@Niceguy2000It's the hot new thingβ’.
Back in the "Golden Age" of whatever-it-was, we had "pulp" magazines. Those magazines would publish serialized novels, and eventually serialized stories that were just ongoing stories - there was no "novel" being broken into chunks.
Some decades back, those crazy Asiatics really dug in to stories that were published in serial form. Now-a-days, we call them "Light Novels." But they definitely existed in 1950's (post-war) Japan, and have a pretty traceable history from that point. (It's possible they go farther back. I haven't looked.) They started as serialized stories, then added illustrations. Then the clever publishers crossed the streams (because... Japan) and created magazines that were nothing but serial updates -- "Here's a bunch of serial updates in category 'Blind-girls-raped-by-tentacle-godzilla' for April 1977". (Full disclosure: I made up the category.)
As with all things furrin, some American nerds and ex-G.I. perverts brought them into the US in their new form. Just in time for the interwebs. So Korean and Japanese stories were being translated and violated (copyright, that is) back when netnews was the state of the art. Could fanfiction be far behind? Of course not - there are tentacles involved, after all!
So we had "serial" stories on rec.arts.sf and rec.arts.sf.manga and alt.fucking.everything. Then we got Geocities, and basement dwellers everywhere could fap and write self-insert fan-fiction, fap and write serials, fap and eat cheetos, etc. The stage was set!
Then people like "WildBow" (not his real name ;-) started writing in this "new format" where they could put as many words in a row as they wanted, and nobody could stop them! What's more, they could do the same thing, day in and day out. Words. More words! MOAR WURDS!! "Web serials" became a "new" category of literature.
Semi-simultaneously, a lot of people were discovering the same thing. Sites like SOL started adding support for "pagination." And suddenly writing 40,000 words and calling it a "chapter" was okay. So we got that Ascending fucking nightmare story from hell. And also "Fresh Start". I'm sure there are others - that pulp-y Werewolf space opera, and the Three Meals story, and that other one that I have blocked due to the trauma of reading it for so long and getting nowhere. (MC father and son are "Alphas". Neighbors are "Alphas." You're an alpha, and you're an alpha. Everybody's an alpha! Except the women.)
Finally, we had two of the three necessary pieces in place: we just needed money. And someone went and invented "Buy me a Coffee." And Patreon. And Podia. And fifty-five more, all ending in 'pore!
Let's call it the "altpub" industry (somebody will eventually use that phrase, might as well be me!) now exists, and it looks like this:
Write a story. Make it interesting and engaging. Get about a third of the way done. Stop.
Sign up for one of a variety of websites. (SOL is not one of them. The Noble Turnpike site is.) "Publish" your story as a serial, with X chapters posting every Y days. (Popular options are 5/7, 7/7, 2/7, 1/7.) Continue writing your story. Do various site-specific things to increase the size of your audience. Develop a following of people who are engaged with and interested in your story.
Write faster. Seriously. Now you can promise people that you have a "backlog" of chapters that will eventually be posted. But... those chapters are available RIGHT GODDAMN NOW on your PayMeBitches.com page for only $3 a month. (Or whatever.)
Eventually, you will write so many chapters that you'll have enough to "publish" a "book." Create a Firewood Limitless author account on Rainforest dot com, bundle up the first 200 chapters of your story. Pay someone to make you some cover art (for best result, it should include a genre-appropriate girl with fucking huge tits). Pull the
first 200 chapters down (you can keep the first 2 or 3 up as a teaser, I think) from whatever website(s) you are using. Repeat this process every 200 * Y / X days, approximately.
Profit!
If you're feeling particularly ballsy, you can do it without using the serialization website. WildBow has done this several times. PirateAba has "sort of" done it, because they were using a serialization site, in parallel with their own domain, then dropped off the serializer.
FWIW, I saw Patreon numbers from two authors (Pirate and one I haven't mentioned) a few years back. They were making plastic-surgeon money, and not paying malpractice insurance. Before whatever revenue they got from the Rainforest. So this seems like a valid way to monetize monotony.
That said, it's hard to write "Slice of Life" stories and keep people interested. I have bailed out on many stories. But new authors keep popping up, and the stories are generally entertaining for the first however-many chapters. So it is possible to enjoy them as an aggregate without entirely enjoying any single one of them. Just bail out when you get tired, and keep turning over new writers.