Mister Dongs
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2020
I agree that how things are now, but don't necessarily have to be.Crowdfunded businesses are never destined to last, because how many people can dump down the amount of money asked by the creators anyway. They may do it once, twice, but after a while, most will realize that they have better, more important things to do with all that money.
Also, this model is antithesis to consumerism in that (a) it prevents casual people from impulse buying and discovering you in the process; you end up becoming increasingly reliant on a shrinking pool of fools, (b) it doesn't afford instant gratification that will help you reach out to casuals who could have been your new fans, and (c) it doesn't allow your products to have a good reach among your targeted consumers.
A lot of things are coming clear in the wash, like how given the investment of time and cash into things like shipping, small overall custmer pool, customers are willing to pay extra for high-end goods - omnibuses, foil and chrome covers, squarebound binding, etc. One major problem is getting and keeping people on-board who are capable of delivering this. The other is a means of low-cost product for developing or uninterested talent wanting to get cheaper comics out the door to customers in a way that's economically competitive against traditional publishing. These things are going to require something innovative, and most creators associated with Comicsgate hem very close to the business path Frog laid out without understanding why it works for him and not them, or that as far as youtube platforms go, they can't just compete solely among each other for a finite viewer pool of people interested in this content.
For example, CreepshowArt is an artist Youtuber with more subs than EVS and Anna combined who makes videos discussing internet drama and sometimes Western comics for an audience of mainly women while she draws Tumblr commissions. I'm sure she wouldn't turn down CG A-list kind of money. But what's the point if all it's going to end with hundreds of thousands of new people discovering a "customer advocacy movement" that welcomes them by calling their beloved creators thots and the customers simps?
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