the cover is the marketing
You hired an artist friend to make something pretty. Your cover sold 11 copies.
Pretty doesn't sell. A cover is a 1.5-second pitch that promises the reader exactly which shelf this book lives on. We unpack genre cues, scale, and the brutal thumbnail test that decides whether anyone clicks. None of this is about taste. All of it is about category fluency. Your favorite cover designer is fluent in genre signals the way a doctor is fluent in symptoms. Yours doesn't have to be, but if you skip the fluency, you skip the sales.
Genre signals · what each visual promises
| Visual | Genre signal |
|---|---|
| Bold typography over single image | Thriller / mystery |
| Soft hand-lettered title | Literary / book club |
| Embracing silhouettes | Romance |
| Dark muted palette + serif | Horror / gothic |
| Bright illustrated character | Cozy / contemporary romance |
| Minimalist clean serif | Literary fiction |
The thumbnail test (run before you commit)
- Shrink your cover to 200 pixels wide.
- Show it to 5 people who read your genre.
- Ask: 'What's this book about?' Don't help.
- If they guess wrong, your cover is lying.
- Redesign until 4 of 5 guess correctly.
A pretty cover that lies about its genre sells fewer copies than an ugly cover that tells the truth. The shelf doesn't reward beauty. It rewards fluency.
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
From the Maven Catalog
- Master Course — Cover That Sells
- eBook — Genre Cues 101
- Toolkit — Cover Audit Toolkit
- Planner — Cover Production Planner
Run the thumbnail test. Redesign for fluency. The cover that tells the truth about the book sells the book. Pretty is a bonus, not a strategy.