Comp Titles: The Author's Most Misused Marketing Tool Comp titles are the most powerful positioning tool an indie author has. They're also the one most authors get completely wrong. A comp title tells a reader, a retailer, and an algorithm: "If you liked that, you'll like this." It's a shortcut that bypasses the need to explain your entire book. Done right, a comp title does more marketing work than a blurb. Done wrong, it makes you invisible at best and actively misleading at worst. The Three Ways Authors Get Comps Wrong Using titles that are too big. "It's like Harry Potter but for adults" is not a comp. It's a wish. Harry Potter is one of the best-selling series in publishing history. Comparing yourself to it doesn't tell a reader where to shelve you. It tells a retailer you don't understand the market. Comps work by setting specific expectations. A title that big sets expectations no debut or mid-list author can meet. Using titles that are too old. Comp titles have a shelf life. Most industry guidance puts it at three to five years for a useful comp. If your target reader discovered your comp title in college and graduated a decade ago, that comp is pointing at a version of the market that no longer exists. Readers change. Genres evolve. A 2012 comp in a 2025 pitch is a red flag. Using titles from the wrong market position. A traditionally published bestseller and an indie series with 40,000 Kindle Unlimited page reads per month are in different market positions even if they share a genre. Comping up too far creates a mismatch between the expectation you set and the experience you deliver. What a Good Comp Does A good comp title answers three questions simultaneously: Who reads this? Where does it live on the shelf? What feeling does it deliver? The best comp pairs are one slightly bigger title for brand recognition and one peer-level title for precise positioning. Something a reader would recognize, and something a reader in that community is actively talking about right now.