10 / 10
Sep 2020

Well for me it was a little difficulted to really understand the general feelings the community had and what they hoped to gain on this site. I barely even pay attention to forums because I thought it would be just a bunch of people screaming at the top of their lungs about that series is the best and what not. But after joining in a some conversations, starting a couple of threads, I see that most of the people on this site have the exact same goals as I do. Getting your work out in the real world and earning the respect from that said work.

I have a low growth rate and I've been working on it since the end of July. All the platforms I post on see equal result. I probably got a total of 50 or so subscribers across all the platforms I'm on combined. I'm still working on my comic and aiming to improve it though.

I've been here a little over a month and I'm at almost 300 subscribers on my novel. I came in with no previous following. My first subs and readers came from the forums, I believe, then they started coming in organically. It's been fairly consistent readership/engagement for me so far, but I'm still new so things could drop or plateau at any point!

I am a novel writer, with a novel that is a bit off the main interests of this site. It is a heterosexual adventure romance without any fantasy component, except sensual fantasy, of course.

I upload very close to daily.

My first few days were slow, then it picked up for three or so weeks, then stabilized for views once I got a core readership, with an extra sub or two.

Then it collapsed like a lead ballon for subs, with a slight decrease in reads during week 4.

At the moment, in Week 5, I seem to get one of the three in a day, either likes, a sub or two or views. I think it reflects my readers’ preferences.

I would describe my novel’s success as decent, but not outstanding in terms of reception here.

On Tapas: 4-5 Years. ( before that 4-5 more years of self taught and college level drawing practice; I only taught myself how to tell a good story in the last 3)

Starting with the present, I launched my latest comic Jan 1st of this year and its basically 5x greater than the previous comic I made last year that was a premium.

Before that, I have three on hiatus/abandoned Long form comics; one deleted long form; and two complete one shots. And one more recent one shot comic.

All the while, I've been improving at drawing and story craft and with my last two comics I've learnt the value of steady updates.

Now, I've got consistent traction so long as I keep finishing projects. Finally starting to reach a range where I can sustain myself on working in comics.

congrats on being able to make a living of your comics! (that's the dream)
I also want to give you props for your perseverance! Inspiring! :hype_01:

Been here two years to get my 80 subs. A lot of those are from the forums.
I don't do a lot of marketing beyond a few posts here and there on Instagram and Facebook.

Most of last year was spent at 25 subs, but right around the end of the year I got a spike. My subs tend to trickle in slowly, so I think I get a lot of random looks from people searching for action comics.
Oh. And I've had two YouTube reviews done of my comic so some of them are probably from that.

Well I don't know if I count. I get about 300 readers here on update day (61 subscribers now) and this is the link that I advertise the most but I post it to 4 other sites as well and those do get some readers as well probably adding up to another hundred or so per update.

When I started Runner I had a small readership already from a previous project. Mostly friends and such that had read that comic and wanted to see more that I was working on after that went on permanent hiatus. So I probably started with 25 regular readers that might not subscribe but would read the updates most weeks. But I've been at it with Runner for about a year and 2/3. I've only been at it on Tapas since the beginning of 2020 though as I started on Smackjeeves and didn't like the changes to their platform at the end of 2019.

So make of all that what you will lol

Honestly I sometimes still wish my rate of feedback was a little higher but I started seeing 'regulars' in my comic updates after maybe 8 months to a year? They tend to drop off after maybe another year and a half to two years and I see new faces start to pop up again. Idk if that kind of rotating readership is common but it's what I've seen with my work.