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Aug 2015

We've all seen the posts and pictures people have created to encourage readers to Like, Comment, and Subscribe. But what of sharing? What merit does sharing actually have, and how can you use it to help support your fellow creators and their content?

What does sharing do, first of all?

Sharing, as many of you probably already know, is the act of linking a comic to another external source. Many of these sources include, but are not limited to:

  • Facebook
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google+ (but we don't talk about that one...)
  • And a flurry of other places! (even reddit!)

Many of these locations are offered as default sharing locations in the drop-down share menu that's available on all comic episodes, just below the page.

Sharing is so fundamentally important in the growing of a comic. Consider it like a chain-mail type thing, except with all the threats of monsters getting you in your sleep or losing all your money. Imagine this scenario - you tell two people about a webcomic that you just read, either through word-of-mouth, or Twitter, or FB, or whatever social media you like to use. Those two people tell two more people. Those two people tell two more people, and all of a sudden, you've got a domino effect of your comic reaching more and more people, with potentially new readers coming in due to this.

Now, this doesn't happen all the time. With our over-saturation of media on the web, it's pretty easy for a person to read your comic and then forget about it in 5 minutes. Which is where sharing frequency and awareness comes into play.

It takes more than just sharing once to get that domino effect going. Sometimes it only takes once, yeah, but the chances of that happening are the same chances of you becoming an overnight sensation, which we know is also pretty rare (it's happened, but you shouldn't be betting everything you have on it).

If more people know the upsides of sharing and how to properly do it, more people will do it (hopefully), and the chances of that domino effect starting will skyrocket.

Places like Tumblr are built on the domino effect of sharing. Most of us know how Tumblr works - you share a piece of artwork, or a text post, or whatever, someone sees it and likes it enough to reblog it, and that article is now on their blog, which links back to your original post. Not only will more people see this post on this new person's blog, they will also see the original source and will be able to travel back to the original blog - you. Person 2 reblogs Person 1's reblogging of your work, and then Person 3 comes to Person 2's blog, and it goes on and on and on.

Then there are places like reddit, which acts as an "upvote" hub for things. You post something, maybe you get lucky and get a bunch of upvotes, people now know the original source of the content and can read more if they like.

Places like Facebook work on a more local scale (depending on who you're friends with). Most people we have on Facebook are family members, friends, pen pals, business associates, fellow creators/artists, etc. Share your work or your findings of other people's works on Facebook! That's now gotten to your friends, who definitely have friends on their Facebook whom you are not affiliated with, and who knows; they might just share your original sharing of the original content.

This applies to all works, not just your own. Whether you're sharing your own work or you're sharing the work of others, the potential for those dominoes to start tipping one by one is right there in that share button.

Before I wrap this up, let's talk real quick about the Do's and Don't's of Sharing.

Do:

  • Share! Share it to one of those websites that Tapastic has linked in the sharing dropdown menu. DO IT NAUUUWWW.

  • If you can help it, share the original source of the content. Whether this is Tapastic or their own original website, try and share the work that's truly the creator's works and not just a re-upload (<<<< we'll get more into those later).

  • Credit the original creator! Make sure people know you're just doing your part to share the love; don't lead people to believe it's your work (unless it is of course, haha).

  • Share because you care. This is a random act of kindness deal. You're probably not going to get instant fortune or anything from building up that karma, but it feels really, really good when you see that you've helped (take it from me; one time I shared a comic by someone else, got them like, 1000 subscribers. It was awesome). Share the comics that you enjoy and want to see get more exposure. You don't even need to share them to Facebook or Twitter, if you don't use social media; simply share them on your profile wall to your subscribers/friends right here on Tapastic!

  • Give people a reason to read the content you're sharing. If the content you're sharing has a space for you to type about it (often a description box, or on walls, like FB), then let people know why you like the content you're sharing. Tell them why it's so funny or so dramatic or so wonderful to read. Tell them how awesome you think the art is. Draw them in. Make them want to click that link.

Don't:

  • Re-upload content. I can't stress enough how much we should NOT be doing this. If you find yourself saving an image and re-uploading the image to Tumblr/DeviantArt/Photobucket/9GAG/etc. STOP WHAT YOU'RE DOING. If you can't find the original source of the image, you can use Google's Image search functions to find it, it's not that hard, I promise. Even if you keep the artist credits on there, it's not the original source of the content, and you could be accused of stealing content. Find the original source and share it from there. If the artist has excluded embedding options or sharing options from their page, chances are it's because they don't want people sharing it, so if that's the case, respect their wishes and leave their content be.

  • Edit out the artist's credits. We should all know this, especially cause most of us do put credits on our comics, but just putting it out there. Just don't do it, there's no point to this unless you're blatantly stealing content, and you shouldn't be doing that either.

  • Bother people by sharing every minute of every day. Like I said, you should be doing this because you want to, not because you feel you're gonna get brownie points out of it or anything. Don't stuff your Tumblr feeds and Tapastic wall and Facebook wall with shares, cause then you'll just be pushing people away from the content you're trying to support. Sharing is caring, but attention-hogging is . . . well, I can't think of a rhyme for that, but you get my drift.

  • Along with the above point, don't share the content where it's probably not appropriate. Ex. if you share on reddit (this is a BIG one guys), don't post a Fail by Error comic in /r/minionhate or /r/AskReddit. Places like reddit have their nooks to post comics, including /r/webcomics, /r/comics, etc. So we shouldn't be seeing any of The Awkward Yeti in /r/starbucks stuck_out_tongue Same as how if you're sharing on Tumblr, probably gonna be a little off-key if you're sharing a webcomic about cats on a blog that's about food.


Yes, some content is tough to share. Just like the Daily Snack features, sharing pages from a longform story can be tricky because it would be taken out of context. But in that case, share intro pages, or cover/chapter pages, to at least lead people on the breadcrumb path towards the content itself which they can read on their own if they choose to.

So next time you tell your readers/supporters to like, comment, and subscribe, tell them to hit that share button, too! It might only take one or two readers to hit that button and net you more readers, more subscribers, and in the end, more support for the stuff you love doing, and the stuff you love reading.

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    Aug '15
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    Dec '15
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This topic is pinned yo. I didn't know I could edit the post fo shizzle (hope i don't get in trouble for this ah daaaang). This topic will appear at the top of the category (Tips and Tricks peeps!) until its unpinned by staff or the original poster, or until the forum explodes, whichever comes first /tick tick tick

:Claps and cheers!:
YES! Great post! Sharing matters.

It doesn't matter if the reader sharing doesn't have a big following or friends list to the account they share to. There still might be one of their friends that sees the post and likes/shares with their friend, starting a chain.

Don't let a lack of friends/followers stop you from sharing a comic you enjoy on your social media. You never know who will see it and how far it'll go.

Thank you for posting this!

I read somewhere that you should ditch the like button and just shaaaaaaaaaaaareeee XDXD.

Sharing can really help artists, it can be one of the best methods of support, if u don't have money sharing could be the 2nd best =]

As for the Reddit posts in other categories, I have heard anecdotes of getting way more exposure for a comic being posted in a niche subject (like a fishing comic being posted in a subreddit about fishing), than being posted in the webcomics reddit where people just kind of post their shit and then fuck off (sort of like promotion threads here).

It may not work as well if it's the one-time subject of a gag-a-day comic, but if your comic is relevant to some kind of interest I suggest posting it in the relevant reddit, like a comic about Starcraft in a Starcraft reddit would probably do much better than one in a general webcomics reddit.

I don't promise any traction on a story-driven comic, though. Most people browse reddit to see funny one-off pictures, so gag comics are INFINITELY better at gaining traction on reddit than story-driven.

I will say though, careful sharing Tapastic comics on Reddit. For a lot of subreddits a Tapastic link gets labelled as spam to the mods and will most often go ignored.

@DavidDaneman tried to help our situation on reddit, however it hasn't been fixed yet.

Creator sharing their own work tip: It's best to use Imgur links on reddit which sadly won't really help your Tapastic stats or just link your official comic site on reddit.

I think the same way and I'm always sharing other artist's work whenever i can, I really wish more people did this and more often, this is a great post dude and you really hit the nail on the head!

Well, that's one of the exceptions lol At least make sure the place you post it has at least SOMETHING to do with the subject matter you're sharing. So y'know, sharing a comic about cats in the /r/awww subreddit? Sure, might get away with it. Sharing a comic about cats in a subreddit that's about dogs? You're kind of pushing it lol Sharing a comic about cats in a subreddit about trampolines and how dangerous they are? Probably gonna get deleted lol (and yes, there is a subreddit like that, it's called /r/fucktrampolines. Don't go in there unless you've got the stomach.)

Oh yeah, I remember that being a problem. I have literally no clue why though. Hmm.

Imgur links should only be used if the content you're sharing is your own. It wouldn't be too cool for me to be uploading content from, say, Anna Landin and posting it on reddit through imgur because now Anna's not actually going to get any of her deserved traffic and it's me getting all the upvotes > <

Yeah, that bit was more creator advice than reader sharing advice. I'm not a fan of imgur though, even though some have had great results with it.

Without my knowledge, I have my comic ripped and reposted on several websites by others at imgur, tumblr, etc., some without any link back to the source. I quickly realised that not many people take the trouble to google for it and end up breaking some of the rules you listed (is it alright if I call them rules? Lol).. But I'd like to give them the benefit of the doubt and say it's mostly unintentional.

Not everyone knows how to share content properly and you can't expect them to. So perhaps it's best to put a watermark on your comics -- as ugly and troublesome it is -- because image sharing (and stealing) is rampant on the Internet

Oh I wish we could get people to share Kamikaze1 more! The problem we have is that our comic is narrative, and not really suited for the gag-comics that go so well over social media. While we post full color page a week, it's kind of like getting thrown into a TV show in the middle of broadcast when people do share it.

Any suggestions or thoughts for folks that do narrative work to get shared around?

Also THANK YOU for posting about the reuploading, taking out tags and sites, and posting to places like 9gag. That mess is HORRIBLE for so many people out there. Share, but share wisely, y'all! blush

If anything, I'm prone to over sharing. For instance, I really enjoy the feeling of ripping out nostril hairs.

But yeah, share comics too. It's nice.

Good advice- although I don't think the pinning was necessary.

I know that some people use interesting methods for watermarks to hide them without them being obtrusive, but they're still there. Stuff like making a layer for the watermark in the PSD file and setting opacity to zero, hiding the watermark in the background art, etc. So there are plenty of interesting and fun ways to post watermarks without fear of having people rip them away (like when you put credits on the bottoms of comics that can easily be stripped out) and in a way that they're still there, just not visual enough for people to easily find them and remove them or just dismiss them.

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