The title tends to be there to grab your attention while the subtitle conveys what the book is actually about.
Also look to the cover art for more clues.
Take this book as an example.
Catchy title, but doesn’t tell us much.
Subtitle tells us it’s about how to stop overworking & doing too much & how to start living more.
Great cover art. We all know sloths move slowly so we can assume this book is about slowing down in life.
2/ Examine The Author
Look for signals of credible (Dr., Professor, NYT Bestseller, or something else).
In the book above, we see the author has previously written a national bestseller. Although her current book may not be a bestseller, it shows she’s written books before.
2/ (continued)
You can also open up the back cover to read more about the author.
Here we learn she’s an award winning journalist, works at PBS, and has had a successful career in radio.
3/ Review The Book’s Testimonials
When it comes to testimonials, you want to make sure the sources are credible (like other authors or successful individuals).
It’s also better if the testimonials say that the BOOK is great, not just the person.
3/ (continued)
Be a bit skeptical of books that say “Author X is a brilliant individual.”
You want them to say “Author X has written a brilliant book.”
Some people give testimonials without reading the book so they praise the person instead of vouchIng for the book itself.
Over the past few years I've listened to 100+ different podcast shows.
Here are 10 of the most valuable podcasts I've found:
(plus a must-listen episode from each one)
1) The Game by @AlexHormozi
Alex is one of the greatest marketers and salesmen of our time. He shares tons of advice on growing a business from $0 to $100M and how he's growing his company from $100M to $1+ billion.
A must-listen episode:
2) My First Million by @thesamparr & @ShaanVP
Learn about business and get business ideas from two incredibly smart (and funny) entrepreneurs who have built & sold multi-million dollar businesses.