MillieDynamite
Millie'sVastExpanse
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2021
- Posts
- 9,965
Because I don't see it from the data.
Consider two of the most-viewed and most favorited stories at Literotica: Threads, and One Who Understands.
Both incest stories. Threads was published in 2011 and One was published in 2015. Threads is 42 Literotica pages long. That's enormous. That's the length of a decent novel. One is 32 pages, also the length of a decent novel. To put them in perspective, One if over twice as long as The Great Gatsby, and Thread is over three times as long.
Threads has a view:vote ratio of 143:1.
One has a view:vote ratio of 162:1.
Those ratios are higher than for the average 1 to 2 page story, but not THAT much higher. My average is around 90:1 or so, but most of my stories are fewer than 5 Lit pages.
29126 people have cast votes for Threads. 14572 people have cast votes for One. Those are huge numbers for Literotica, yet these are by Literotica standards extremely long standalone stories. My most-viewed story has just under 10,000 votes but is only 3 Lit pages long. It has a view:vote ratio of 110:1. That's better than those other two stories, but it's not THAT much better, when you consider it's less than one-tenth the length of those stories.
These stories suggest that if readers like the stories they will stick them out to the end even if they are very long.
8Letters previously has presented data in his statistics threads that standalone stories will get more views than stories designated "Chapter 1." Many people don't read chapter stories. They don't even start them. If you start a story by publishing a chapter in the form "My Story Ch. 1", right off the bat you will lose significant numbers of readers.
So if you tell a story in chapters, you have two disadvantages. One is that many readers will never start reading the story, and the other is the extremely heavy level of attrition. The attrition is somewhat set off by the continued exposure that newly published chapters bring. The long standalone story has the disadvantage that some people don't want to read long stories, but I'm inclined, based on what I can see, to believe that the long standalone story option one will yield more readers who finish the story than the multi-chapter option.
None of this is very scientific, I admit.
If only we had something like Amazon uses to determine how many pages a person reads. I can look at the ones that are Select and tell exactly if someone finished the story or not. Not that it matters, my only longer story I have published for money isn't on Amazon. But views to votes doesn't tell you how many people actually read the story.
Had one comment, "didn't like the tags, so moved to the end and voted a one without wasting my time reading it." AGH
Last edited: