Linda K Sienkiewicz

Writing life, line by line

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I Deleted My Book Trailer Three Times — Here’s What I Learned

March 30, 2026 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

closeup of computer and hands with a cell phone with scattered sticky notes about mood, music and timing for a book trailer

What making a 50-second trailer taught me about revision:

When I set out to make a book trailer for Love and Other Incurable Ailments, I didn’t expect the hardest part would be deciding when it was finished.

A book trailer is a different kind of storytelling, since it’s built from images, rhythm, and music as much as words. For Love and Other Incurable Ailments, I worked on mine until I thought it was done. Apparently, it wasn’t because I posted it to YouTube and deleted it. Three times! The process reminded me that creative work is always evolving.

The five things I learned about making a trailer along the way:

1. Start with the emotional core, not the plot.

A book trailer isn’t a summary—it’s a visual medium that should create a feeling. Before choosing visuals, I asked: What does this book feel like? Tender? Hopeful? Funny? Mysterious? That emotional tone guided my decisions.

2. Write a short script first.

Even if the trailer is mostly visual, a script helps shape rhythm and intention. Aim for it to be concise, intentional, and centered on the heart of the story.

3. Collaboration makes it stronger.

My amazing Facebook street team (which you can still join, if you’re interested!) helped shape the script, offered feedback on timing, and gave thoughtful suggestions about text readability and the visuals that captivated them or turned them off. Their feedback helped me see what resonated and what needed refining.

4. Sound matters more than you think.

The soundtrack sets tone, and my street team made it clear what they liked and didn’t like.

5. Keep revising.

Like writing, a trailer improves through revision. I adjusted timing, trimmed the language, and refined transitions until it felt right. Then I let it sit for a few days. It’s fine to give it time to evolve. (In my case, even more time would have helped.)

The tools I used on Canva:

Here’s what the process looked:

  • I selected short video clips, or I adjusted them to 4 to 5 seconds each.
  • I added text overlays, choosing fonts that paired with the tone of the book.
  • I adjusted the timing so each clip felt intentional and paced.
  • I chose transitions between clips.
  • I experimented with text animation options (fade in, scroll, bounce, etc.) to find what felt right.
  • I chose the music last. Since the trailer includes a QR code to buy the book, I made sure to use music licensed for commercial use.

The surprising thing is that making a one-minute trailer took almost as much emotional decision-making as writing a chapter. This project also reminded me that creative work doesn’t have to be solitary. Inviting trusted readers into the process made the trailer feel like an extension of the book — not just a promotional tool.

You don’t necessarily need flash or gimmicks to make something compelling, either.

After all that revising and experimenting, here’s the final version of the trailer, and it’s just 50 seconds long! I’d love to know what you think.

My question for you is: Do book trailers influence whether you search out a novel, or do you prefer discovering books another way?


Thank you for visiting!

If the trailer resonates with you, I hope you’ll consider preordering the book!

Love and Other Incurable Ailments, is about an anxious overthinker whose fixation on a stranger pulls her straight into chaos, heartbreak, and the inconvenient unraveling of her carefully constructed life.
Find it here: Regal House Publishing | Bookshop | Amazon | Barnes and Noble

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Book Marketing & Promo, Love & Other Incurable Ailments Tagged With: book trailer, books, marketing

Book Marketing Scams: When Praise Comes with a Price

November 3, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

A hand grabbing money from a cement floor with rolled dice

The Cost of Being Seen: Fellow authors, beware the marketing scam, an approach that plays on our deepest longing to be seen, to be read, and to have our work touch someone. Praise is powerful bait, … Continue reading >>

Filed Under: Book Marketing & Promo Tagged With: fake marketing, Marketing pitch, marketing scams, publicity scams, review scams

When Social Media Hurts: Finding Balance and Protecting Your Peace

January 18, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

The danger in chasing approval Social media can be a wonderful place. It connects us to friends, readers, fellow creatives, and communities we might never have found otherwise. But it can also … Continue reading >>

Filed Under: Book Marketing & Promo, Notes on Being Human Tagged With: Facebook, instagram, online toxicity, protecting mental health online, self-worth, social media, tiktok, validation

Exploring book sales opportunities beyond bookstores

September 9, 2024 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

Literally go anywhere that books are sold: How often do you consider other places for book sales? When you travel, do you carry copies of your book? What about a sell sheet? I encourage you to … Continue reading >>

Filed Under: Book Marketing & Promo Tagged With: book marketing, book selling, sell sheets

My Big Ask

May 13, 2024 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

The importance of reviews Friends, if you've read Gordy and the Ghost Crab, my poetry book Sleepwalker, or my novel In the Context of Love, please hop over to Amazon and write a few words in a … Continue reading >>

Filed Under: Book Marketing & Promo, Books and Reviews, Notes on Being Human Tagged With: book review, book reviews, reader reviews, writing

An Author Platform

May 9, 2022 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

What good is social media? Allison K Williams is a memoirist, essayist, and travel journalist whose recent post, Writers, Stop Using Social Media (Like That) on JaneFriedman.com explained the use … Continue reading >>

Filed Under: Book Marketing & Promo Tagged With: author platform, social media

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About Linda

Author, poet, artist, cynical optimist, corgi aficionado, crafter & klutz with just enough ADHD to keep it spinning. More here.

Recent Posts

  • The five-star question that divided my book club
  • Writing the Weird: Finding Joy, Meaning, and Magic in Storytelling with Stephanie Campisi
  • What We Owe Each Other as Writers
  • I Deleted My Book Trailer Three Times — Here’s What I Learned
  • Creating Community, One Chalkboard Message at a Time
  • This Self-Checkout Queen Needs a Crown
  • Small Talk: the Social Ritual We Pretend Not to Need

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Linda K Sienkiewicz

Writing life, line by line