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Aug 2018

Hey guys, so does a blog still help for webcomic artist to promote their work?

I mean, these days people mostly use their smartphones and there are a lot of social media which may be moe practical in this matter.

If you think blog still helps, what kind of posts do you think a webcomic artist can publish in a blog to make it interesting?

  • created

    Aug '18
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    Aug '18
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Personally I think no, a blog doesn't help to promote. Of course as more online presence you have bigger are the chances to be found by potential readers, but if you want to promote and find readers there are more efficient ways to use your time other than managing a blog.
On the other hand, a blog could help to engage with people that are already following you and, in the long run, also bring you new readers. Some examples of what could be posted are works in progress, Q&A or interviews, behind the scenes, character descriptions and general lore of your comic. Another interesting posts could be things like tutorials or reviews (of materials, tools, software, etc) but these, more than your readers, would be targeted to fellow artists.

That's true. I always have this underlying doubt making blog for my comic but can't really tell why. You word it well. However like you also said there might be little promotion happen in the long run. Thanks for your response!

If you have the time and energy to maintain a blog, you'd be better off making a Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr or Patreon. If you're organized with your tagging it's a lot easier for people to find you than with a traditional blog. Easier to connect with other creators that way, too.

I agree with some of the previous answers - rather than making a regular blog try an insta page or a tumblr blog. As far as promotion goes they're way better because people will stumble on your work more easily. I find that posting my work on tumblr brings in a lot of attention.
The best thing for you to do would be to find some existing blogs and accounts that are dedicated to comics/webfiction and get them to share your promotional posts. There are plenty of them around so do some searching. Promote, promote, promote!

@Croik @wumblebumarts thank you guys for your insight! I have a tumblr with 5k followers but doesn’t seem to bring in traffic to my comic. It’s maybe just the way I am using it. Also, Tumblr is banned in my country so kinda a hassle. Probably stick with Insta and Twitter, tho start using Tumblr again sound more promising now.

I don't think a blog helps - unless you're really good at writing engaging blog content. Find what content you are good at creating and focus on that be the best you can be. I personally advise against spreading yourself too thin. Peace.

With Kaiwang868 on this. If you asked because you genuinely enjoy blogging, it wouldn't hurt to try. If it's only considered for the sake of promotion, best avoid something you'll hate doing later on. Some people have YT channels about their series where as for others, maintaining such a thing is a nightmare.

i get about +300 views per update (on the comic as a whole, not the new episodes) through my tumblr blog promotion but thats about it. luckily my art blog has about 4k followers so i get some traction through there. my comic blog is mostly just update posts but i also put promotional art there.

i think a blog is helpful in a different way

jane doe isnt gonna see you blog where you talk about your process and art things youve been up to and decide - from that - to read your webcomic. i mean, some might, the really nerd ones, but most wont.

i think a blog is more useful if youre going for employment. or at least, thats why were told to make one in college. if the person considering you for some art job is looking over your online presence and they find a blog where you talk abt how you figured out how to do whatever in photoshop, your experiments with a new medium, stuff like that, it could get them a better insight into who you are as a creator that makes them more inclined to hire you.

that said, i dont think theyre anywhere near essential. defo not the first port of call for promotion