Jaymi
Time Traveling Idol
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2023
- Messages
- 177
- Points
- 83
I'm writing a story which i want to start posting here on scribblehub. It's mainly just for fun. but I'd love to get at least some readers.
I don't really have any backlog, I plan to just post chapters as I finish them (roughly one every 2–3 days, sometimes longer if I get stuck editing). But I’ve noticed a lot of stories launch with 5–10 chapters right away. Is that necessary?
If I were to launch with just 1 chapter and then continue updating every few days as chapters are finished, would that significantly hurt discoverability compared to launching with multiple chapters at once?
I’m trying to understand how much consistency and initial chapter count matter compared to just focusing on writing at my own pace and letting it grow naturally.
And if i do get a bad launch, can it still get more readers later on in the story?
I know the obvious answer is “build a backlog,” but I kind of like being as far into the story as the readers are, lol. (and im super impatient)
Sorry if this has been asked before >.>
I don't really have any backlog, I plan to just post chapters as I finish them (roughly one every 2–3 days, sometimes longer if I get stuck editing). But I’ve noticed a lot of stories launch with 5–10 chapters right away. Is that necessary?
If I were to launch with just 1 chapter and then continue updating every few days as chapters are finished, would that significantly hurt discoverability compared to launching with multiple chapters at once?
I’m trying to understand how much consistency and initial chapter count matter compared to just focusing on writing at my own pace and letting it grow naturally.
And if i do get a bad launch, can it still get more readers later on in the story?
I know the obvious answer is “build a backlog,” but I kind of like being as far into the story as the readers are, lol. (and im super impatient)
Sorry if this has been asked before >.>
These days hardly at all. These days every new release or chapter update gets immediately hopelessly swarmed, so the exposure gain from releases is negligible, at best.