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Sep 2018

This is a little rant, about views and subs.
The big question. Is the reason I'm no getting a lot of subs or views is, my creation or that I don't reach a lot of people?
That question is always on my mind, and if I don't have a metric to analyze you can't do any thing about it.
You can ask people what they think of your art, but it won't reflect your potential readers.
It's like the elections survey, (they ask a small random percentage of the voting society about who they think should win.
If a certain survey asked random people which by chance belong to the same party, than they most like say the same person, boom is the leading the polls.) we need a way to see if your creation got the views but no subs, so we could knew what to change or adapt.

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    Sep '18
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    Sep '18
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a link would help us decide! it's hard to judge a comic we cannot get to easy.

I find it very hard to navigate, especially on the Tapas app, so I miss out on a lot of good comics, which I don't want to.

I'm not sure if it's just me, but I see a lot of paid comics at the very top, and even I have difficulties in finding my own comic, even when I sort it by genre.

I'm also not getting any views besides the day I upload a new episode, there are days that I get 1~9 viewers, but new subbers is pretty rare to get nowadays. I get about 1~2 subs after I update, but a few more unsubbed it everytime it happens. So I'm stuck to the same number of subs since May of this year

Try this: go on Tapas and try to find your comic without typing the title into search. If you just updated, you might appear in Fresh for a few minutes before other updates push you off that page. Try searching generic keywords someone might use when looking for something new. Look at the first page of each of the genre sections. If your comic doesn't easily appear using any of those methods, at least half the problem is that you're so far removed from basic site traffic that people just aren't finding it at all.

So to combat this you can make sure your icon is as eye-catching as possible. You can add tags to increase searchability. And you can improve your comic so that every update encourages people to like. Even if your subs are low, you can get into trending if the ratio of views to likes/subs is high enough. So pay attention to which updates are getting the most likes, it might tell you what your audience is motivated to click for.

Of course there's also advertising off site, but that's a whole other topic and a lot of work in itself.

Do you have any idea how the search works? I turn up really far back on search with a few really relevant keywords but I have no idea how it sorts results out. A lot of comics that have been inactive for years show up in the search first so I don't think anyone will look that far.

Uh, isn't that what the Series Performance stats are for? You can see how many views, subs and likes you get by time and by chapter.

Anyway, just because your series isn't getting a lot of likes or subs doesn't necessarily mean you need to change your methods. After all, not everyone who is good is popular, and vice versa.

Honestly I have no idea either. If I do a search for 1930s my comic shows up 4th. But it's clearly not organized by subs, or views, or first update date, or latest update date, or any obvious sorting method. So the key might be finding keywords that are searchable but also specific enough that you're not buried under pages of updates.

But the problem is exposure. you can promote your ass off on every social media known to man, but with out some metrics you don't know if you got the word out. unless you have data about you comics you don't know how your comics is fairing.

The only way I ever get subs/views is getting on trending or if you're very lucky popular and staff picks. That way you occasionally make the front page, and it's how I've managed 50 views on my best day (as a novel) and 3-4 subs. But it really isn't easy :confused:

Which is why you check your view count after every new advertising strategy you try. Like, when I posted my novel series in a certain topic, and I checked the views on them afterward, I found that they had gone up from 0 to 3. So that showed that the advertisement worked, if only a little.

Tapas literally colors your view count numbers (green for up, red for down) and gives you a percentage of how much they've changed. Every day. I don't know what more data you want from them...