H
HandsInTheDark
Guest
I've starting looking at the favorites page of people who favorite me or my stories. I see two distinct patterns:
1. Readers who seem to only favorite stories with high ratings, following some sort of "a sort of 4.6 and above" rule. (It's tempting to decide that these are the people who like quality.)
2. Readers who favorite stories with ratings all over the place, even down into the 3's. Your first guess would be, "oh, these are the kinksters", but glancing over titles and some stories, they don't always seem to have a single kink, and even when they do it's rarely one my story would have catered to.
The second group seems to be larger than the first.
So the first thing that strikes me is that kink in king here. Your writing can be terrible but if you land the kink you'll get the favorites, no matter what the ratings says.
The second is that maybe good writing is a kind of kink for some people - or at least, bad writing is a serious anti-kink.
In any case, my pet theory that high rankings and lots of favorites go hand in hand is now ruined. Has anyone else sat down and tried to plow through reader's responses to find patterns?
It would be nifty if Lit made it easy to download bulk data on rankings and favoriting. My guess is they are sitting on a pile of useful data that could help authors, at least authors thinking of publishing for profit. It might also be useful for studies on sexual kinks and changes in sexual interests over time. There are probably people who would pay at least a modest fee for access to that data...
1. Readers who seem to only favorite stories with high ratings, following some sort of "a sort of 4.6 and above" rule. (It's tempting to decide that these are the people who like quality.)
2. Readers who favorite stories with ratings all over the place, even down into the 3's. Your first guess would be, "oh, these are the kinksters", but glancing over titles and some stories, they don't always seem to have a single kink, and even when they do it's rarely one my story would have catered to.
The second group seems to be larger than the first.
So the first thing that strikes me is that kink in king here. Your writing can be terrible but if you land the kink you'll get the favorites, no matter what the ratings says.
The second is that maybe good writing is a kind of kink for some people - or at least, bad writing is a serious anti-kink.
In any case, my pet theory that high rankings and lots of favorites go hand in hand is now ruined. Has anyone else sat down and tried to plow through reader's responses to find patterns?
It would be nifty if Lit made it easy to download bulk data on rankings and favoriting. My guess is they are sitting on a pile of useful data that could help authors, at least authors thinking of publishing for profit. It might also be useful for studies on sexual kinks and changes in sexual interests over time. There are probably people who would pay at least a modest fee for access to that data...