple titles. I think it also shows some flexibility, like you’re not so in love with your own ideas that you can’t take advice and I would want to work with someone like that.

  5. Hi, Chad. Thanks for this advice! I’m working on a book proposal for a juvenile nonfiction right now. Where would you put the list of alternative titles and subtitles in a proposal whose elements include hook, overview, manuscript info, author background, and synopsis, in that order?

  6. Wonderful, helpful ideas. Title/subtitle was the hardest part for me last time. Looking forward to snagging the perfect combination this next time around! Thanks once again, Chad!