AwkwardlySet
On-Duty Critic
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2022
- Posts
- 3,735
In one of the recent topics, I touched on the term that Simon used - "doing well"
While I believe that we all have our personal motivations and benchmarks for how well we are doing, and while I also believe that is the most important thing for each of us, I also wanted to try to set some more "objective" metrics of "doing well" besides the subjective ones we all undoubtedly have.
My intention here is to set several criteria that could be used as "objective metrics", but my ambition is to have all of you invested in this and I intend to edit my original post to adjust the criteria and expand on the options as you present your arguments.
1. Doing well commercially - I believe this one trumps everything else. If you are doing well commercially then you ARE doing well, regardless of all the other parameters. This now includes only the authors who use websites such as Patreon as their Literotica influx can be estimated, in my opinion.
2. Having a large following - This is also quite an obvious one. The number of readers who want to be notified as soon as we post a story must be relevant, although it does depend heavily on the categories and themes the author focuses on, as well as their prolificness (is this a word?
) Of course, authors like SilkStockingsLover, HeyAll, lovecraft68, etc. whose followers are measured in the tens of thousands are objectively doing well regardless of the themes they are writing, but I also wanted to see if we can set some thresholds in the sense of how many followers one needs for certain themes and categories to be considered of being objectively "followed well?" It might be a hard task but hey, I believe we could use one serious topic for a change.
3. Having high scores and being ranked high on the top lists. This is a tricky one. High scores and top lists are easier to achieve with chaptered stories, not to mention that one needs mere five votes to be listed in last month's top list, ten votes to be listed in 12 months' top list, and a hundred votes to be listed in the All-time top list. Also, high scores vary by category and theme. I have some ideas here but I am reluctant to write them down yet. The problem with this criterion is that is so prone to tampering in all but the most popular categories where stories get thousands of votes. I am curious to hear your opinions about this one.
4. ??? Maybe something like the number of comments, quality of feedback, number of favorites and such could be used as one criterion but I am not sure how to measure this one properly
I am looking forward to hearing your thoughts and suggestions
While I believe that we all have our personal motivations and benchmarks for how well we are doing, and while I also believe that is the most important thing for each of us, I also wanted to try to set some more "objective" metrics of "doing well" besides the subjective ones we all undoubtedly have.
My intention here is to set several criteria that could be used as "objective metrics", but my ambition is to have all of you invested in this and I intend to edit my original post to adjust the criteria and expand on the options as you present your arguments.
1. Doing well commercially - I believe this one trumps everything else. If you are doing well commercially then you ARE doing well, regardless of all the other parameters. This now includes only the authors who use websites such as Patreon as their Literotica influx can be estimated, in my opinion.
2. Having a large following - This is also quite an obvious one. The number of readers who want to be notified as soon as we post a story must be relevant, although it does depend heavily on the categories and themes the author focuses on, as well as their prolificness (is this a word?

3. Having high scores and being ranked high on the top lists. This is a tricky one. High scores and top lists are easier to achieve with chaptered stories, not to mention that one needs mere five votes to be listed in last month's top list, ten votes to be listed in 12 months' top list, and a hundred votes to be listed in the All-time top list. Also, high scores vary by category and theme. I have some ideas here but I am reluctant to write them down yet. The problem with this criterion is that is so prone to tampering in all but the most popular categories where stories get thousands of votes. I am curious to hear your opinions about this one.
4. ??? Maybe something like the number of comments, quality of feedback, number of favorites and such could be used as one criterion but I am not sure how to measure this one properly

I am looking forward to hearing your thoughts and suggestions
Last edited: