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I really hope this is universal. I've not been able to get over my hang up w/sacrificing title (often an extension/subtext of my theme) to garner looks on my small portfolio account.The description is available nearly everywhere the title is, and not much less prominent. As far as I'm concerned, they're a pair. I can have a story title that doesn't necessarily evoke anything, but if I put the right buzzwords in the description, it's going to fly just as well.
I say don't sacrifice your creative license with title. The description can do the lifting for those who want more "who's fucking who, and how".I really hope this is universal. I've not been able to get over my hang up w/sacrificing title (often an extension/subtext of my theme) to garner looks on my small portfolio account.
Description feels the other side of the author/reader agreement coin (for the masses) but I'm willing to admit I'm perhaps being a little precious.
RejectReality and Simon both make great points and I'm so very torn. I may sacrifice my next chosen title for something with a buzzword mostly out of morbid curiosity.
Try it both ways and see what happens. What do you have to lose?
That one's in my list of one word titles, and as yet unused on Lit when I checked it. ( been a while, so it may have been used since ) So I'll be happy to keep that one in reserveYep. You're right. The next title will be MILF Cruise - Upgraded instead of just Upgraded. We'll see how it goes.
" I try to pick something that has meaning to me and to the story"... exactly what I did in my bunions story. Sacrificed views for my own satisfaction. As you say, a big deal. Thus important.I am going to be someone that offers a different opinion ... and I think I am in the minority at that.
Let me preface what I say - what others are saying about viewership is likely very true ... while I like that people would read my stories and like them (hopefully) ... I admit that my main goal when writing is more to write...I guess, for myself. (Admittedly, on Lit I do write a little for the audience...meaning, I put sex in the stories when I normally would not. The reason I write in Lit is a WHOLE other story though...I will try to keep on topic...)
Anyway, to me, the title is a huge deal. I try to pick something that has meaning to me and to the story. It's not necessarily descriptive of the story, but is a part of it. Again, my main objective is not to get viewership ... and again, that is just me ... I know a lot here are great writers and want viewership....there is nothing wrong with that. So what most everyone has said is correct in regards to that.
However, for me, the title of a writing .. a book...a poem ... is integral to the story told. I tend to like to tie it together with my story....and I know that a lot, if not most readers won't pick up on it. And I am okay with that.
Some examples (and I only have a few, as I have not published a lot in Lit ... so take what I say with a gazillion grains of salt)...
The story I did, that was titled, "A Costume Party at the Forum" was written about some of my experiences in Lit ... in these forum pages. While the physical setting was at the Forum in Englewood, I was really alluding to the threads and the people I met here.
In another submission, I titled it, "Butterfly Nectar". I sprinkled references or allusions to that. The name of a juice bar, the way the protagonist's err...legs....spread. I even tied it in to the opening of the doors of the juice bar. Again, would anyone else have caught that? Perhaps not ... unless you read it for themes. I guess that is how I write...and how I read.
A final example. Its a story from a very good friend who writes here, and who I think is one of the better writers - @TarnishedPenny .. and I hope its okay that I use TP's work as an example. However, TP wrote a story titled "Black to White" .... and it is GREAT. After I finished reading the story, I appreciated the title so much more. Everything just tied together for me. (I won't say what it was about in case others wish to read it.)
At any rate, perhaps the importance of a title in Lit differs from that of other sites or writing venues ... but...those are just my thoughts.
Try it both ways and see what happens. What do you have to lose?
That one's in my list of one word titles, and as yet unused on Lit when I checked it. ( been a while, so it may have been used since ) So I'll be happy to keep that one in reserveI'm almost as fond of one word titles as I am puns and wordplay.

What did you pull with vote totals?Well, this little experiment has been very interesting. Please note the publishing dates. The only difference between them is that MILF Cruise is 12.8k words and Hedonism House is 20k words. I suppose some people see a long story and pass.
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What did you pull with vote totals?
I think the title is so important to ME, maybe not the reader, they know what they like. sometimes I have a story waiting to be published because I am waiting for that magical title to appear. I also like when the title takes you by surprise, comes up in the context of the story, or refers to something you didn't realize was important in the first place. Unfortunately, our readers want to know everything from the title, I don't think they like surprises... And on a side note, my two stories with 'wife' in the title are pretty popular, ha.Titles are important. One story of mine that should have been popular, if I may say so myself, was a fun tale poorly titled Funions, Onions, Bunions. It failed to find its audience. My least viewed story, but a score of 4.33 suggests more readers could have enjoyed it.
Well, this little experiment has been very interesting. Please note the publishing dates. The only difference between them is that MILF Cruise is 12.8k words and Hedonism House is 20k words. I suppose some people see a long story and pass.
View attachment 2199091
I rarely disagree with Reject or Simon, but if I'm reading the number of votes your two stories received correctly (you posted that screen capture later in the thread), I will disagree with both.Well, this little experiment has been very interesting. Please note the publishing dates. The only difference between them is that MILF Cruise is 12.8k words and Hedonism House is 20k words. I suppose some people see a long story and pass.
View attachment 2199091
I rarely disagree with Reject or Simon, but if I'm reading the number of votes your two stories received correctly (you posted that screen capture later in the thread), I will disagree with both.
Votes per view for Milf Cruise (1:36) are nearly three times higher than for Hedonism (1:97), and the number of raw views is significantly higher even with a much shorter (three days v three weeks) viewing window. Two differences contribute; story length and title/description.
I write long stories and see a direct correlation between story length and the votes per view number. The metrics vary among categories, and I write in multiple categories and categories other than yours. Although my specific ratios won't directly apply to you, it is clear that the longer the story, the fewer readers who initially click a story will follow through to vote.
My interpretation is that Milf Cruise - Upgraded, and the description gives a provocative possibility and a specific gendered/age differential that 'preselects' an audience who (provided you deliver the goods) will follow through your long enough, but not too long story and vote. Headonism House isn't provocative (at least in the same way), and an older woman could be an older woman/older man, older woman/group, or something else. Readers have to click to discover if the kinks will be in their wheelhouse, and when they do click, the story may be longer than they're willing to engage, even if it aligns otherwise.