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Deleted member 166076
Guest
So, I've been working on my writing since the first week of December about two years ago. In that time, I've managed to complete one five volume series, three volumes for a second series, and one volume for a third series. The amount of work to write each series has varied depending on the point I'm at in each series and which series I am working on. However, right now I have two dungeon core LitRPGs that require a lot of extensive planning including hours of research, creating pixel maps that are 25,600 pixels in size, planning extensive tavern menus, planning challenge rooms with rewards, etc. Then I also have a wiki on the Discord that needs updated and finished volumes that need endless amounts of editing and formatting. All this to say it's a lot of work.
Anyhow, I was originally writing one gamelit slice-of-life series that barely required 5 minutes to story plan and one dungeon core series. So I ended up with a schedule of 10x chapters / week for Patreon between both series. When the first series wrapped up, I just worked on one series for a while, but then the subscription numbers started to drop and I got excited about a new story idea, so I started another series. The problem is that now I'm working 40+ hours a week and earning $300 or less a month for my trouble. I already have a poor immune system and chronic health issues, but I'm overworking myself to the point where illnesses drag on for far longer than they should and I barely have time to just exist.
I want to cut my workload down to a more manageable amount, but I'm worried about losing all of the subscribers I have left. I live in the US where I have to pay $350 to H&R block just to access the paperwork to file taxes then another 15% of the total earnings have to be paid in taxes. Essentially, if I don't make enough I end up in the red. I don't want to give up when I'm just starting to self-publish to places like Amazon, but I have barely had time to do more than sleep lately just to keep up with everything. I wish I was exaggerating.
Recently I had to take a single week off from posting new chapters to fix a major plot hole in both of my series related to measurements. I have been losing subscribers all week as a result. This is the first week of no chapters in two years and I'm having to work even more than usual rather than less just to get it all done in the span of one week.
I guess I just don't understand how authors like LostRambler of Carousel can take weeks off constantly and still have earnings over $1,000 every month. I mean, I understand quality of writing and all that. However, most authors have maybe 5-10 early access chapters and still maintain subscribers. I have 50-100+ for each of my series and constantly fix and improve any issues with my writing, but I lose subscribers right away if I have to work on anything but early access chapters for a single week.
I'd appreciate any guidance or advice anyone can give me. Should I restructure my entire Patreon with different tiers for different numbers of early access chapters? Can I reduce my new chapters per week to focus more on story planning and such? How do I avoid upsetting my current subscribers in the process, some of them have subscribed ahead of time for an entire year?
Anyhow, I was originally writing one gamelit slice-of-life series that barely required 5 minutes to story plan and one dungeon core series. So I ended up with a schedule of 10x chapters / week for Patreon between both series. When the first series wrapped up, I just worked on one series for a while, but then the subscription numbers started to drop and I got excited about a new story idea, so I started another series. The problem is that now I'm working 40+ hours a week and earning $300 or less a month for my trouble. I already have a poor immune system and chronic health issues, but I'm overworking myself to the point where illnesses drag on for far longer than they should and I barely have time to just exist.
I want to cut my workload down to a more manageable amount, but I'm worried about losing all of the subscribers I have left. I live in the US where I have to pay $350 to H&R block just to access the paperwork to file taxes then another 15% of the total earnings have to be paid in taxes. Essentially, if I don't make enough I end up in the red. I don't want to give up when I'm just starting to self-publish to places like Amazon, but I have barely had time to do more than sleep lately just to keep up with everything. I wish I was exaggerating.
Recently I had to take a single week off from posting new chapters to fix a major plot hole in both of my series related to measurements. I have been losing subscribers all week as a result. This is the first week of no chapters in two years and I'm having to work even more than usual rather than less just to get it all done in the span of one week.
I guess I just don't understand how authors like LostRambler of Carousel can take weeks off constantly and still have earnings over $1,000 every month. I mean, I understand quality of writing and all that. However, most authors have maybe 5-10 early access chapters and still maintain subscribers. I have 50-100+ for each of my series and constantly fix and improve any issues with my writing, but I lose subscribers right away if I have to work on anything but early access chapters for a single week.
I'd appreciate any guidance or advice anyone can give me. Should I restructure my entire Patreon with different tiers for different numbers of early access chapters? Can I reduce my new chapters per week to focus more on story planning and such? How do I avoid upsetting my current subscribers in the process, some of them have subscribed ahead of time for an entire year?