Weighing the importance of reader feedback
Having wrapped my first Kickstarter campaign, I’m finding that I’ve learned an awful lot about crowdsourcing — and webcomics in general. I want to share one of those general lessons with you today. It’s about gauging the significant of reader feedback.
This is a topic we’ve talked about here before under many headings — whether to allow negative comments on our site; gauging reader interest in a new piece of merchandise; and so on. And I thought I had a good handle on it. But this Kickstarter proved otherwise.
The issue started when I heard repeated comments about how great it would be to include PDFs of the original How To Make Webcomics book in the reward tiers. And, fresh off achieving my $10,000 goal in three days, I was eager to do whatever I could to reward the people who has rewarded me. Of course, that book is not mine to make unilateral decisions over, but a short time later, I included a PDF of the book at a special reward tier.
I placed it at a level that would benefit the vast majority of my supporters. And some of them took advantage of it. But it was, by no means, a groundswell. That should have been my first tip-off.
I received this response from a commenter who listed a first name, but was otherwise anonymous (shoulda been my second tip off).
Hi, several people, including myself, would like to know: Will people who pledge more than $29 will get the PDF of How to Make Webcomics?
The content you are trying to access is only available to members.
More than ever, aspiring cartoonists are looking towards the Web as a means of distribution and business. But does your comic really have what it takes to be successful online?



