Jump to content

Gay Authors - The Next Update and Survey Discussion


What We’re Hearing from the Community Survey — and Where Gay Authors Is Going Next

First, thank you.

We asked members to take time out of their day to tell us what is working, what is frustrating, and what would make Gay Authors better. Many of you did exactly that. We have heard from daily readers, occasional visitors, authors, editors, Premium members, longtime community members, and people who mostly enjoy the site quietly in the background.

That range of feedback matters. Gay Authors is not just one type of member or one type of reader. Some members visit multiple times a day. Others stop by when they have time. Some follow active serials. Some strongly prefer completed stories. Some use advanced filters. Others just want a simpler way to find something good to read.

The survey has helped clarify an important point:

Gay Authors is strongest when it helps members read, discover, follow, return, and connect.

That is where we are focusing our next major work.

survey results.jpg

The Big Picture

The clearest result from the survey is that most members come to Gay Authors to read stories. That may sound obvious, but it is important because it keeps our priorities grounded.

Members told us they value:

  • Reading stories
  • Following favorite authors
  • Discovering new stories
  • Finding completed works
  • Using tags, genres, tropes, and story details to choose what to read
  • Getting updates from authors and stories they care about
  • Returning to stories they were already reading

That gives us a clear direction. The next stage of Gay Authors needs to make the reading experience easier, more personal, and more comfortable across desktop, tablet, and mobile.

reader journey.jpg

Easier Story Discovery

One of the strongest themes in the survey was story discovery.

Members want it to be easier to find stories they are interested in. Some want better search. Some want simpler browsing. Some want clearer genre paths. Some want better filtering by genre, tags, length, status, or author. Some want recommendations based on stories and authors they already enjoy.

Gay Authors already has many powerful tools in this area, including story search, author search, filters, quick searches, reading history, suggested stories, and story ratings. But the survey makes clear that having tools is not enough. Those tools also need to be easy to find, easy to understand, and easy to use.

That is why our next update will focus not just on adding features, but on making the experience clearer.

Planned work includes:

  • Improved search and filtering
  • Better organization of story discovery tools
  • Clearer genre and tag pathways
  • Better ways to find completed stories, ongoing stories, and recently updated stories
  • Better visibility for recommended stories and similar authors
  • More consistent story metadata

2 ways to browse.jpg

Simple Browse and Advanced Browse

One thing we heard clearly is that members do not all want to browse the same way.

Some members like powerful filters and detailed controls. Others want a simpler path: pick a genre, see stories, and start reading.

Both approaches are valid.

Because of that, we are planning to support two browsing experiences:

Simple Browse will offer a cleaner, more guided way to find stories. It will focus on common reading paths such as Continue Reading, Completed Stories, Recently Updated Stories, Browse by Genre, Recommended for You, and Popular Stories.

Advanced Browse will continue to support members who want the full power of filters, tags, sorting, status options, and detailed search controls.

The goal is not to remove power from experienced users. The goal is to make Gay Authors easier for members who want a calmer, more direct browsing experience.

Finding Completed Stories Without Hiding Ongoing Stories

Many members told us that completion status matters when choosing what to read. That makes sense. Starting a long story is an investment, and some readers prefer to know that a story is finished before they begin.

At the same time, Gay Authors has always supported serial writing. Many authors post chapter by chapter, and many readers enjoy following stories as they update.

So we need to support both kinds of reading.

We will continue making completed stories easy to find, but we do not want to hide active serial authors. Simple Browse will include clear pathways for Completed Stories and Ongoing Stories. Advanced Browse will continue to support more detailed filtering.

The goal is choice, not one default that works for some members while hurting others.

Continue Reading and Reading History

Another strong theme was helping members return to stories they were already reading.

Gay Authors already tracks reading history and has recommendation tools, but the survey showed that these features need to be surfaced more clearly. Many members think in terms of “Where was I?” or “How do I continue the story I started?” rather than in terms of technical labels or menu locations.

As part of the next update, we want to make reader tools easier to recognize and use.

That means clearer access to things like:

  • Continue Reading
  • Reading History
  • Recommended for You
  • Tune My Recommendations
  • Followed Stories
  • Followed Authors
  • Collections or saved reading lists, which may become Bookshelves in the new system

A major goal is to make the reader experience feel more like “My Reading” rather than a set of separate tools members have to remember how to find.

Better Recommendations

Members also asked for better ways to find similar stories and similar authors.

This fits directly into where we are already heading. We want Gay Authors to do a better job helping readers answer questions like:

  • What should I read next?
  • What stories are similar to this one?
  • What authors might I enjoy?
  • What completed stories match my interests?
  • What new authors deserve attention?
  • What stories fit the tags, genres, tone, or style I like?

Recommendations will not replace browsing or search. They will add another path, especially for members who know what they like but do not know what to look for next.

Tags, Genres, Tropes, and Metadata

The survey strongly reinforced the value of good story information.

Members rely on tags, genres, tropes, length, status, ratings, and other story details when deciding what to read. That means metadata is not just an administrative detail. It is part of the reading experience.

We will continue working on:

  • Better tag and trope consistency
  • Clearer genre and subgenre organization
  • Better story metadata quality
  • Better ways to use metadata in browsing and recommendations
  • Improvements that help members find stories matching their interests

This is also one of the reasons we created a new team called the Archive Stewards. Better metadata helps readers, authors, and the site as a whole.

Interested in helping? The Archive Stewards will help review older stories where authors may no longer be active. If you enjoy reading and organizing story information, please PM @Myr.

Notifications and Communication Preferences

Members told us that updates matter, especially story updates and favorite-author updates. At the same time, many members want fewer or more selective notifications.

That is not a contradiction. It means members want control.

One member may want every update from favorite authors. Another may only want a weekly digest. Another may want story updates but not community updates. Another may prefer minimal contact.

Our planned communication and notification improvements will focus on making those choices easier.

The goal is to let members decide what kinds of updates are useful to them and make it easy to do so. The current notification options are powerful, but not as easy to use as they should be. We want to make those choices clearer and more manageable.

Author Tools and Author Support

Although most survey responses came from readers, authors and editors also gave important feedback.

Authors want better tools, clearer posting processes, better feedback, and better ways to connect with readers. Some members also mentioned the importance of helping newer authors be discovered rather than only surfacing the most established names.

This matters because authors are the source of the stories readers come here for.

Planned author-side improvements include:

  • Author portal improvements, starting with a clearer central place for authors to manage their work and expanding from there
  • Better story and chapter management
  • Better guidance for posting and managing works
  • Posting schedule or author status options
  • Better visibility for new and emerging authors
  • Author retention and support workflows

We are also discussing a possible future Reader Responses system. This would be separate from the existing site reactions and would allow readers to quickly tell authors how a chapter landed emotionally, such as “Loved it,” “Emotional,” “Surprised,” “Funny,” “Tense,” or “Want more.” This would give authors more useful feedback without requiring every reader to write a full comment.

Mobile, Desktop, and Device Parity

Site analytics show that Gay Authors usage is split heavily across mobile and desktop. That means future work cannot be designed only for one screen size.

Our goal is device parity:

Core features should be available and usable on desktop, tablet, and mobile.

That does not mean every screen will look identical. Some features need different layouts depending on the device. A desktop page may support a dense advanced filter panel, while mobile may need collapsible panels, larger tap targets, and simpler task-based navigation.

The goal is the same functionality, adapted intelligently to the device being used.

choices.jpg

Interactive Fiction

We are also continuing work on interactive fiction as an optional new story type.

This is not intended to replace traditional stories. Traditional stories remain the heart of Gay Authors.

Interactive fiction will simply give interested authors another format to create with and interested readers another way to experience stories. It also gives us a way to reach new audiences who are more familiar with choice-based and interactive storytelling.

Members who are not interested in interactive fiction will not have to use it. It will be another story type available within the broader Gay Authors ecosystem.

Ads and the Reading Experience

Some members raised concerns about ads interrupting reading.

We understand that reading flow matters. We have already reviewed ad placement settings and adjusted controls to keep ads from appearing in the middle of story chapters. Supporting the site is important, but ads should not disrupt the act of reading.

What We Are Not Doing

It is also worth being clear about what we are not doing.

We are not throwing away the current archive.

We are not removing advanced tools.

We are not hiding ongoing serials in favor of completed stories only.

We are not forcing interactive fiction on readers or authors.

We are not treating every individual suggestion as a site-wide decision.

The survey is a guide. It helps us see patterns, priorities, and pain points. Some requested tools already exist, which tells us we need to make them clearer. Some requests point to features already planned. Some ideas need more thought. Some are individual preferences rather than site-wide direction.

That is normal and expected.

Where This Leaves Us

The survey has confirmed that our next major update should focus on making Gay Authors:

  • Easier to browse
  • Easier to search
  • Easier to personalize
  • Easier to continue reading
  • Easier to use across devices
  • Better for authors
  • Better at helping readers discover stories they will enjoy

A lot of this work was already planned, but the survey gives us stronger confidence that we are focusing on the right things.

These changes will not all arrive at once. Some are tied to the upcoming platform upgrade, while others will be added in stages as we build, test, and refine them.

working on.jpg

We Want the Discussion

This post is not the final word. It is the start of a broader discussion.

We would especially like to hear your thoughts on:

  • What would make Simple Browse useful without taking away Advanced Browse?
  • What should be easiest to find on a “My Reading” page?
  • How should we balance completed stories and ongoing serials?
  • What kinds of recommendations would be most useful?
  • What author tools or feedback would help writers stay motivated?
  • What parts of the site are hardest to use on mobile?
  • What help topics would make the site easier for newer or less technical members?

myread.jpg
Example render of possible "My Reading" interface

Thank you again to everyone who completed the survey. Gay Authors has always grown through the energy, creativity, and feedback of its members. Your responses are helping us shape the next stage of that growth.

— The Gay Authors Team

  • Like 9
  • Love 26
  • Wow 2

38 Comments


Recommended Comments



Krista

Posted

I missed the survey as well. But I've barely been on GA for over a week or so. I doubt my answers would've skewed the outcome any by looking at the results.

It looks massive, this change. I wonder how many times I'll manage to break something. It will be interesting to see the implementation of it, as I am more likely to complain about... ;) or enjoy something after I have access to it.

Although I am a bit worried we're moving towards a "Recommendation" heavy system. I'm not going to break my back trying to get readers to react, review, or recommend. But I also don't want my stories buried in searches for the lack of them either. 

  • Love 5
Cane23

Posted

On 5/30/2026 at 2:14 PM, Myr said:

I would check your spam folder. you got sent 2 and they didn't bounce.

Found it in promotion folder! 🤪

  • Like 2
  • Love 2
Lee Wilson

Posted

I worked for years on a video-on-demand system that was linked to a recommendations engine. The two most common types were More Like This, and Also Bought. MLT keyed on actors, genre, snd something else (my memory sucks sometimes). Genre obviously fits our situation. AB could equate to Also Read. Both had their own sets of underlying rules. It sounds like it should be simple, but with weighting this over that, it could be tricky recommending the right things.

  • Like 3
  • Site Administrator
Myr

Posted

1 minute ago, Lee Wilson said:

I worked for years on a video-on-demand system that was linked to a recommendations engine. The two most common types were More Like This, and Also Bought. MLT keyed on actors, genre, snd something else (my memory sucks sometimes). Genre obviously fits our situation. AB could equate to Also Read. Both had their own sets of underlying rules. It sounds like it should be simple, but with weighting this over that, it could be tricky recommending the right things.

We are already using the basic engine underlying Netflix and Amazon called collaborative filtering. They have both moved on to enhanced AI versions, but the function is the same. It gets better as you update your ratings.  https://gayauthors.org/stories/browse/mysuggestions/

The new updated version will be using this engine, along with both expressed and actual genre preferences.  It will be observing tags and tropes as well.  Aiming to have exclusions in as well.  (IE, if you don't like Vampires and Werewolves, you can exclude Paranormal genre from recommendations)

There is a metric ton of math going on underneath, but we don't need to know or care. lol

The problem also is people's mood change on what they like to read.  Some days you want an escape, some days an emotional bender.  We'll try to handle that too for "Read Now" recommendations.  I'm sure this is going to take multiple updates to get working, but when it does... 

  • Love 3
  • Fingers Crossed 1
Gary L

Posted

3 hours ago, Myr said:

but when it does... 

it will be amazing!   🤩 

  • Like 1
  • Love 3
Mark Arbour

Posted

11 minutes ago, Altimexis said:

This all looks great!

I'd like to put in a word in favor of posting schedules for authors. As one who prefers to complete and edit a story before posting it, I like the idea of being able to post and entire story at once and schedule publication of the individual chapters. It used to be possible to do that, but current restrictions prevent scheduling more than one chapter at a time. That means I have to schedule reminders in my own calendar to be sure I remember to schedule each new chapter publication once I've published the last.

One other thing: Is there a way GA could reach out to authors who've abandoned a serial story? Perhaps if we could match a struggling author up with a mentor, we could help them get past whatever it is that's blocking further writing. I know there isn't much that can be done about the curveballs life throws us all, but just having someone to sympathize might help them to resume writing.

You can schedule postings already.  When you hit “publish” instead of immediately you can pick a day and a time.  I use this especially when I’m traveling. 

  • Like 2
  • Love 3
Altimexis

Posted

 

1 hour ago, Mark Arbour said:

You can schedule postings already.  When you hit “publish” instead of immediately you can pick a day and a time.  I use this especially when I’m traveling. 

I already do that, but unless I’m missing something, I’m restricted from scheduling more than one posting in advance. It used to be that I could schedule publication of all of my chapters at once. Still better would be if I could schedule automatic chapter postings on a specified day of the week at a given time.

  • Like 2
  • Love 1
Cane23

Posted

Would it be possible to have a daily schedule or timetable listing all story updates for the day? It would also be helpful to have a schedule for stories that many of us follow regularly - for example: Author X, Story Y, new chapters every Monday and Sunday.

Of course, this would only apply to authors who follow a reasonably consistent posting schedule, not those who update irregularly. I think such a feature would make it much easier for readers to keep track of their favorite stories and upcoming chapter releases.

  • Like 2
  • Love 1
ReaderPaul

Posted

On 6/4/2026 at 12:09 PM, Cane23 said:

Would it be possible to have a daily schedule or timetable listing all story updates for the day? It would also be helpful to have a schedule for stories that many of us follow regularly - for example: Author X, Story Y, new chapters every Monday and Sunday.

Of course, this would only apply to authors who follow a reasonably consistent posting schedule, not those who update irregularly. I think such a feature would make it much easier for readers to keep track of their favorite stories and upcoming chapter releases.

That is the case for some authors.  @Altimexis --  As @Mark Arbour said, it can be done.  I've seen more than one author who have stories scheduled to publish chapters up to four weeks ahead.  You can see publishing schedules, if they have been set up, by clicking on the title of a story on the author's story listings, then clicking on the "Stats" tab for that particular story.  It will show chapters loaded for that story, and if a publishing date is set, will also show that.

There are already a lot of handy features, but it is not always obvious how to see them.  I still have much to learn.  But I would like to thank @Myr and the other Admins for how they keep improving the usability of the site.

  • Like 1
  • Love 4
Mark Arbour

Posted

1 hour ago, ReaderPaul said:

That is the case for some authors.  @Altimexis --  As @Mark Arbour said, it can be done.  I've seen more than one author who have stories scheduled to publish chapters up to four weeks ahead.  You can see publishing schedules, if they have been set up, by clicking on the title of a story on the author's story listings, then clicking on the "Stats" tab for that particular story.  It will show chapters loaded for that story, and if a publishing date is set, will also show that.

There are already a lot of handy features, but it is not always obvious how to see them.  I still have much to learn.  But I would like to thank @Myr and the other Admins for how they keep improving the usability of the site.

I did not know that.  Fascinating.  

  • Like 1
  • Love 1
BendtedWreath

Posted (edited)

I am very late on this, but I did want to make one suggestion (if it hasn't already been suggested):

Make the "My Reading History" its own button somewhere on the phone app for quicker access to it.

Screenshot 2026-06-08 104132.png

Update: I just noticed that the proposed preview actually shows it as its own tab on the main menu. I take this back. The preview looks amazing.

Edited by BendtedWreath
  • Love 5

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...