Votes

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All of us have our calling. For a while, I thought my calling was to be a monk. That passed.

Currently I feel my calling is to express a qualified opinion regarding hits, votes, and comments at least once a month.

There appears to be a number of people who think the number of votes a story or part of a story receives has a correlation with the quality of the writing. In my experience this just isn't remotely so.

In order for the law of large numbers to come into play -- which makes statistics creditable - there obviously has to be LARGE numbers.

It has been suggested that one hundred votes equates to success for a story. Let's say for sake of argument it does. Each author gets two votes. Actually I'm sure that others have found as I have, that it's possible to have three votes for each story if we are artful about whether or not we sign in. Given that -- it's very possible for a story to get 100 votes with just thirty-four people voting. Thirty-four is NOT a large number.

Football Girl Chapter One received 119 votes, which is more than any of my stories has received. Does that mean 119 is a LARGE number. Given the fact that Football Girl Chapter One has has over 8,500 hits one would have to ask why thousands and thousands of people HAVE NOT voted for it. It is a marvelous story and if votes actually meant quality it would have over 10,000 votes by now.

What does a vote mean? When I read a story and think it is something other than total garbage - I vote for it. Over the last few months I can think of only four or five stories I've read that I DIDN'T vote for. I'm harder on authors I think just throw something out there. I won't mention names but just recently a very good writer posted a story on BC that was utter, implausible trash; I didn't vote for it though I noticed it received quite a few votes. Since it was so pitifully rancid I assume those votes were from fans of other stories/series the author posted.

I believe most votes mean the reader felt something when they read the story -- something other than the desire to puke. As such, a vote probably is more likely for one genre over another. I assume most stories written about TS rather than CD will garner more votes as that seems to be in the current of the BC stream. Also, SciFi and Magical stories seem to have lost a bit of their BC fanbase.

My guess is there are less than two hundred people on this site who do all the voting. . .maybe even less. Given that it is more truthful to say that out of the of outspoken people on this site a vote of fifty probably means you've struck a chord with thirty or so.

People rarely vote for a story after the third or fourth day it is posted. A vote than also seems to be akin to a star rating for a movie. Maybe it means -- I read this and found it acceptable for others. Maybe.

It does not denote quality of writing and shouldn't be used by anyone serious about improving their skills as a meter in that regard.

Jill

Comments

I wonder

Angharad's picture

if that monastery...nah, never mind.

If you were getting all the comments, votes and reads, would you still be complaining about the system or is this Devil's Advocate stuff?

Angharad

Angharad

Who's Complaining??

When I complain you will know it.

Uhmmmm -- attacking the messenger instead of the message means what?

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I haven't been able to fathom the system...

Andrea Lena's picture

...I have no complaints at all, but I must agree with your last premise... votes do not necessarily indicate the quality of writing...nor should they. They seem to be an indication of popularity, which is okay. But along those lines, I'd expect Dan Brown sells more books these days than Dostoyevsky or Dumas...yes?


She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Possa Dio riccamente vi benedica, tutto il mio amore, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

That only counts ...

... as a story access, not a vote for Dan Brown. You have to read as well as own them :) All of his I've read was an extract from 'The DaVinci Code' in the 'Observer'. It was so awful I've never attempted to read further and I like thrillers usually.

John Humphrys (BBC R4 'Today' programme presenter) was challenged to read 'The DaVinci Code' in a TV programme which persuades people to try something new. He thought it was one of the worst written books he'd ever read but confessed to enjoying the story. Perhaps I'm wrong. It happens on rare occasions.

Robi

I've Read All

Cover to cover -- except for the last, which I started, but got waylaid by the holidays. It's fetsering on my Kindle.

I also read all of Grisham's books, and he's God awful. The Associate is an absolute turd.

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

The way I do it

This will probably make me sound mean, but I tend to be stingy about what I vote on. Whether it means the same to others or not, a vote for me basically means "this is a story I would recommend to a friend." I usually don't vote on individual chapters in serials until I've finished the entire serial, either, meaning that even if I'll recommend an unfinished serial to a friend I probably will not have voted for any of the chapters, and then whether I vote will be based on my overall impression of the entire story as a whole, and I will vote for a number of chapters I deem appropriate; the better the story, the more votes I will give it. Add to that the fact that for some reason I only seem to give one vote rather than two (or at least I was for a long time, lately when I've voted the tally has jumped by as much as thirty because of other votes that have went in during the time I spent reading) and I've got a very low total of votes I've given out since the rating system was put in place. To be honest, I much preferred the star rating system the site used to have, if only it had been seeable to more than the person whose story it was.

Don't get me wrong, I like seeing votes, and I can't help but be affected by seeing them on my stories. But I much prefer a good long string of comments. Neither one is really indicative of how many people have read or enjoyed your story, but at least a string of comments lets you know your story has made people think and feel, and really, that's what's important.

Melanie E.

Not Stingy

I don't think your voting method is mean. You obviously care, and that usually finds its way through to the author. I agree that meaningful comments are much more important than votes. One good comment means everything to me. Especially when it comes from a writer I admire. . .like Randalynn, Sue Brown, Laika, 'drea, you, etc.

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I agree as well

... but I'm even stingier. I typically vote for maybe a dozen stories in a week -- this includes OLD ones I've just found or am re-reading.

As for my own stories, I wait. I have in my mind a "level" of how well I think it is compared to my other stories, and then assign a value to that. But I assign the value really low. If after a week, the story has not reached the number of votes for the level I've assigned to it, THEN I'll vote for my own story, if it HAS reached that level, I don't. But... here's my scale:

Best work, most fun to write, most fun to think about - 32 votes...
Technically well written, serious, or thought-provoking - 16 votes...
Written to make a point - 8 votes...
Sk8r Grrls - 4 votes...
Anything else of mine - 2 votes...

Usually, this means I don't vote for my own stories.

I tend to be...

stingy on my voting as well - though not so stingy, in that I vote on chapters that affect me. For me to vote for a post, it has to be something I find worth my time to read, and it also has to have a little something extra. I can't quantify what that is, but it's something that pulls me in more than I'm normally pulled into a story. I don't believe I've ever voted for EVERY post in a serial... Though, if I've read an entire serial from beginning to end, it's likely that I've voted at least once for one of the posts.

I actually comment at least twice as often as I vote. I prefer to receive comments, authors take time to write and post... So, unless I just give up part way in, I'm likely to eventually comment on a story/serial. I try to make my comments actually mean something but, fear I fall short regularly.

As to the votes, I like to get them, but I'm not willing to do some of the things that I'm aware will be likely to increase the likelihood of receiving votes. The numbers are not large, but I like to pretend to myself that now that I'm getting about twice as many votes as I did when I started writing here that I've gotten better. But, I know the vote increase probably has more to do with the larger audience than it does any improvement in my writing. As Jill points out, the number of voters (even if you assume most are not other authors) is insignificant compared to the number of hits.

Annette

It's not the quality of the writing ...

... it's how the story (plot, if you like) appeals to the reader. Stephen King is an excellent writer. There's no doubt about that. But I wouldn't vote for one of his stories, if it were possible, because I just don't like them. I feel guilty about that but that's how I feel.

There's no doubt that sweet, sentimental TS stories will always score highly here; as will serials because people get hooked - I know I do. However I do like a bit of dark to contrast with the light and that's why I (and everyone else who responded) encouraged Jennifer Brock to go ahead with her darker plot. I think you just have to accept that many readers here are looking for catharsis to imagine how their lives could be if only ... They'll vote for that and why not? Like you, I vote for every story I read with very few exceptions.

Anyway, rest assured, Angela, that your stories will always get a vote from me (and even a comment, now I'm registered) and so will Angharad. My only concern is if you stop writing and I'm deprived of your insightful stories.

Robi

Robyn

If you were to write a forced fem story would your protagonist be made Marian?

I fear you have given Stephen King a bad rap. There's much of his writing that I find uninteresting, but so much of it is simply wonderful. Do you really not like Shawshank Redemption or Stand By Me?

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

And if he wanted to be seen as a she,

Andrea Lena's picture

...would Friar tuck?


She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Possa Dio riccamente vi benedica, tutto il mio amore, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Three more:

When they undressed him, would the tormentors comment on how little, John's *Ahem* was?

Would Will turn scarlet with embarrassment?

And anyway, how much of a guy is Gisbourne?

(Oh dear, what have we started?!)
 
 
--Ben


This space intentionally left blank.

As the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, then only left-handers are in their right mind!

After all that, Alan-a-dale wanted to be known as Alana

Andrea Lena's picture

..."Can I find acceptance here as one of your Merry Women, Sir Robin of Locksley? Would you even care to have me, such as I am," she said demurely. To which Sir Robin replied...

They don't call this Sure Would Forest for nothing."


She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Possa Dio riccamente vi benedica, tutto il mio amore, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Penis Envy... or not.

Angela and I have spoken about this before, and I find myself agreeing with her premise in many ways. I think that our reasons and our approach to the question are simply a little different. Doubtless we are looking at the same phenomenon, but like all statistics and other forms of art, beauty is in the eye - - the meaning is wholly individual.

As I’ve said this all before, I’ll summarize briefly: People don’t come here to make us better writers. Their needs are as varied as their personalities, but mostly they are just looking for a specific type of entertainment. Some due to curiosity, but most with a deeper need for ratification, or at least corroboration. More plainly a desire to live vicariously the emotions and situations in our story plots. We need to be mindful that, a reader contributes as much to a story as an author any appreciable caliber; and although many are quite literate, typically they do not come to this particular place for literary brilliance…alone.

I do not think that the question of voting has been done to death, because it is an ongoing phenomenon that we can see every day. What Angela called ‘sweet spot’ stories, seem to me, to be simply those that corroborate the emotional validity that most reasonably well balanced people look for: A chance to change what we dislike or are uncomfortable with. A desire to change fix the one little thing about ourselves that’s hardest to explain or understand. The questions: Would I then find love and happiness? Could I ever be ‘Pretty’, and would mere physical appearance lead the dramatic changes I’ve imagined it would?

There is no doubt we have wise and literate people here. Many are voracious readers who appreciate the subtleties that must be taken into account to draft a water-tight, if not air-tight storyline, but how often do people comment on this aspect of what we do here? In my experience, we are nothing like some other writing sites, where the brutality of the critique might be something reminiscent of the grinding teeth of a garbage disposal. I believe, that the most telling point of the comments we see here, is in the quantity that don’t speak so much to the story itself, or it’s craft. Rather, I see the important number as addressing how the story effected the readers themselves.

I think Longevity of an author here is important too. Since I’ve been hanging around, I’ve chatted with most of the regulars, and I can’t say that I’ve been able to form a real dislike for any of them. Almost universally, they are damned fine people whose company I’m sure I would enjoy very much enjoy. Thus it follows, that if I post something here, and if I’ve worked hard enough, I may reach my own goal of making the story mechanics invisible to the reader, but I’m almost sure to attract some attention from the users.. I’m just thankful that on occasion, many of the nice people here who recognize my name will at least open and look at it simply because they know who I am. Hopefully, it will be a much smaller number who will avoid it for the very same, and equally valid, reason.

For me, the fascination of this subject was, that given the numbers of reads, so few people do vote. I’ve discovered some who were convinced I’d get a prize that they were not sure if I’d truly earned, and no argument there. Others felt to do so was somehow a greater exposure, or worse, and admission on their part. Thus I observe, that to this day, the numbers on this site seem mostly to indicate the sizes of the various groups who like a particular story type, or an author, and that these unique groups seem to act as entities based on the time they have available and the types of stories they gravitate toward. This, along with the smaller core of folk who seem to be able to read most stories, god bless them. What is remarkable is, that on a well written story, with eight thousand reads, that we only seem to have the same fifty to seventy five people voting. .

I agree, there are tons of very well written stories here, indeed, very well written stories which simply do not garner that attention and that ratification, that we all take so much pleasure in seeing, either for our own works or in recognition of a favored story. It’s just that, I agree that the votes don’t rationally relate as easily to writing quality, as they do to the humanity people are seeking. I think the numbers of votes are only about the people who are reading the stories, and about their lives, and that they only have the loosest possible relationship to literacy, scholarship , or erudition. I think, it’s about their humanity.

Thus, the more interesting question might be, what is it our friends need from us, and do we always understand what it is they are asking for? No compulsion to produce a popular piece, when we might need to create another goal for our effluent, but ‘The Best’ authors here, do seem to understand at least some of that, in a subconscious way if nothing else. Likely, due to commonality of vision and need.

Stories like Angela’s, whose talents are obvious and fine, are simple tailored to a different subset of the readers here – to needs that are merely congruent, and not identical. Thankfully, the paradigm we all concede is that each subset just as valid as the next, and in some genera, adult-fantasy-science-fiction say, sixty votes can mean a much greater response/impact, than a real-life, or sweet-spot story at One-hundred, because of the respective sizes of those target audiences. I just find it more fulfilling to look upon every vote, and every comment as amazing. Each is a gift.

I know. A shocker coming from me…the humanist view; but I have to say that I’m equally amazed by how often these discussions degenerate into something resembling -penis envy. I pray, I’m not the only one who sees the humorous side of that.

Sarah Lynn

Nobody Doesn't Like Sarah Lynn

I get the penal colony irony . . . but just who are the degenerates of which you speak?

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I may be one...

Back in Uni days, we played "Crazy 8s with Deviations for Degenerates" (Very similar to what Uno is today). Since I played, I must be one of the Degenerates.

Annette

PS do you prefer to be referred to as Angela or Jill? I see you signing as both...

What's in a Name

Jill is my name and Angela is my nom de plume. So - if you are speaking to me as the writer I suppose Angla would be preferred.

However - just as long as you are speaking with respect and not accusing me of "complaining" -- you can all me by either.

Thank you for asking.

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I must say...

Andrea Lena's picture

...I'm the kind of girl who gets thrilled when I swipe my Debit Card at Shop-Rite and it tells me I'm approved. Now to learn that I belong to a different subset, and that my needs are congruent. Wow...and here I thought I read Angela's stories because she's adorable!


She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Possa Dio riccamente vi benedica, tutto il mio amore, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

OHMIGOD I'm APPROVED!

It likes me, it really likes me!

I'll never be able to use my debit card at WalMart or the grocery store again without smiling!

I like the gray bob the best.

Hugs
Carla

Votes vs Readers

I'm not sure of the corrolation of voters to readers. I do know that the most votes I've had on one story is 75, I've had almost 2.5 times that as readers.
I've seen recent reader increases in some of my old stories but no votes. That fact that someone is still reading some of my old stories boost my confidence.
What is really unique is the number of comments made in reagrds to a story vs the number of votes and the number of readers.
The fact that someone reads what I write is good for my ego. (yes I have low self esteem).
Angela you are correct in you summerization of Votes.
A story has to hold my wandering attention span to get a vote from me and it has to make my vivid imagination go very vivid to receive a vote.
Maybe we should remove the votes and only use them for contests.
Just my $00.02 worth.

Jill Micayla
May you have a wonderful today and a better tomorrow

Jill Micayla
Be kinder than necessary,Because everyone you meet
Is fighting some kind of battle.

As a reader........

only, I vote only for something I liked to read regardless of anything else. Oh I might go back and re-read something more than once and I am pretty sure every time I go back to a story that the reader count goes up by one but I can only vote once. It really is as simple as that for me as a reader 'If I liked it I voted if not I did not.' As far as for voting for something old I do it all the time if I find something old that I have not voted for but reread or maybe found something 'old' I missed first time around. Serials present another problem for a reader but again if I liked the chapter I vote, some chapters I do some I do not.

votes and quality

Votes do not necessarily indicate anything about the quality of writing, but rather about appeal to the tastes of the audience. Let us remember that there are two types of readers who come here: transgendered people and non-tg's who get a kick (sexual, fetishistic or otherwise) out of reading stories about tg's. The second group, I suspect, is much larger and would account for the fact that stories with a definite SM component or stories about preteens, for example, tend to get a fairly large readership irrespective of their quality. That also goes for stories involving certain fetishes (brides, cheerleaders, etc.).

As to why many people read stories and do not vote -- remember that only registered members of the site can vote or leave comments. A large number of readers are visitors who are not registered here.

Actually anyone can sign in

KristineRead's picture

Actually anyone can sign in as a guest reader and can leave a comment. I'm not sure about the voting rules.

Hugs,

Kristy

Yes my Dear! Guest readers can!

all guest readers can leave 1 vote per story.

=^.^=
 

Sephrena Lynn Miller
BigCloset TopShelf
TGLibrary.com
 
 
I am always watching over you. Protecting you...
Come out into the light and enjoy life.

do they know it

I doubt if most of the nonmembers who surf this site know that they can log in under the name of "Guest Reader".

I didn't.

That's why I registered. I wanted to be able to comment as well as vote. Incidentally I think I was able to vote each time I logged into the site. Perhaps it might be a good idea to clarify the position though it might mean fewer people opting to register, which may or may not be a bad thing.

Robi

First off, I have to agree

KristineRead's picture

First off, I have to agree with Angela by saying that Votes, comments, and hits do NOT represent the technical quality of a story. Sometimes they represent how popular an author is, sometimes as others have said, it is simply that the story is in that "sweet spot."

Most of us aren't professional writers, and most of the readers here don't expect us to be. What they want is a story that reaches them some how, and frankly gives them what they are looking for.

As for how I vote, if I enjoy a story, I'll vote on it. If I struggle too much to read it, or it doesn't work for me, then I won't vote on it. I try to comment on stories that I read, but am not always perfect about that.

I do think that people get too hung up on the vote, comment and hit thing. NO Question we all enjoy it when our stories get them, but you shouldn't try to compare one against the other, all votes, hits and comments really tell you is that someone is reading. Comments are the best of the bunch because they give the most insight into what the reader thought.

Hugs,

Kristy

Your first paragraph is right on, sis!

I don't recall ever seeing any guidelines for voting or commenting on the site, and if they do exist people are ignoring them. People vote for their own reasons. Mostly I think they vote for a story if they liked it. That's what I do. But sometimes I like a story because of the storyline, or the mood, or the humor, or in fewer cases, because it is so well constructed.

Comments fall into seveal categories, but most seem to be either to encourage the author, to discuss the characters or plots in a story (these seem mostly directed to serials), or to encourage an author to write future episodes of a story to fit their individual taste.

As for me, I am a neophyte writer, a fledgling with few skills and not enough time or motivation to really become much better. I write mostly for personal reasons. Rarely does an idea of mine reach the stage of a storyline, so it's rare I can complete something presentable. Then, it usually takes me several more days, and a couple complete rewrites before I'll post it. I have this annoying dread that people are going to be comparing me to individuals like Angela or Angharad, as if I consider myself anywhere near as qualified or talented as they.

As a writer, I have a terrible fear that readers are clicking on my story, reading the first few line, and giving up on it before it has a chance to get started. The only thing close to assurance I have that someone has actually read something is when they leave a comment. I would love to know what it is about my writing that someone liked, but especially I'd like to know what it is they didn't like too because I'm pretty dense and I need that knock in the head kind of thing to show me where I can improve. Alas, most readers here are too polite to be honest, and some of the few who tried have have been misunderstood.

In my case, I prove my own point. As a writer I'd like comments to be open honest critique of my stories, which would also prove readers are actually reading them in their entirety. I'd like votes to be based on the story's quality. But I vote for stories I like for whatever reason I feel like at the time, and I comment mostly to encourage the author.

Does that make me epileptic? Dunno. But I'm not going to worry about it.

Hugs
Carla Ann

As a writer who migrated

As a writer who migrated from FM, I simply love votes. I use my vote to say "Thanks for writing this. I enjoyed it."

Hit counts are a measure simply of how many people clicked on a story and read the first few lines - not how many people read the story.

Comments are great but I suspect many readers do not generally leave them.

To me, votes count as the number of "Thank You"s I receive. They are how I measure my stories popularity. But then I don't aspire to write great stories - only ones that people enjoy.

How and Why I vote

I tend to vote based on a total view of the story...content, plot, character development AND errors (grammar, spelling, etc.). I am a compulsive editor, so the WAY a story is written gets factored in. If I don't like the total package, I don't vote. If I really like the content, but am turned off by the technique, I will PM the author and offer to edit. A number of authors have apparently liked the editing, and I have built up good relationships with them (and hopefully, have improved their work). I am more an editor than a writer (except for technical books, of which I have written four). I DO feel that a vote should represent a TOTAL view of the story, but I can understand why many people ignore the errors and just vote on content.

Blogs on Votes and Comments

I know what you are saying, Angela. I even agree with the point you are making, but that does not mean your answer provides the answer to all blog entries from authors that talk about votes, hits, or comments.

As often as not, they are expressions of frustration with being a writer. And most often when frustration is the greatest, when it boils over, writing is the hardest, even writing a blog is difficult. At that time, numbers are more tangible, easier to grasp and explain than the real problems, because if you can explain those problems clearly, you can likely overcome them.

So though this may be part of the answer the writer needs, they also need to hear from fans, they need to read the write for yourself, and they sometimes just need to vent.

Precisely

Which is why you are there to fill in my blanks.

Often people write simply to vent and then forget why the wrote so the vent again.

Vino ergo ventorum. I drink, therefore I vent. Overheard in a bar after an oaf let one rip.

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Hits (Browsers); Votes (Buyers); Comments (Fans)

Lifted from a comment I made to another post:

You could think of hits as being browsers in a book store. They pick your book off the shelf, perhaps just look at the cover, maybe thumb through it, or perhaps even take it over to a chair and read a bit while they drink a cuppa.

Then votes are the ones who take the book to the checkout and actually buy a copy. Rarer and way better than browsers.

Lastly comments are the fan letters. Rarer still and the best of all.

Kris

Kris

{I leave a trail of Kudos as I browse the site. Be careful where you step!}

By Jove she's got it!

"The rain in Spain falls..." Oh sorry. Got carried away. Best explanation I've heard yet.

Hugs
Carla Ann