Be careful what
you make permanent. Working titles are dangerous. They can become too familiar
to us while being misleading or meaningless to potential customers.
Choices, a Teen Woman's Journal for Self-awareness and Personal Planning
was a hot seller and spawned a publishing company as a subsidiary for the Girls
Club of Santa Barbara. The company thrived but soon found that Choices could
not be used in schools unless there was a version for the boys. So the authors,
Mindy Bingham, Sandy Stryker and Judy Edmonson, wrote a matching masculine
edition.
Working titles ranged from Choices II, to Choices Too, and
even Son of Choices. What sounded ridiculous or humorous in the beginning
became familiar and sounded fairly good.
Finally the three female
authors settled on Changes but found that men did not like the proposed title.
After discussions with a number of men (including Mindy's father), they agreed
to change the title to Challenges, a Teen Man's Journal for Self-awareness and
Personal Planning. The female authors discovered that while many women want a
change, most men do not like change. Men prefer challenges.
http://www.academicinnovations.com The title must be
easy to remember and easy to say. It has to grab the attention of the potential
buyer and it must project an image the buyer can relate to. Authors and
publishers often argue over titles. Authors may be closer to the subject matter
and publishers may be closer to the buyers.
Authors, as a rule, are
poor judges of titles and often go for the cute or clever rather than the
practical. ~ Nat Bodian, The Joy of Publishing
So far Choices has sold
over one million copies and Challenges over a half million. They are used
side-by-side in many schools. A "working title" is for the manuscript, not
necessarily for the book.
Dan Poynter has written more than 100
books since 1969 including Writing Nonfiction and The Self-Publishing Manual.
He is past-chair of NSA's Writer-Publisher PEG and the founder of the PEG
newsletter. For more help on book writing, publishing and promoting, see
http://ParaPublishing.com.
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