Topic: How to Get the Most Reviews of Your Writing - Updated 3/8/25
Existing members, please point all new members to this thread, in case they haven’t already found it.
Below are tips to maximize the number of reviews you receive on the site. Everything here is voluntary, but it’s what works for many people, especially those who are new to the site and have yet to build a network of fellow writers here (using “connections”) with whom to trade reviews.
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Review, review, review. It's the best way to find long-term partners with whom to trade reviews. You’ll want a network of them to give you feedback on an ongoing basis. Building relationships here also regularly leads to new friendships.
The best place to find active members is on your home page, which contains the writing of everyone currently actively posting new work.
There are many casual users of the site (e.g., folks who don't write/post/review here year round), so be sure to check out the writer's personal profile for when they were last online on this site. If it's more than about two months, they may not respond/reciprocate in a timely manner. They may even have left the site for an extended period, which could be months, sometimes years.
Respond to reviews in a timely manner, otherwise reviewers may just move on. It only takes a few minutes to respond to most reviews. However, understand that the turnaround time to actually do so varies from a few hours to a few days because real life often intrudes (e.g., illness, deaths, other crises).
Read stories in your own genre, many of which you may find in the individual groups or by searching for new works by genre. You may get more reciprocal reviewers if they share your interests.
Post your work in the Premium group. When you do, your work will be visible to all members. Also, reviewers of Premium works are rewarded with points with which to post their own work, which leads to more reviews for you. If you're serious about becoming a writer, Premium is where you need to be. Note that the Premium group contains the Premium forum.
While gathering points to post your own work can seem like a pain, you would have to read the work of other writers anyway to keep them as long-term reviewers (they need feedback too). The points system on this site is also less onerous than on other professional workshop sites. Most of these sites work the same way.
If you don't review the work of others, you can't expect to get reviewed in return. Most members here are experienced writers and, in many cases, published authors. They don't have the time to review the work of every new trial member, of whom there are many. You may get a free review or two, but the best way to get reviews is to give reviews. It shows you're serious. You are serious, right? :-)
You're not expected to be a great writer or reviewer if all this is new for you. But you are expected to try. That's how everyone else here got started. We all suck at writing and reviewing initially. Trust me! But if you're not willing or able to do that, then this site isn't for you.
Reviewing the work of others also allows you to study how they write. There are experienced writers on this site to learn from, including published authors. And reviewing makes you a better reviewer, which should allow you to build relationships with the best writers, who generally are among the best reviewers.
Post clean chapters to the extent you know how. That means proper punctuation, grammar, and proofreading. If you're still new to writing, ask for help in the Writing Tips & Site Help or Premium forums. Google for articles on punctuation and grammar, or buy a good book on the subject. You want your reviewers focused on your story, not your writing mechanics.
Use a picture as a cover page in lieu of the default red cover. If default covers worked, there would be no need for real covers on Amazon either. When you look at the home page, it's the pictures that stand out first/most. Free pictures are available online from multiple sites, including pixabay.com.
Have a content summary for your book so people know what it's about. This seems like common sense, but we still see books without a summary posted on the site. Who buys books when they don't know what it's about?
Try to come up with an interesting book title.
Keep a clean portfolio that is easy to peruse. That means inactivating (hiding) or deleting obsolete versions of stories you no longer want reviewed. Or simply rename any obsolete versions (e.g., stick the word OBSOLETE at the end of the title (this is the easiest solution)). Note that deleting chapters also deletes any reviews you received for those chapters, so be sure it’s what you really want.
Don't post massive chapters that take six to eight times as long to review as a regular post. If a member has to choose between reviewing the chapters of six people they regularly review vs. reviewing one massive chapter, the former will usually win out since we're trying to maintain as many reciprocal relationships as possible with only a limited amount of time.
A good chapter length for the site is perhaps 1500 - 2500 words (costs about 5 to 8 points to post).If you have a much longer chapter, break it up and post it in parts, and clearly identify in the chapter names and chapter notes that it is a multi-part chapter, otherwise you'll get repeated comments about how a chapter seems to end abruptly or has a lousy hook. Short chapters generally get the most reviews.
Be patient while waiting for reciprocal reviews. Expect to wait a few days up to a few weeks for people to reciprocate. Most writers do so part-time, which may include writing a chapter or story every few weeks, posting it, and then catching up on reviews owed to others. Many reviewers do it this way. If someone has never reviewed you before, try to reciprocate with them more quickly, since it's a chance to acquire a new permanent reviewer.
If you're not going to reciprocate because the other writer’s book doesn't interest you, please thank them and tell them that it's not something you normally read and/or probably can't be of much help with. The other writer can then move on. And don't be offended if someone doesn't want to read your current work. It happens. With any luck, they’ll read your next one.
Read the work of new members. There's a points bonus, they'll probably be grateful to you and may read your stuff, and they'll be more likely to join the site permanently if they see they're getting helpful reviews. A thriving site helps everyone.
Ask other members about who else might be good to ask for a review, then check out the latest posted work from those writers. Keep in mind that the people you ask may be too busy on any given day or week, so it may take some time for them to provide a review. If someone doesn't reciprocate after two or three attempts, move on. On the flip side, when you review someone new, suggest who else the new member should review to increase their chance of gaining more reciprocal reviewers.
If you’ve tried most or all of the above tips and still have trouble finding enough reviewers, post a message in the Premium forum about that, and ask for reviewers. Give the name of the posted work, a summary of what it’s about (quote some or all of your story’s content summary if you like), and the type of feedback you’re looking for. Since this is a small workshop site, you may find that the best feedback comes from members outside your own genre, so don’t restrict yourself. And be prepared to recip.
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If you don't know how to do some of the things mentioned in this thread, don't hesitate to ask in the Writing Tips & Site Help forum or even in Premium. Note that the Premium forum is where you’ll get the most number of eyeballs on your post and, most likely, the fastest and most number of responses, so don’t be shy about using it. Site members are generally happy to help.
Feel free to reply directly to this thread with any feedback you may have about reviewing and this writeup. Going forward, this article will reside only in the Premium forum to avoid having to maintain two copies (the other was in the Writing Tips & Site Help forum), which can get out of sync. An article by the same name still exists in the latter forum, but it merely directs people here.