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Jun 2018

I would say the first thing you need to do is launch with enough content that the readers that come by have something to actually look at and get interested in. I'm fine with one page updates over all, but at the very beginning, you need the extra oomph to hook 'em.

Otherwise it's kinda the same stuff you always need. A good icon/thumbnail to grab attention, a well written description to help them decide if your story interests them.

And then naturally I followed that up with some relevant promotion, but I don't actually do much of that.

I peruse different sections at random, but I find a number of series through stalking through other peoples reading lists. :smile:

I started off by joining Tapas because my close friend joined. I already had someone with a decent subscriber count that I could depend on to help trade subscribers with.

On another note, I am already established on other platforms prior to Tapas, such as on Deviantart, Twitter, and so forth.

After that, you tend to just get subs more easily when you continue making more series as a single creator.

by launching
there is no secret formula launch your comic and pray for the best =|
if you got great art you already have a good first impression
art catches the eye more than any story can sadly -_-

The best advice about making a good impression in a launch is: do your best! Don't "save" for later you best cover, drawing, pages. This is it, people don't usually give you a second chance because there are too many other comics.

:cry: So, here is the sad story of my launch: My fisrt pages had a very unattractive written introduction, of course it scared many potential readers and thanks to feedback I redraw it and looks way better. I wish I had known that.

You are right about the "fresh" section, it is useless to get viewers, you get kicked out from there in less than 10 minutes, because many others are updating their comics too. Unless you get featured there is no other way to get readers than promote your comic and have beautiful art. (I whish I could say have a good story as well, but being realistic many readers chose visuals over story)

I moved from DeviantArt to Tapas when I started, so I had about 30 pages already made. What I did was posting a page every day until I was caught up. It gave me a pretty good start. I didn't know about the Fresh section at the time, but I think being in the fresh section every day for a month might have helped?

Also, do your utmost to ensure that the quality of all your work is of high standards. That means great content, amazing artwork (comic) and near-perfect or perfect grammar.

These are crucial in gaining and maintaining an audience. If you examine the most successful comics/ novels on this platform, most have all these elements.

That's not to say that there aren't amazing works that get ignored all the time. It happens due to the large volume of creators.

Apart from Tapas, you can join internet forums or social media groups where people are interested in content similar to yours and direct them to your page.

That's just my opinion. Keep up the good work JimComics.

First of all, thanks so much for the great insights everyone, it's exactly what I wanted to hear. I did want to clarify again, I'm not asking how to get subs and likes, I'm asking how to get initial views. You can have the highest quality art and story in existence that means nothing if it never gets seen.

Can I ask how your first initial readers came? What I'm hearing from this thread is mostly what I suspected. Very very few people get subscribers on Tapas from Tapas unless they are featured. That's fine, but it's important to understand when coming up with a plan to promote!

Hello, reader here! For me the biggest thing that determines whether I subscribe would be the art, if I like it I'll be more willing to subscribe to it, so I think it's important to have a nice cover for the comic/novel. Even when I do like the art, I don't usually subscribe if the story only has one chapter out. Also having a good summary. I'm not sure if some comics want to have a sense of mystery or something, but having a 2 sentence vague summary doesn't really let me know if it will be something I like.
This isn't as important, but big grammar and spelling mistakes tend to put me off, especially if I can't understand what the characters are saying. Another thing that would keep me away from your comic is if you promote it under someone else's comic. I think it's kinda rude to go to someone's comic only to leave a "check out my comic/novel" comment. I'm ok with author's posting it on my wall (as a public or private msg) as long as they're being polite about it.

How I ended up finding/noticing comic:
- from the home page: popular (this was before premium comics happened and took over the popular
section), trending, note-worthy comics
- if the author(s) is friends with an author I am currently subscribed to
- guest comics/collaboration projects (ex. the christmas collaboration)
- fan art
- daily snack on the Tapas app
- from the reading list of creators I'm subbed to/people I notice to have subbed to series I had subbed to
- "thank you for subscribing" thing on people's walls
- an interesting commentor with a nice profile picture

There was one author that started off with making really funny replies to the "thank you for subscribing" things, I ended up kinda "stalking" their wall until they decided to make a comic.

I believe most of my audience initially came from the fresh section, and over time their interaction occasionally gets me into trending, and I believe more recently the low end of the popular section for my genre at times. To my knowledge I’ve never been featured.

Secret to the fresh section is a really great thumbnail. That’s the first thing people see, and if the art is appealing and stands out, they click. If your comic/novel then looks good you have a chance of retention. Fresh section is not worthless.

The growth can be pretty slow though, so pairing it with promotions is your best bet!

Yes, when you are a small creator (and you don't get featured) you get most subscribers when you launch...and then you are buried for the eternity in Tapas basement (jajaja XD). You are in the fresh section and some readers/creators only check out what is completely new. I don't really know how readers know that you are new because you are way more visible than when you just update your comic. When you update you don't get nearly as much activity than when you create a brand new comic (algorithm maybe). My subs came from the launch, then I had no activity whatsoever until I promoted myself. I wish there was some strategy here...but what we say is true...your initial views come from being "new" and people will only visit if they see a good avatar and good art. So, be sure you are giving them your best. XD.

OMG a reader in the forum :heart_eyes: I thought your kind didn't exist, that were were all creators subscribing to each other. Here, have a cookie :cookie: my kind exists to please yours. :laughing:

Joking aside thank you so much for the insight, I never thought about our profile picture as a part of "promotion" or being a point of interest. Is good to hear from non-creators! (note:readers are real and they are out there, gotta build a reader-catcher-net)

Hahaha thanks for the cookie! :yum: I express my thanks to your kind for creating comics to satisfy my boredom.

I'm glad my comment was helpful somehow :relaxed:

The way I see it, the only way to make a "bad" impression is to not show that you love your work.

If you show that you're excited and into what you're doing people are gonna dig your passion. You're also gonna find that you work harder on it as well - it has an effect on you as well as the audience.

It's all about presenting stuff with excitement and personality - I'm less likely to read something that says "a crappy webcomic about such-and-such" in the description. If the creator is able to create confident banners and description then I'm way more likely to give it a chance because the creator is showing that they care about what they're making. Nobody wants to read something that's passionless and aimless.

I literally just launched today, and I don't know what merits a good first impression, but i feel happy with how today went. I do know I had to pretty much go for it. I also hyped my other social media (twitter, insta and tumblr) with the cover I made for my first episode for several days leading up to today, which I put a lot of effort into to make it eye catching. I feel the most important step is literally just to do it. Do it for yourself if nothing else, because you're never going to improve if you don't at least take the first step (imo the scariest part)

honestly...the comic may be good looking, but if i start reading and it looks and sounds like a movie script with texts describing what the characters are making (*glazes, *waves *turns, you know what i'm saying) and using zero panel to panel storytelling, i drop it imediatelly

Yeah, I think the best you can do is just launch your comic and hope for the best. Either it catches fire, or you'll get a small group of dedicated readers who will carry you across the finish line in a few years. Just make the best comic humanly possible. You'll get fans regardless, because there's SOMEBODY out there who is going to like what you're doing.

My thoughts exactly. It seems that people who start off really, really well, know how to pitch their content to the max. This means an extra long first episode, dramatic trailer, full color; anything to get past basic/boring introductions in one sitting and leave off with a decent cliffhanger. It's all about first impressions.

Wish I did that with my series. x'D

You live and learn. Most of us wish we could go back and redo the beginnings. BUT, now you have valuable knowledge for starting a future project. It's just the nature of web comics and the process of learning and growing over time. :heart:

10 days later
4 months later

I'm going to write this from a reader's point of view.

I'm scrolling through Tapas and see an amazing and intriguing thumbnail. I click on it and start reading. The story is well thought out and obviously checked, and it has amazing vocabulary.
That's what would catch my eye.