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May 2017

Another thing that some people do (and this is pretty common on any SNS platform) is people will like your comic hoping you'll see their comic and like it back. If you don't return the favor, they might dump your comic.

I sometimes follow a comic I know I don't have time for thinking I will give it a shot another time, and then maybe unfollow it when it turned out to be something other than what I was hoping for. If I was in the mood for a yuri comic and the comic started out that way and then ended up a BL comic, I might be confused and unsub it. Or sometimes I follow a comic, forget why I followed it, and then unfollow it half a year later... sometimes I just get sub happy XD I'm sure other people do something like that. Can't please everyone! Don't worry about it.

for some reason I have been losing a lot of subscribers lately. I wish they would tell me why they unsubbed.

I think this is how many people may lose their subs actually because a lot of the time, a comic is more than just one single thing, and people who went in and wanted only that thing will be disappointed eventually.
This is probably how I lose most of mine, since mine is story heavy, AND some chapters heavily focused on erotica. So some people get into it for story and then get really pissed when a chapter of erotica rolls around. They're like "FUCK THIS SMUT I'M OUT"
Or someone gets into it to see boys kissing and getting hot, and then we get a chapter full of traumatic pasts or, god forbid, a lesbian couple discussing their life issues. Then THEY'RE like "FUCK THIS SHIT I'M OUT"

It used to offend me when I was still new to it occurring, but now I just find it funny. I create what I like and people should just come and go as they please. People who genuinely enjoy what you make are the ones that are ACTUALLY fun to keep around.
Never change what you do to satisfy someone else (unless someone points out something ethically problematic you're doing and you recognize that it's an issue), and don't get too offended by others going about their own way freely just as you go about yours. Even if their way is away from you.

I see that you update your comic regularily and answer a lot to subscribers so those aren't possible reasons... Try asking in the author's note of your next update instead of as a comment in the comments section. They're more likely to see it there!

When it comes to sexual subjects, it can be really tricky. I actually have a warning on my comic saying "there's some violence, there are religious issues, there's nudity, and homosexuality, etc happens in this comic." I don't think these are really things that need warnings, necessarily (and I've had people give me shit over including homosexuality in the warnings list), but I do it so that people who are homophobic or religiously closed-minded, prudes, etc etc will stay the heck away from my comic. It's not for them, obviously, and I'd rather they know that before they get started.

I also have the opposite problem, where I have nudity in the first chapter (not even sexual nudity, really) and I know some people will start reading my comic, realize it's not porn, and then unsub it. And that's okay! I'd rather they unsub then write comments saying "needs more tits". It happens, and it's nothing to get upset about, so I hope the OP doesn't get their feelings too hurt over it.

and thank you @ everyone else too! we've just been worried about this because eventually we're hoping to maybe turn comic creation into a career? (or at least worthy of some pizza money)
it's hard to remember that these things take time
-g

When I started out with Night Twink14, I was pulling it down some mushy romantic road like some of those BL comics and people seemed to be enjoying it. Then I savagely tore the relationship apart hahahaha. I lost some subs then heh. But aye it's going to happen. I think it's more odd when you have a large body of work behind you and people know more of what you're about that they'd later unsub, but maybe people just get tired of the same old format?

Actually people keep mistaking my comic as BL, and when they realized it's not they tend to unsubscribe XD So it's not a weird thing for me.

I am still new and, still increasing views and subs. But I am ready to see loosing them too. smile

I don't think I've hit that threshold with The Beard1 yet. As far as I can tell, I still have all 30 original subscribers. I do dream of the day I have a big enough following to alienate 30 readers in a single update, but I'm pretty up front about how bizarre and irreverent the story is and, never having been featured in any capacity, I guess those that find it have been tending to stick with it, thankfully (small readership, but an awesome readership so far).

There are many reason why people unsubscribe.

-Some people sub a bunch of comics that look interesting then read them later. In the later reading, if they decide they don't much care for it and they unsub
-Some people will start out enjoying a series but further on, will unsub because they lose interest and such
-Some people will delete their account, which means you will lose that sub.

You shouldn't feel too discouraged, you're still doing a hell of a lot better than me and I've been here longer.

On that note, what are some suggestions you guys have for engaging your readers/developing greater interest from the subscribers you already have? I'd love to get people more involved in our comic but I'm not 100% sure how to go about it.

In other words, ways to turn your subscribers from a readership into a fanbase? -c

Talk to them! Make little jokes in the authors comments! Did you do something special today or see anything funny? Talk about it! Engage your audience as a person rather than just a name and an avatar that posts pages once in a while. It gets more personal and much more fun for both parties.

I made a forum post earlier about this topic.

I haven't been successful at all despite trying multiple ones, but maybe you will have more luck. four_leaf_clover

Thanks!! This is really useful!

On reflection, I really think building relationships with the following we already have is more important to me than getting more subscribers. I want to encourage people to give us feedback, tell us what they think, etc, so we can improve and be more engaged with the people who like parlor tricks for what it is.

We're hoping to make a little pizza money eventually, but until then every comment and like means a whole lot. -c

1 year later

Just wanted to ask a question:Is it necessary to keep my series on going?will I lose subscribers once it comes to an end?pls answer.

I recently found a few titles in my library to which I did not purposefully subscribe in the first place. They just ended up there by some glitch, and I had not even seen these before then. I went on a purge. I did not even give them a chance. Yep, I am mean that way.

I don't think you have to continue a series once it's done if that's what your asking, but it's probably a good idea to keep your audience in the loop somehow in between projects - and direct them to where they can get more information from you if they want it (like twitter or instagram or a mailing list maybe?). Tapas will also notify all of your subscribers once you've started a new series.

Hope that helps? :V