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The StoryGraph

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The StoryGraph
Type of site
Book reviewing, metadata aggregation
Available inEnglish
Founded2019; 5 years ago (2019)
Founder(s)Nadia Odunayo
URLapp.thestorygraph.com
CommercialYes
RegistrationOptional
Current statusActive

The StoryGraph (sometimes shortened to just StoryGraph) is a social cataloguing web platform for books, serving as a competitor of Goodreads (an Amazon-owned social cataloguing platform). The StoryGraph received awareness after Book Riot covered the platform's assets, including more personalized recommendations for readers, customized ratings options (including half-star and quarter-star ratings), and its non-affiliation with Amazon. The StoryGraph uses a freemium model, with some features only available in the paid subscription plan.

Design

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The StoryGraph was created by software engineer Nadia Odunayo in 2019, initially as a side-project for tracking books. Based on the comments of Goodreads users and other book readers, Odunayo focused on the implementation of systems on the platform for personalized book recommendations.[1][2][3]

In comparison to Goodreads

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The StoryGraph is similar in many ways to Goodreads, being also a web platform designed for readers to keep track of the books they read, using metadata to build book profiles. Unlike Goodreads, The StoryGraph is more focused on the tracking aspect of book collecting, and lacks the same type of social homepage as Goodreads. The StoryGraph platform allows readers to log and rate their books, interact with friends on the site's community page, and set reading challenges. The platform builds recommendations based on analyses of users' reading habits. By scrolling over the "stats" tab on their profile page, readers get an evaluation of their online library broken down by mood, pace, length, genre, rating, etc. This function can be upgraded, for a monthly fee, to provide more advanced statistics. Unlike Goodreads, The StoryGraph offers the option to give books half or quarter star ratings.[4]

Goodreads is considered to hold a monopoly in the field, consequently limiting the growth of similar sites. Tom Critchlow, a data consultant based in the United Kingdom, argued that Amazon's ownership of Goodreads would continue to hinder alternative platforms, saying, "Amazon has showed no mercy when dealing with competitors before. If you were to compete, you would need significant scale. Again, you'd be dealing with Amazon directly."[5]

Reception

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The StoryGraph is a functional but fairly new platform, and has received mixed opinions from critics and users. Chris M. Arnone of Book Riot commended The StoryGraph for not being affiliated with Amazon and for distancing itself from Amazon products, but criticized the platform for its lack of a strong social community, stating, "this is the most glaring place where The StoryGraph falls behind Goodreads. The community on Goodreads is huge, with multiple groups and social media connections to automatically add people you know in other spaces. The StoryGraph just doesn't have any of that. There are no API tie-ins to other social media platforms at this time. This not only means you can't import friends from Facebook or Twitter, but you can't directly post from The StoryGraph to those platforms. While this might be something they're working on, this lack of interaction hurt my review of The StoryGraph. The StoryGraph does provide the ability to search for similar users based on your reading preferences. That's as far as the community goes right now."[6] Mara Franzen, another writer for Book Riot, took a different view than her colleague, arguing, "I have been a die-hard Goodreads fan since 2016, but after spending time with Storygraph, I think I might make the switch. It's just so much more user-friendly, and I was recommended so many books that I'm actually interested in. I loved being able to see my reading data and was even surprised by it a bit."[7]

In January 2024, the app was so popular that the large number of new signups caused their servers to crash. It was back up and running within a few hours.[8]

References

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  1. ^ Wille, Matt (4 February 2021). "Amazon's Goodreads is ancient and terrible. Now there's an alternative". Input Mag. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  2. ^ Herman, Lily (30 July 2021). "Meet The Book-Obsessed Entrepreneur Challenging Goodreads' Reign". Bustle).
  3. ^ Manavis, Sarah (10 September 2020). "Why Goodreads is bad for books". The New Statesman. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
  4. ^ Koop, Lauren (8 September 2021). "Join The Migration of Readers Moving From Goodreads to StoryGraph". studybreaks.com. StudyBreaks. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  5. ^ Manavis, Sarah (10 September 2020). "Why Goodreads is bad for books". The New Statesman. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
  6. ^ Arnone, Chris M. (21 May 2021). "The StoryGraph Review: Is It Worth Replacing Goodreads?". Book Riot. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  7. ^ Franzen, Mara (June 2022). "Is StoryGraph a Good Alternative to GoodReads?". Book Riot. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  8. ^ "Black Woman-Founded Reading Platform StoryGraph Surges in Popularity". POCIT. 2024-01-04. Retrieved 2024-01-14.
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