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Jun 2014

Here is a link to my reddit page.

reddit/the deducers11

As you see, it's just an archive of all my postings of individual comics. It's pretty simple really, go to the comics page, click submit a new link, then enter a title and the link, and click submit.

I usually link directly to my website, but I link to Tapastic as well. Reddit does not like links to reheating sites as they want to drive traffic to the creators site, but if its my content, I don't see the problem.

Most people only look at your link, then go right back to reddit, but still, you're reaching potential fans you didn't have before.

Hopefully this helps!

I attended ACen not too long ago, largest in the midwest US. I'm not at that point that I'd get a table, but I was looking into it as I talked to the comickers in the artist's portion of the dealers room.
I don't think just talking to convention goers seemed to help much (gave flyers to everyone I met), then again, most of the people I talked to were comic makers themselves so they likely did not have time or interest to look at my own content. If I had a table, perhaps I'd have better luck, but I've yet to experience that.
Most of my success so far has just been talking to people online through Tapastic and giving it to people who were already my friends.

Thanks for the advice :). I'm kinda cautious before I start posting original content on some sites, for example, whatever is posted on Facebook essentially becomes property of Facebook, so it's not always smart to post your original content there. I suppose I'd have to look into Reddit's policies, but so far, links look like a good start.

None of the sites would take your copyright though; they only reserve the right to re-use if necessary, and that's just so they can "show" your post in your friends' newsfeeds. These sites aren't going to steal your stuff, so don't let that stop you from spreading your comics.

17 days later

Sorry for delay, but well I just left some stacks of promotional bookmarks in a library and a sushi shop in which one of my friends is working, and gave some to a few other people. I'm not sure this brought me much readers, though. Most of them surely come from the period when my comic was in the New and Noteworthy section.
I think I'm going to start uploading on other websites too, but always keeping two weeks behind Tapastic, so if people want to read more they have to come here.
I was told to make a tumblr too but I really have issues to just understand how that works. And Reddit is even worse, I just don't even understand what kind of website it is. Those places seem so chaotic, random and scary...

On Tapastic the best way I've found is to comment on everything. The more people see your name and that you're a real person the more people will make it to your profile page and then your comic. The user Amet6 as an example has a not so great art dump comic that has amassed over 900 views from his frequent chatting.
Some other people have mentioned Reddit, but that tends to be very capricious and you may get people disliking you for simply self posting your work.
For other sites I can't advise.

i would like to share this video i found 3 minutes ago about how to establish brands :3

also if you ask me, collaboration with already established people is the best way to get your name out! especially if they ever feature you! (i got a spike of 100 watchers just because of one little feature from a well established name XD)

yaaaaaaaaay1

That's a cool idea :). It took me a while to get the hang of tumblr (thankfully one of my friends walked me through it).

Excellent video! I should spread the word smiley
I've yet to find some established names to collaborate with... *ponders

Nice video indeed smile I've been thinking of collab but I tend to have that worry of being intrusive or to annoy people (when I'm not just thinking that it's not the right moment yet). But I should definitely try because nothing happens if you don't try.

the trick with collabs is that you start off with smaller or equal people you'd find and help each other out first! also, its best that you know the person well or at least by a degree before you start collabing! (cause nobody would just go out and collab with everyone they've meet!)

also, join group collabs! the more the merrier as they always say! and you don't need to know the people here as much to do it :3

Wish i had more time in the day to do a collab, but when you work 7am-11pm sometimes it's hard enough squeezing in time for your own work. :-/

Collabs are good! Careful with Reddit, trolls feed off of each other, despite encouragement and lots of praise on my art style just about everywhere else, the Redditors gave me an ego smashing when I shared my first 8 pages. You've gotta really shove awesome deep down the throat of trolls so they're incapable of sayin anything stuck_out_tongue

Trolling is just so useless... I wouldn't want to lose time over them. It's not that hard to make constructive criticism, after all. May I ask what kind of collabs you do? Like, uh, one makes the lineart and the other colorizes? That kind of stuff?? Or trading fanarts?

Draw with Jazza is a very helpful channel. I'm subscribed. I did not know he had this video on there. It's nice, concise and very helpful. Thanks for sharing this.

And I agree with most of the posts here. Find as many places you can and share your work. I'm starting to realize that networking is a great deal of work, but it's rewarding.

I've been involved in a couple of group collabs. The concept has been that someone will pick an old public domain comic that gets completely rewritten in a different genre, then the artists will do their interpretation. At the end the participants get a copy of the finished book in PDF format that can be sent to a printer and printed out if someone wants to sell them at cons.

That sounds like fun! I like to do interpretation, twisting things... I've mostly done this through fanwork though, so of course it's not public domain and no profit can be made (it wasn't intended either), but still something I'd have fun doing.

Thing is that my polyvalence in writing and drawing made it so I never had the need to team up with someone, and if I could find someone who'd be interested to work with me (and fit as team mate). I must admit I'm a little controlling at times, and if I don't have the direction I will always find a way to bypass hierarchy "for the better" ^^;

1 year later

As a new artist, I've only done networking on Facebook previously, but that hasn't gone well at all... I realized that Tapastic had a forum, so that's why I'm here now. I've been interested in doing some collaborative work though too.