Serafina1210
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2014
- Posts
- 899
I did it again today: posted a story I'd sweated bullets over but totally froze when it came to thinking up a title and description. Nothing good came to me, and now the story is limping along with few readers (or few clicks anyway).
Now I'm trying to be analytic about what kind of title and description is most likely to draw readers (to speak only of my own case, I'm pretty sure a good title and description is more important than my magical handle or my yuuuge reputation).
Here are some story pairs from the same categories: the first did well (talking about views, not ratings) and the second did poorly:
LW:
Diary of a Faithful Wife: An ordinary day in her life
Augustina's Confession: Young, married, pregnant, and cheating
I have no idea why the first got more clicks than the second. Perhaps because the first played against standard LW expectations?
BDSM:
Kitten and the Wolf: A rough-love fantasy for grown-up women
Slave Girl Emily Ch 09: She plays with Mr. Watanabe and Ai
First conveys a decent amount of info about the story: two main characters, well characterized, with some rough play: a romance. Second (which did much worse than the surrounding chapters) doesn't tell much about the story--the proper names don't convey much information.
NonConsent:
The Ruination of Annabelle: A student and her sadistic benefactor
The Ultimate Thrill: Does it have to be death?
Both promise dark stories, but the first is much more forthcoming about what will actually be in the story. The second is actually pretty cryptic.
My theory here is that the title/description that actually tells a potential reader what's in the story will do better than one that's cute without being descriptive. One of my favorite descriptions was for Pipit Ch. 10: "Two fucks, a razor, and a sandwich." Maybe people chuckled over the description, but they didn't click on the link.
How do others go about coming up with titles and descriptions? Do you have a method, or do you wait for inspiration to strike?
Now I'm trying to be analytic about what kind of title and description is most likely to draw readers (to speak only of my own case, I'm pretty sure a good title and description is more important than my magical handle or my yuuuge reputation).
Here are some story pairs from the same categories: the first did well (talking about views, not ratings) and the second did poorly:
LW:
Diary of a Faithful Wife: An ordinary day in her life
Augustina's Confession: Young, married, pregnant, and cheating
I have no idea why the first got more clicks than the second. Perhaps because the first played against standard LW expectations?
BDSM:
Kitten and the Wolf: A rough-love fantasy for grown-up women
Slave Girl Emily Ch 09: She plays with Mr. Watanabe and Ai
First conveys a decent amount of info about the story: two main characters, well characterized, with some rough play: a romance. Second (which did much worse than the surrounding chapters) doesn't tell much about the story--the proper names don't convey much information.
NonConsent:
The Ruination of Annabelle: A student and her sadistic benefactor
The Ultimate Thrill: Does it have to be death?
Both promise dark stories, but the first is much more forthcoming about what will actually be in the story. The second is actually pretty cryptic.
My theory here is that the title/description that actually tells a potential reader what's in the story will do better than one that's cute without being descriptive. One of my favorite descriptions was for Pipit Ch. 10: "Two fucks, a razor, and a sandwich." Maybe people chuckled over the description, but they didn't click on the link.
How do others go about coming up with titles and descriptions? Do you have a method, or do you wait for inspiration to strike?