If I might speak up on behalf of "Those People" being called out...
I want to be very clear here. I don't think I'm intrinsically better or more worthy than any other person here. I know we're all working hard. I have no intention of insulting anyone by pointing out a simple thing which is that most of "those people" (ie. people who believe that if Tapas is to promote community works more, there would need to be means to make sure the content getting seen was fairly professional looking) are in our thirties with professional experience and/or training. It's not a difference of being a better person or more determined to succeed or more talented (talent is a myth), it's just having been at it longer and so having knowledge, resources and time, which any of you can and will acquire if you just keep at it, I just happen to have been alive since the mid 80's and making webcomics for going on twenty years so my career is further along. Assuming that this ire is primarily aimed at Joanne and I, I should flag the fact that both of us are clearly keen to use our experience and the knowledge we have gained to help others. It's practically a forum meme that if somebody needs advice or critique I'll turn up, and I'm always seeing Joanne giving out great advice on threads. I genuinely do want every single one of you to succeed in your endeavours, and I don't think anyone should feel bitter or ashamed about not being there just yet, or for being a hobbyist who makes comics for fun without compromising their artistic vision to make it marketable.
The reason I'm saying that the changes should be ones that help high performing works with a high level of polish get organic visibility isn't because I'm like "ONLY I MAY SUCCEED" like I'm the villainess queen or something; it's because Tapas is a business and anything we pitch needs to be shown to be a worthwhile financial investment for them to consider it.
Tapas tried community picks... and I heard through some contacts that the reason we lost community picks was because a number of very unpolished works got put on the front page (because the community staff did take the very well-meaning, fair and open-hearted approach of putting pretty much everything the community suggested with little to no vetting), which resulted in app users losing faith in the quality of the recommendations in that section (which also corroborates with reports I have from friends that the later a week of Community picks you were in, regardless of how nice a cover you had, the lower the overall sub gain was) and stopped clicking works in that section. So obviously after that, Tapas are a bit scared to give that valuable front page real estate to anything that isn't thoroughly vetted for quality or directly picked by the staff who can curate the selection based on it fitting in with the front page.
If we are to sell the idea to Tapas that it's worth making more room for community comics or tweaking algorithms or the UI so that community comics get seen more, we have to sell community comics as an investment worth betting their money (in this case, the loss of revenue from giving up space that could be given to more immediately profitable premium comics) on for a return. If people can see more free comics, it means they're seeing fewer paid comics, so it is vital to try to explain it to Tapas in terms that these free comics can become paid comics if you give them opportunities to build an audience, can earn significant ad revenue or donation money, or could be the next Tapas Media TV adaptation. In other words, we can't sell it as "you should show people my comic because I'm a nice person and I worked really hard on it!" even if that is a lovely sentiment, we have to sell it as "give these comics a chance for the best performers to rise to the top, one of them might be the next Moonshine or Heartstopper." To us artists, our comics are works of art dear to our hearts and labours of love, but to Tapas, they are products on a shop shelf, and you might be the kind of admirable person who doesn't judge a book by its cover, but most app users aren't, no matter how much we wish that'd change, and they're the ones who are bringing the money.
I use my own comic as an example not because I think I'm better than anyone, but because it's an easy example I have stats for that back up the theory that it's under-performing and could grow more under a system where comics can gain more organic visibility, and that based on its earnings, it's worth investing in for potential financial returns.
I know Errant inside and out. I know all the stats for it. I know how much it has earned, I know how it performs, I know my social media strategy, like how I've taken part in every Tapastry event and had the misfortune to never have them share my work (I would really like to know if this is just bad luck or being in the wrong timezone or if somebody at Tapastry doesn't like me for some reason. If somebody on the staff doesn't like me, can we please just talk about our feelings in DMs and straighten things out? Sometimes I upset people without meaning to because I'm autistic and can be overly honest and blunt or misjudging what's appropriate tone for a situation, so I have concerns...) and since it has been featured before on the front page a few times I can safely hold it up to Tapas and say "look, you've featured this before, right? You feel like this is polished enough to be on the front page, So it wouldn't be so awful if stuff like this turned up on the front page or in a trending list on a good update day, or if it was easier to find content like this." I don't even think my comic would benefit the most from the changes I'm suggesting because it's an odd comic in a less popular genre, the biggest gains would likely be for comics like The Princess Beast, Hollow and the like; comics that have over a thousand followers and which fit the Tapas aesthetic and audience pretty well, but seem to not be climbing up into those 10s of Ks like comics of comparable quality and audience appeal used to a couple of years ago.
Honestly this spiteful attitude some people have of "WELL. If MY community comic can't get seen and make money with or without changes to the site, I don't see the point! Especially if it benefits that uppity cow Darth Mongoose who thinks she's better than me!" is pretty unhelpful. If we convince Tapas to improve organic visibility by selling the benefits of investing in community comics, it will benefit the majority of community creators. Some of you it may not benefit immediately if you still need to build up your polish or marketing game, or your product doesn't suit the platform, but some day, maybe not so far off, your work will reach a professional level of polish or you'll hit on a great premise or capture the zeitgeist and you'll get a few hundred subs and then find yourself stuck in the donut hole like I currently am, popular enough that people tell you on the forums you're a "big creator" and not allowed to complain about popularity or visibility, but nowhere near popular enough to make viable money from the work you're making and unable to grow the audience fast enough for that to look probable any time soon.
What I'm trying to convince Tapas to do is to give us a ladder to climb so that higher performing community comics can viably turn into premium or "wait for free" comics. Some of you may not be tall enough to reach that ladder just yet, but when you are (when, not if, and I'm always happy to give advice to help you get there), you'll need it. Overall it would ultimately benefit all of you though, because if a polished community comic jumps into premium, it both proves that they can be a worthwhile investment overall, encouraging Tapas to foster community comics growth with resources, promotion and tutorials and means that person is no longer competing with smaller comics for eyeballs in smaller promotion events, which means more attention for everyone.