• Home
  • Contact
  • FAQs
    • What is Webcomics.com?
    • Member Benefits
    • How To Post an Article or News Item
    • How to Post a Webcomic on the List
    • How to Post a Comic
    • Terms of Service
  • WebComics List
  • Benefits
    • Print Vendors: Get multiple quotes
    • Banner stand: Discount
    • Consultation discount
    • “How To Make Webcomics” book: discount
    • “Webcomics Handbook”: discount
    • ALL benefits
  • My Account
    • Welcome
    • What is Webcomics.com?
    • My Subscription
    • Join us!
  • Account
  • Membership List
Twitter Email RSS

Webcomics.com

How To Make WebComics

Webcomics Handbook

‹ Webcomics Confidential Ep 4 — Why I’m n... ComicPOP interview: “The Ins and Outs of ... ›

ComixLaunch interview

Tyler James and I discuss the many ways webcomics have changed since the early 2000s — and we re-think Patreon. From the site:

In today’s show, veteran webcartoonist Brad Guigar (Evil, Inc.) drops an onslaught of mega-ton knowledge bombs on everything from Kickstarter to Patreon to creating better comics. You’re going to want to listen to this session at least twice!

Highlights of this Session Include:

  • The state of the webcomics business model in 2017 from the guy who literally wrote the book on webcomics.
  • What Brad wishes he focused more on in the early days.
  • How Brad’s entire business almost went belly up a few years ago… and the crowdfunding platform that saved it. (Spoiler: He’s not talking about Kickstarter.)
  • Plus: The art of the pivot.

The content you are trying to access is only available to members.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
by Brad Guigar on March 29, 2017
Posted In: Interviews
Comments available to logged in users only.



Recent comments

  • rpmichel on Humor Writing — One Step at a Time
  • Stan! on Should you do a 2025 calendar?
  • Jaycee Knight on Some brilliant marketing advice — and a warning
  • Brad Guigar on Some brilliant marketing advice — and a warning
  • Jaycee Knight on Some brilliant marketing advice — and a warning

Search



Webcomics.com Poll

I design my comic specifically for smartphones and digital tablets.

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
  • Polls Archive

Categories

  • Archive Dive
  • Articles
    • Advertising
    • Art
    • Business
    • Community
    • Conventions
    • Creativity
    • Crowdfunding
    • Digital publishing
    • Image prep
    • Lettering
    • Marketing / Social Media
    • Merchandise
    • Print publishing
    • Tech
    • Web site
      • Web Site Design
    • Writing
  • ComicLab
  • Edited and Ready
  • Events
  • Guest
  • Hot Seat critiques
  • Information
  • Interviews
  • Livestream Chat
  • Mail Bag
  • Member Benefits
  • Promos
  • Site News
  • Surviving Creativity
  • To-Do List
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • Webcomics Confidential
  • Webcomics Weekly
  • Webcomics.com Poll

Tags

ad revenue AdSense advertising Comic Easel comments composition contract copyright creativity exercise credit cards Crowdfunding digital lettering digital publishing Facebook holiday Humor IP KDP Kickstarter Kindle legal lettering line weight Longform comics Manga Studio merchandise NCS panels Patreon Promotion PulsePoint readers revenue SEO shipping social media Square taxes trademark Twitter typography Web design word balloons WordPress writing

Recent Posts

  • ComicLab Ep 387 — Who are you? What do you do? Why should I care?
  • Webcomics Confidential: Infinite Reader Theory
  • Accepting criticism
  • Understanding BISAC Subject Headings
  • ComicLab Ep 386 — Special Guest Scott C

Recent Comments

  • rpmichel on Humor Writing — One Step at a Time
  • Stan! on Should you do a 2025 calendar?
  • Jaycee Knight on Some brilliant marketing advice — and a warning
  • Brad Guigar on Some brilliant marketing advice — and a warning
  • Jaycee Knight on Some brilliant marketing advice — and a warning
  • My Subscription
  • Store
  • Terms of Service
  • Account
  • Membership List

©2007-2025 Webcomics.com | Powered by WordPress with ComicPress | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑