Competition Backwash?

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I submitted a story to the 2008 Summer Romance competition. I don't know why. I have never entered a contest here before and I certainly did not expect to win. If I bought all the tickets in a chook raffle I think I could manage to lose. However, as the days rolled by I was surprised and delighted by the reception my story got,not spectacular but respectable (by my lights, anyway). The phenomenon that really surprised me though was what happened after entries closed. Normally, the number of hits seems to peak at a couple of days and then tail off over a week or so until settling at one or two a day, at least in my case. It may be different for the superstars. This time, when voting began, I was getting 10-20 hits a day on my entry, but what I thought was a tremendous resurgence of interest in my old stuff. Over the last two weeks I got up to 200 hits on each of my older stories, and I have to assume these were real readers, not just the seagulls who drop in, crap, and fly away. Now some may sneer at an extra 200 hits but, for me, that was up to a 20% increase. So my point is, have other writers noticed such a phenomenon? I was loath to mention it earlier in case it looked like a blatant attempt to influence the voting (Who, me? Never!) or have I discovered a sneaky way to lure unsuspecting dupes into reading my mistresspieces. Just enter a contest!
Joanne

Comments

It's The Truth...

At least, it was for me. The easiest way I knew of to bring up the contest stories for review (once they were listed together on the vote page) was from the author list, and doing it that way brought some of those authors' other intriguing stories to my attention -- mostly items I'd missed the first time around.

Eric

I've done that myself

I've read a current story, enjoyed it immensely and then stared delving into the archives to see what else there is. I've discovered some real gems as a result of trawling the author list.

Susie

Dusting off the bookshelves

I've been noticing some of my older stories have been getting new hits. I know at least some of them were real hits because a few of those old stories have even gotten new votes, and seagull readers wouldn't do that. I'm not sure if it's related to the contest, but that would make sense. Although it makes me feel a little guilty if someone decided to check my back catalog after reading my sweet (silver medal wininng!) romance and ends up plunging into the brutal horror story that was my first effort. I wonder if I should put a stronger warning in the blurb.

I noticed the same effect...

Though, in my case, I suspect it was folks opening the story by accident, realizing it was rubbish, and then quickly going on to one of the good ones. I may submit something in the future... The extra hits (even from folks that don't finish reading) are good for the psyche!

Annette

P.S. Let's keep this little hit trick secret, okay?