RE: Programming Diary #31: Beyond Proof of Brain
What if, instead, I invested $100k in a Steem campaign where I upvote people who blog about the NFL? Then, at the end of the campaign I still have my $100k + curation rewards and +/- any change in STEEM's value, and I have also rewarded some of my best fans. And, of course those fans all shared their content on other platforms because they want to build their audience and increase their rewards.
...
It's so simple, but almost no one has figured it out. I don't get it.
There are a few reasons. One is that Steem is kind of a closed ecosystem, there's very little organic spread outside of it. Advertising and PR is about getting positive stuff about your brand in front of eyeballs, not just into pixels. Another is that paid content production is much lower value than organically generated content -- there's something about money changing hands that changes the nature of the thing and readers pick up on that. Another is that many normies still view crypto as a very sketchy thing, a conventional company would probably see your "you keep your investment" point as akin to trading their money for slot machine tokens, not something their shareholders would be happy about. Plus, a small coin like Steem is probably at the higher end of percieved sketchiness. You also have the problem what other content might be "next to" your paid promotion in this ecosystem -- a lot of advertisers were spooked off of twitter after Elon Musk took over, and "censorship resistant blockchain" is even more open than Musk-era twitter and therefore potentially scary to conventional marketers.
Basically I think this idea makes sense to you because you already think Steem is good. But if you're an outsider, especially one that's conventional enough to be considering large marketing spends, then this place probably looks very dubious.
Yeah, I guess "I don't get it" was an overstatement. The reality is that most companies don't want anything to do with crypto yet, not even bitcoin. But still, there's a whole world-full of companies out there. You'd think that a few of them, somewhere, might do some exploration.
0.00 SBD,
0.02 STEEM,
0.02 SP
I think that bitcoin dominance is actually part of the problem. Bitcoin has a lot of issues (wasteful energy usage, long transaction times, etc.) and crypto haters like to use those as easy attacks on crypto as a whole, so they're implicitly aligned with bitcoin maximalists in acting like coins that tried to address those problems don't exist. Some crypto enthusiasts might know a bit more, but many of them also treat some of the problems as features rather than bugs (high volatility, pump-and-dumps, etc.). So even if there are coins that have features that could be interesting or useful to someone that's often obscured by the polarized information environment. There's a weird chicken-and-egg thing where crypto opponents are doing their best to keep crypto walled-off from the rest of the economy until it settles down, but being disconnected from everything but traders and the financial industry perpetuates some of the problems.