Alright, it’s been several months since I last wrote about promoting your webcomic with online advertising, so we’re about due for an update! I’ve done a lot of advertising since then, tried out some new places, etc, and feel like I have some good stuff to share. As always, I will include real analytics with real numbers, so if comparing numbers makes you sad or braggy, don’t read XD

Like last time, I’m assuming you’re familiar with using Google Analytics to track visitors to your website, and know how to set up custom trackable urls for your ad campaigns. If you aren’t, go read my linked post, and google some tutorials on how to install and set it up on your site. While there are various plugins to track analytics, IMO google is one of the best, and for the sake of advertising (especially with them!) you really ought to make the switch.

General Advertising Option Updates

InkOUTBREAK

Similar to Comic Rocket, InkOUTBREAK is a comic-reading/tracking site/app, that allows you to subscribe to updates, and read comics via their reader (embedded, giving page views and whatnot to the original publisher still). The creator is rather busy and not actively maintaining/improving it a ton, which is why I list that its advertising backend isn’t quite ready. They have plans of hopefully getting it fixed and ready for the future, but at the moment buying ads isn’t available.

I was, however, able to email the owner directly (inkoutbreak@gmail.com) and set up a couple of tests a few months back. First, a free 3-4 day test he gave me as part of him trying to get it set up and ideas of costs and whatnot.

This test ad ran for about 48 hours, getting up to ~500K exposures. A lot of new users, who read a LOT of pages. Definitely grabbed my attention, and thus my hope that they eventually bring these ads back.

Separate from their plan on buying ads, you CAN still pay to promote your comic to InkOUTBREAK subscribers via their Jackpot program (unless I’m mistaken and that’s no longer functional now too, I’ll check and update). Assuming your comic exists on their site, you’ve claimed it, and uploaded banners and whatnot, you can select it from the list, select how many impressions you want to pay for, pay via paypal, and it’ll get set. Still needs work as an advertising backend to be more transparent (selecting banners, etc), but, I did it ($10 in), and got some nice results:

Even though I only paid $10 or 100K impressions, it seemed to run for a whole week, grabbing hundreds of visitors reading many pages. AND these readers stuck around afterwards, coming back to read new updates and the like. Assuming there was no error and I didn’t get more impressions than I was supposed to be allowed, $10 for 223 new readers is ~5 cents a new reader, so comparable to a cpc of $0.05 or better. That’s a good deal!

Unfortunately the status of InkOUTBREAK is in a bit of limbo at the moment. But if enough of us bother them about wanting to give them money for ads, I’m sure we could fix that 😉

Top Webcomics

I talked a lot about Top Webcomics in my previous ad post. I just want to share some recent data (to show it’s still good even at higher prices and etc) and show the new “Sponsor” ad in action. Some of these I paid for, most I earned doing some of their competitions.

First, the Square. I did two recently, the first of February and the first of March.

As you can see, still lots of readers, reading lots of pages. Less successful in March, likely because it ACTUALLY wasn’t March 1st, but actually February 29th (the first days of the month are always more lucrative, as voting gets crazy then, and the Square ad shows up on the voting pages), and also likely because having run the ad earlier that month, less people were inclined to read it again.

At current prices (as of January 2016) of $11.65 per day for the Square ad, the cpc on TWC ads is rising. $0.15 and $0.30 per new reader for the first and second ad, respectively. The cpc is likely better, but it’s hard to tell how many of the returning visitors in the sessions total are people coming back after clicking the ad, or old readers clicking the ad and getting back in to the comic, etc.

Still decent, still worth it occasionally, especially if you can score some free ads as prizes in a competition of theirs. They’ve moved voting to Facebook now, it seems, which means the competitions won’t be so riggable and vote-crazy.

Seba made us a snazzy new skyscraper gif ad, which I tested out on TWC as well (and I use on Project wonderful, predominantly).

I ran it on 4 update days in the middle of the month (divorced from start of the month voting shenanigans). ~200 new readers over 4 times means ~50 new readers on average per ad day. At current prices of $8.35 per day, that’s looking at $0.17 per new reader/cpc, a respectable price point. Still a good value for your hard earned advertising dollars.

The NEWER thing that TWC has now are these mini Sponsorship ads, which I decided to try out (actually I think I won them as a prize as well).

The ad ran for a month, and accrued a lot of visitors. As always, TWC readers read a lot when they visit. They’re a high quality audience. At current prices, 30 days costs $45, bringing the cost per new reader in this case to around $0.13. So about the same cost-effectiveness, but potentially reaching more people as it is there for longer. You’re balancing the size and visibility of your ad with time. I recommend you try it though. Especially if you have eye-grabbing gif skills.

Long story short, TWC is still a good place to spend your advertising dollars.

The WebComic List

What, this site is still around? It used to be THE webcomic listing, with forums and everything. But it … hasn’t aged well. And is filled with bots and spam and etc. Supposedly it was still a good place to advertise though, so I figured I’d give it a shot. I paid $30 for 30000 impressions (a decent price if you’re comparing cpm’s) and used the new skyscraper gif, as well as paying $15 to be “featured” for the month at the top of the page.

Eh. Not that impressed. Not a ton of readers, not as many pages per session, a little more sporadic and random. There are definitely readers to be accessed there, but for $45, I’m looking at over $1 per new reader. DEFINITELY not the most cost efficient. Between that, and the layout/spam/bots nature of the site, I don’t think I’ll be shopping there again.

Verdict: May be worth giving it a try once, but I don’t recommend it.

Google Adwords

Supposedly the Holy Grail of advertising, I’ve personally not enjoyed my experiences trying to use Google Adwords. I have not found it intuitive or easy to use, it’s difficult to target it to the webcomics and whatnot you’re interested in. So the grain of salt with which you should take my advice may be large, as I may just not have successfully figured it out. But that’s a large strike IMO, as most of these other options are rather simple and easy to use.

Anyways, one nice thing is that Google Adwords automatically plays nicely with your google analytics, even calculating cpc and the like for you.

So you can see right there, the cpc is NOT as good as I’ve gotten from other advertising options. I tried to target this towards being on webcomics that have Google adspots, so the bounce rate and readership was decent. Just the cost wasn’t.

Which, you know, makes sense. The big reason many people STOP hosting Project Wonderful ads (more on that next) is because it isn’t as lucrative as adding Google Ads. What do you know, big corporations are willing to spend more money to put ads online then independent comic creators are XD

Anyways, if you’ve got a good budget, patience and/or the skill to use it, Google Adwords is the logical and really ONLY next step when you’ve grown beyond the small webcomics pool, and need to advertise outside of it to grow more. Most of us, though, are not there yet, which is why we all love and rely on:

Project Wonderful

Ah, good ol’ PW. I’m so glad I found you. And so sad that your user base continues to dwindle as creators look for more lucrative ads to host on their sites (curse you Google!). Fortunately at the moment there are still many comics that use it, meaning you have many audiences to try pitching your comic to.

PW uses an auction system, where you bid on ad spots for a $/day. Whenever you are winning the spot, you pay at your winning rate for however long you maintain the high bid.

You can do a lot of this manually, which I am personally rather fond of, or via an automated campaign. I decided to run a comparison between the two for cost effectiveness, spending $50 on an automated campaign and $50 on targeted ads.

First, some targeted ads, using one of my standard favorites, as well as some that don’t always perform as well, and a new comic that may become a favorite.

GWTBW is a post-apocalyptic comic that only updates occasionally, but has a large reader base. I often buy adspace there to both remind them I exist and to grab new readers. As you can see, the cpc I get with this very targeted ad is very good, I get many readers who read many pages. I spent $20 on them and got ~10K page views XD I continue to get new readers at a good rate, about $0.10 each.

Not a Villain isn’t quite as good a match with my comic, artistically or thematically, and their ad placement isn’t as good, but they’re still a decent adspot I come back to when the prices are good. A little more expensive, not as many interested people, and I often lose the spot when it goes above my budget, but a lot of readers at a decent cpc and value. My cost per new reader is higher though, at $0.33.

Dr McNinja is a large, popular, and expensive comic. I only bought non-US/Canada ads, as those others were too much for me. But, despite the high cost per day, the large readership actually balanced out pretty well. You can see I got a lot of clicks ($0.21 per new reader) at a good cpc, who all read a decent amount. It’s definitely worth it to occasionally try winning some high bids. Since you can set maximum spending, you can bid $100/day and only spend $10, having it for an hour or two, etc. I recommend you try it at least once.

Black Mudpuppy is a friends comic (very good!) that I like to support, but unfortunately we don’t really share an audience. You can see that even an an update day for it, I got very few clicks, who all read very little. This is not surprising, given that this was not a very strategic targeting choice (remember this when we talk about automated campaigns).

Finally, 6-Commando is a smaller post-apocalyptic/dystopian comic I recently discovered. While the audience is smaller, the price is also lower, AND we’ve similar audiences. You’ll note of the few clicks and readers I got, they all read a LOT of my archives. Definitely going to advertise on there again.

Now, with automated campaigns, instead of you manually trying to target by genre and etc, testing and finding the best spots, you let the computer do it for you. You can set some parameters on how it bids and how much and whatnot, but a lot of it is mystery algorithm. And that means that a lot of the sites it bids on won’t be good fits for you at ALL. I think this campaign tried setting up my ad on several HUNDRED different sites.

Huh, what do you know, despite the lack of targeting, it’s actually pretty cost effective and successful! By the sheer nature of automatically finding cheap spots, and pulling out when the price gets too high or the effectiveness too low, the auto-campaigner does a decent job. $0.29 per new reader isn’t bad, and there were obviously a lot who read a lot and came back. At the tail end, you can even see where the ad ended on May 21st (0% new readers) but a fair number of sessions still, as people came back to read more.

I call that a success. I’m going to test more automated campaigns in the future. It’s expensive though, but you can set yours up to look for cheaper spots and not spend as much per day or overall. I recommend you give it a try.

Summary

So, there are still places to buy ads. Yes, some disappear, some become too expensive, and sometimes a comic gets rid of adspots entirely. But there are still places you can spread the word out. If you make some $ via hosting ads yourself, earn spots by participating in competitions, or save your pennies from Patreon, you can put some money in and get new readers.

Let me know if you have any of your own tips or tricks, or know of some other place to advertise online I didn’t mention!