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‹ Webcomics Confidential: Mistakes cartoonists ma... July To-Do List ›

ComicLab Ep 446 — Never Outsource Your Vision

This week, Brad and Dave discuss one of the easiest traps for independent creators to fall into: Outsourcing important business or creative decisions to reader polls. Audience feedback can be useful, but when creators ask readers to steer decisions about Patreon tiers, Kickstarter rewards, publishing strategy, or creative direction, they often get noisy, contradictory advice that can lead them away from their own best judgment.

Topics covered in this episode include:

  • Why readers are experts in consumption, not creation
  • The danger of asking your audience to make business decisions for you
  • Brad’s cautionary tale from his early days as a newspaper designer
  • Why negative comments carry more psychological weight than positive ones
  • The difference between listening to readers and asking readers to decide
  • Why feedback should be treated as a compass, not a steering wheel
  • How polling readers can create factions and resentment among backers
  • Why creators should rely first on their own instincts, goals, and judgment
  • The value of seeking advice from trusted peers and experienced professionals
  • Why no single expert — including ComicLab — should be treated as the only authority
  • Dave’s hierarchy of advice: Heart and mind first, peers and pros second, passive reader feedback third
  • Erika Moen’s thoughtful counterpoint about social-media assistants
  • How a social-media assistant can protect creators from harassment, criticism, and burnout
  • The difference between a social-media assistant as a partner versus a replacement
  • Plans and possibilities for future live ComicLab events
  • Dave’s San Diego Comic-Con appearance at Booth 1228, including free ComicLab pins for listeners
  • A listener question about “boomer humor” and whether it should be taken as an insult
  • The difference between old-fashioned joke structure and out-of-touch subject matter
  • Why traditional setup-and-punchline comedy still works
  • How Reddit comments often reflect meme culture more than thoughtful criticism
  • When repeated criticism might be worth filtering for a useful grain of truth
  • Why creators should protect their confidence while staying open to thoughtful feedback

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by Brad Guigar on July 2, 2026
Posted In: Uncategorized
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