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Jan 2020

As a writer by hobby, I was wondering: How do you keep from losing subscribers after you complete a series?
It seems like my subscriber list is going down even though I have started a new story.
How does that work? What do you guys do?

Also, looking for people to read and give feedback. That would be greatly appreciated.
I enjoy reading, and I try to leave a positive note for the stories I read since I know it encourages writers to keep up with what they enjoy.

Any help would be appreciated! ~Nurse Amethyst

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    Jan '20
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    Jan '20
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I think the general consensus is that tapas subscriber count is bogus and not a real reflection of your followers. (To a certain extent) I don't think there is much you can do about it personally. Not everyone will check notifications or a new story from a creator either. So you might not see a return base of previous fans if you aren't advertising super hard.

After your story is complete you should let your subscribers know that you have a new story starting on such and such date. Most people, if they like your work, will stay subscribed but it's not unusual to lose a few people.

I'm not aware of a general consensus that Tapas subscriber count is bogus--I would say it's the opposite. You know every one of your subscribers. Perhaps Webtoon is bogus, because subscriber count is kept blind.

As @JRHoch suggested, I'm starting a new story :slight_smile:

Subs loss and gains will happen. It's common.

I don't necessarily say it's "bogus" but multiple people have theorized that the number only affects two aspects on the site.

It unlocks ad revenue at 100 subscribers ... Then after that it potentially seems to only act as a denominator against reader engagement in various algorithms. The greater span between those subscribed and those engaging, the worse it is.

What helps trending is a different story, but the people who subscribe aren't imaginary. They may become dead subs, but they aren't fabricated by Tapas.

I don't disagree.

I think it's more of a case that the vagueness of what that number does and a culture of treating subscribers as the ultimate sign of success is the problematic element.

It just sucks in a way, because I would appreciate a little feedback to see if I'm heading in the right direction.
I know for myself, I'm always seeing and checking out new series, the FRESH tab, etc. So, Idk how this count works.... :cactus:

I am currently working on a different story. And I did announce that it would be done...I'm also trying to work on how often to post, perhaps weekly so as to not inundate and overload people's feed

@JRHoch I'm trying to not let it bother me, but I'm rather new at this and don't know how it all usually works. I've always been more of a background subscribers and reader. Last year was the first time that i actually started posting myself. I told myself this morning that I'm writing because I want to help myself and my brain. LOl

Sounds like a solid motivation.

It's easier to give this advice than to actually follow it... but most of us would better served ignoring our subscribers count and focusing more on our Likes/Comments/View counts.

Personally, I find readers get lost during any pause, but especially between projects when all the elements they cared about are gone. It takes a pretty devoted fan to keep tabs on an inactive author to wait for a new project.

Even when new projects launch, fans usually take a while to accept the new project. I think the safest bet is usually to launch a new project a bit before the old one closes, even if it’s just a preview chapter. It gives fans a chance to engage with it instead of resenting it for not being your old project

15 days later

I say turn it into an anthology. Post your new work at the end of the old. I have some short stories around tapas that stopped getting attention once they finished. My current plan is to slowly add them to an anthology I'm working on.

I know, for me personally, when I finish a completed book or comic, I don't unsubscribe to it. I just leave it in my library. Especially if I liked it a lot.

Yes, same for me. I tend to keep it unless I really decided I'm moving on from a certain app or whatever.

Unlike youtube were the followers follow the creator I think the reader follows the story and characters they have subscribed to.

Depending on what kind of new story you startup different readers will follow that.

I have this cute 4th wall undefined comic called Blue Life1 and it has a special fanbase.
Then I have this one: The Last BL Comic1

And none of them are done yet but they have a completely different reader base. And whenever I try to merge them, it fails hard. They only want to follow the chosen story, not what else I do???

Have a social media presence. Make a big deal about the ending of the series. Start a new series and let everyone that read the previous series know. Continue advertising your old series a little bit on the side/try to publish it. Best you can hope for.

I think losing readers is just something we have to face after you finish a story, and not every person who followed your first one will be around for the next.

My short comic had it's best month in June last year. That was a full 2 months after I had posted any updates on it what so ever. (I think it got some sort of shout out from someone but I never figured it out haha) I started posting extras last december and it's never hit the same amount of pageviews since. Which is completely understandable, extras aren't for everyone.

So honestly the best thing you can do for your new story treat it like it is. It's new, and not a lot of people are aware of it yet. Market it in the right place. Look for lists you can post it in, and join communities that enjoy the type of content you're all about!

You do not post so often that you are a pest. :heart:

I unsubbed one person because they notified all us readers every time they corrected a spelling mistake or reworded a paragraph. In retrospect I wish I'd told them (politely) what a pest they were making of themselves, but I'd only been here a month. I bet they lost other readers too.

Anyway, your updates are always informative, and there aren't many. Keep 'em coming.

@burginlewis Oh, yes, definitely! I try to keep that in mind when posting anything. It's the same way when trying to figure out a good schedule for new chapters and stuff. My life is getting busy again, so it'll most likely be like once ever week or ever two weeks. Depending.
THanks~~ :slight_smile: