Comic Talk and General Discussion *

Who is your Audience
Bruno Harm at 9:05AM, March 9, 2016
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I've been thinking a lot about this lately. Looking at other webcomics today, I'd say I'm outside the mainstream in respects to style and content. Maybe old fashioned. But I believe there's an audience out there for me. I guess I imagine grown up type people with jobs and kids. People that read or miss reading strips in the Sunday paper.
What kind of audience do you imagine you are appealing to? Where do you find them?
I think a huge part of our advertising effort is targeting other webcomic creators. are we the only people reading webcomics? Where do the “Normal people” look for this kind of entertainment?

Genejoke at 9:40AM, March 9, 2016
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I'm pretty sure my audience is largely other webcomics creators.
bravo1102 at 9:53AM, March 9, 2016
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For every fellow webcomic creator there are a few who dream of it but never do. They follow and read the comics and maybe in a way share the experience of the creator.


Plain readers are less likely to comment so they are the silent majority. It is said that for every comment there are three lurkers. I don't know. I only ever found any of the statistics of my own work too depressing and pitiful to consider.


My usual response to audience is to ask “what's that?” Nothing I have ever done has ever gotten nor deserved anything as grand as an audience. Occasional reader, but never an audience.
usedbooks at 10:21AM, March 9, 2016
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I draw for me and my two former roommates who inspired my story. So that's my target audience. Who else is reading? I dunno. Used to be a couple amazingly supportive comic artists (well, writers, mostly writers). My audience has always been limited. I suck at art (and used to REALLY REALLY SUCK). By the time the art was tolerable, it was a really long comic that intimidates potential new readers.

On the topic of readership… Back when we could put html code on our pages, I used a hit counter that monitored all kinds of stats, which included a “referred by” list of websites. I started noticing a big spike in visits and go curious. The main referrer turned out to be an erotic lesbian blog. There was no blog mention of my comic or anything. It was just a link in the site owner's links list of things she liked. Not many people link to me on their own (I joined databases and things), so that was my silly little source of pride. For a short time, if you asked who read my comic, the best guess I could make was “lesbians?”
KimLuster at 10:58AM, March 9, 2016
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lol UB that's hilarious!

As for my target audience, I just want EVERYONE to be my audience - is that too much to ask?!! ;)

Seriously, I suppose I mainly geared the Godstrain toward ‘introspective types’ like myself: people who think about the ‘Big Stuff’ (ya know, the largely useless musings about things we'll never know the true nature of, at least in our current state of existence… Stuff like: Life and Death, the Nature of Reality, Dreams, Philosophy, Physics, the Philosophy of Physics, the Physics of Philosophy… *slaps head*) Errr… yeah…

But… I also like art for its own sake and wanted people to like my stuff as a work of art too…! I know that was hard for them at first, but I have gotten better… :)

I also like to spice in a bit of action, intrigue, and romance, cuz I like that stuff, and I think my ‘audience’ does too. It makes characters feel ‘real’, and having characters that feel real makes the heavy stuff more interesting and relatable, methinks!


Banes at 12:18PM, March 9, 2016
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I think my audience is mostly web comic creators and people who enjoyed the 90's.



KimLuster at 12:45PM, March 9, 2016
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Banes wrote:
I think my audience is mostly web comic creators and people who enjoyed the 90's.
I used to think most of my audience was fellow web comic-creators (us being the incestuous group we are…) but with the return of stats, I realized I have a LOT more more people taking a peek that actually comment on it, so… Yeah, still probably fellow-creators! ;)
last edited on March 9, 2016 7:48PM
Bruno Harm at 12:50PM, March 9, 2016
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Most of my traffic comes from Top Web Comics or Comic Hosting sites. I've gotten some traction on Reddit, r/comics and r/webcomics , which I feel may contain more non-creator readers, but I may be wrong.
Genejoke at 4:49PM, March 9, 2016
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My stats are too higo for it just to be creators but I have no way of knowing where from. My target audience? The undemanding typ who are probably a bit older.
Ironscarf at 5:58PM, March 9, 2016
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I am unable to define my audience in terms of any specific demographic, but I can draw the following conclusions, based on comments I receive on the comic and discussions elsewhere.

ADF readers jealously guard their solitude, but also enjoy time spent with treasured friends and family. They are generous to a fault but won't be taken advantage of. They have long memories. They solve problems in unique ways and see things others don't. They look beneath the surface and get to the heart of the matter. They laugh long and hard, never more so than when they're laughing at themselves.

They are hard on themselves yet tolerant of the failings of others. They like to listen, but not to the sound of their own voices. They don't seek positions of power, yet in times of adversity, their unique qualities make them natural leaders. When others argue over details, they see the bigger picture. They plough their own furrow, with their own unique sense of style. They are intelligent, kind, creative, talented, loyal and fun to be around. Yet despite all these outstanding qualities, they are highly modest and self effacing. They also quite like the number 6.
HippieVan at 7:38PM, March 9, 2016
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Ironscarf wrote:
I am unable to define my audience in terms of any specific demographic, but I can draw the following conclusions, based on comments I receive on the comic and discussions elsewhere.

ADF readers jealously guard their solitude, but also enjoy time spent with treasured friends and family. They are generous to a fault but won't be taken advantage of. They have long memories. They solve problems in unique ways and see things others don't. They look beneath the surface and get to the heart of the matter. They laugh long and hard, never more so than when they're laughing at themselves.

They are hard on themselves yet tolerant of the failings of others. They like to listen, but not to the sound of their own voices. They don't seek positions of power, yet in times of adversity, their unique qualities make them natural leaders. When others argue over details, they see the bigger picture. They plough their own furrow, with their own unique sense of style. They are intelligent, kind, creative, talented, loyal and fun to be around. Yet despite all these outstanding qualities, they are highly modest and self effacing. They also quite like the number 6.

OMG, how did you know I was a Gemini?!
Duchess of Friday Newsposts and the holy Top Ten
Ozoneocean at 7:55PM, March 9, 2016
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Nice reader profile Scarf!

My readership is split between amazingly beautiful, talented, intelligent women who're also snappy dressers, and handsome, intelligent, rugged men.

What they both have in common is their fondness for G-string underwear and the fact that they get dressed up to read each new page of Pinky TA: The men in full black tie, the women in figure hugging, glittering black cocktail dresses.
Call Me Tom at 9:09AM, March 10, 2016
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KimLuster,
Bravo1102,
Banes,
tupapayon, plymayer Z74, Gunwallace and ghostrunner.
Thats all of it.
I'm sorry for any offence I cause.
Elanore at 10:07AM, March 13, 2016
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i believe mine is also other web comic creators and some people who stumbles upon it. i haven't gone out of my way to make paid advertising but I'm leaning towards that area to get more readers <3
Gunwallace at 8:02PM, March 13, 2016
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I have an odd niche in the wider Playmobil comics community. For some reason there are a lot of Spanish Playmobil comics, and there are some links to my pages from a number of sites that collect such websites together. Other than that it's the usual collection of fellow webcomics creators and the occasional person who stumbles upon my site. Every now and then I look at the stats for my webpage, and it's mostly a flatline of a few people a day looking at a few pages each, but every now and then you'll see a user spike 1000+ pages in a short time, and I know another person has read Character Development.
David ‘Gunwallace’ Tulloch, www.virtuallycomics.com
Genejoke at 1:45AM, March 14, 2016
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Gunwallace I did a search for D and D related comics and found a discussion where character development was mentioned.
Kota at 8:34AM, March 16, 2016
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Banes wrote:
I think my audience is mostly web comic creators and people who enjoyed the 90's.
You and me both. Someone once called me the Tom Waites of webcomics. A lot of people have listed me as an inspiration and no one's ever heard of me. :D
Kota Otan
http://www.drunkduck.com/Mailbox_Rocketship/

http://www.drunkduck.com/The_Errant_Apprentice/
and
Kota's World: Broadband
-
“If Jeff Bridges is stupid enough to do this, I'M stupid enough to do this!”
last edited on March 22, 2016 9:28PM
Ozoneocean at 9:55PM, March 22, 2016
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Seriously I'm not really sure who my audience is.
The people who comment are other webcomicers, great people all of them, but stat numbers suggest that there are a lot of other people too… I don't update much so I don't know why they're still coming.
Adminning this site means I have links to my profile on the front page, because of news posts. Presumably curious people follow that to Pinky TA.

I honestly don't know the majority of my audience.
bravo1102 at 6:00AM, March 23, 2016
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You know an unscientific survey of just who posts here might be in order. Are there any discernable patterns to who visits a Web comic site in general before one can determine the audience for a particular comic.
toondoctor at 1:35PM, March 23, 2016
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I created this survey for my comic back in December 2015. Did not get many responses but the few I got really helped figure out my readers.

You are more than welcome to fill it! There is a bonus strip when filled!

http://www.comicbookbin.com/johnnybulletsurvey001.html
Sway at 7:25PM, March 23, 2016
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Cynical superhero fans and power tool enthusiasts, held together in an aggressively weird bearhug.
last edited on March 23, 2016 7:37PM
MegaRdaniels at 9:27AM, March 29, 2016
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Sway wrote:
Cynical superhero fans and power tool enthusiasts, held together in an aggressively weird bearhug.
Same but with less cynicism.
last edited on April 4, 2016 7:54PM
MegaRdaniels at 9:28AM, March 29, 2016
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Superhero fans who likes to see them fight supernatural ancient evils.
totallyraddad at 7:31PM, April 4, 2016
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so far my audience is my friend kyle and my grandma.

but all jokes aside, i think 20 somethings who are bored and hate life are my audience. the kind who smell like dennys and cigarettes.
El Cid at 9:30PM, April 8, 2016
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Reader feedback is probably a better gauge for how well you're doing with the local webcomics community than with readers in general. Nearly all of the feedback I've gotten on my comics and most people get on theirs is from people they know, whether from in the forums, or working on community projects together, or because they've been reading and commenting on their comics. People who don't know you generally don't bother to leave comments too often.

I have no clue who my readers are on this site. Back when I had my own website, my traffic tracker gizmo recorded hits from dozens of countries all over the Earth… but I'm sure a lot of that had to be bots. I was really big in Germany and South America for some reason. I see my older comics reposted enough that I know people are still finding them somehow, and I just recently found out that some of the characters from ‘Death P#rn’ were added to a “Bad Girls Wiki”… which I didn't even know was a thing, but apparently it is. But who are the faces behind any of it? I'll never meet most of them.

I do, from time to time, get emails from readers, and they span the whole spectrum: An erudite Medieval history buff from London, a married couple from Boston, an exotic dancer from France, a divorced mother from Mexico… and yeah, some are weirdos. Years ago, someone named “Snoozle” sent me this little gem (it was in response to a blog post I'd made about my site being hacked).

Fucking hackers are pathetic. Stalking is where the real talent lies. I'm the president of your fan club and I'm happy to inform you that we are preparing a full scale attack involving sponge bob handcuffs a rusty saw and using your severed big toes as sacred masturbatory tools.

So CHEER UP! YAY!

It did cheer me up.
Konspiracy at 12:12PM, May 22, 2016
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I wish I could say, but I don't really have one, other than a few friends xD
kyupol at 3:55PM, May 25, 2016
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they tend to be the “seeker” types. Either into religion or spirituality or political conspiracies…
Bruno Harm at 12:07PM, May 26, 2016
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kyupol wrote:
they tend to be the “seeker” types. Either into religion or spirituality or political conspiracies…

so, for example, this seems like a really unique audience. Do you have any presence on religious websites or political websites?

I've tried to poke around for Detective related sites, pulp fiction, old detective comics. I haven't really found a “scene” per say, But I think it is worth looking at who your comic may appeal to aside from “webcomic readers”
Ozoneocean at 9:00PM, May 26, 2016
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Often our comics don't really have a super specialised audience that we think they should…
There are quite a few different comics here on DD that tackle similar subjects to Kyupol's Mag-isa but they often have a general audience because of something cool about them that has overall appeal, even though the subject might be a little weird.

Mag-isa for example had great depictions of fiercely strong emotions and amazing power and speed in the fight scenes! The spiritual stuff and action was a mix between a lot of what we're used to from ‘90s anime and Filipino action films- so easy to relate to by a lot of people.

Bruno Harm has easy comedy and a friendly tone as well as themes of getting older, old VS new etc- all very universal relatable factors. The nior references draw from media most people have seen or at least we’ve all seen the things that similarly reference nior in some way so it doesn't alienate anyone with those.
Bruno Harm at 10:37AM, May 27, 2016
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You are absolutely right Ozone. And I do try to appeal to a broad audience. I certainly don't want to discount avid webcomic readers! I just think it's always good to reach out to people that might not know this type of media is here, or where to find it. I'm looking to grow not only my audience, but the community as a whole, and while yelling “Free Comics!” into the internet does garner some results, I thought appealing to interests that intersect different worlds would be helpful.

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