What is an Incubator? [A New Layer for the Growth and Innovation of Steem]
Setting a Steem-Powered Precedent
The purpose of an incubator is to support a period of...wait for it... “incubation.” Incubators are rigorous programs designed provide a boost for entrepreneurs, creatives, and the growth of new businesses. These specialized programs are designed to equip people with new networks, resources and expertise so that after their incubation period (typically 4 or 5 months) participants are able to exit the program with self-sufficiency and the skill sets needed to take their work to the next level.
Over the last couple of decades - the incubator has become a exceptionally popular business-growth model. You can discover dozens of different themed incubators in technology-savvy places like New York City and Silicon Valley, where small startup businesses are seeking a mix of networks and financial kickstarters. Incubators have also become popular in the realm of academia. Universities are now offering incubator programs to recent graduates who are starting off on their own as freelancers, researchers, or creating their own new companies. Some of the more well known incubators are Y Combinator in Silicon Valley and Techstars, which both have campuses in several major cities worldwide. We’ve seen incredible products and companies come out of incubators, including some familiar names like AirBnB and Dropbox (both Y Combinator alums). These programs typically last anywhere from a few months up to half a year. They’re fast paced, immersive, and designed to empower professionals of the internet era.
From the get-go, our team @sndbox has been working towards developing the very first Steem-powered incubator. Our goals are focused on the long term, where this growing community can become a premier ecosystem of empowerment for creative projects, new businesses, new cryptocurrencies and disruptive technology.
Rewards, Networks, Delegation
The Steem blockchain has an incredibly built-in ability to incubate. Using just your ideas and content, you can incrementally accrue awards while building a following and establishing valuable networks. Another layer on top, is delegation. This is perhaps one of the most underrated features of Steem. With delegation you can lend influence to multiple users who can then leverage that influence to fulfill a task, build out a product, support a community or accrue funding.
Incubators as New Layers to Support Reward Distribution
As with any new network, Steemit is still growing and finding its footing. This process of self discovery has yielded some fascinating discussions surrounding how to properly grow a global community composed of countless languages, core tags, and an infinite number of impactful projects.
Effectively distributing rewards remains a hot and critical topic of discussion. How do we make sure valuable contributors are supported by those of us with a stake in Steem Power? This core question is why Steemit has mobilized so quickly to create and sustain community run accounts such as @curie, @ocd, independent curation-trails, and a myriad of systems designed to effectively re-distribute voting power in an democratized and equitable way.
Under the umbrella of each trail, guild or community is the central goal of retaining as many valuable users as possible regardless of their economic standing. Steemit is only as valuable as the content produced by its Steemians. But what happens when public interest shifts attention and these support structures move onto different or perhaps newer users? Will these individuals (who received substantial rewards early on) continue to contribute? Will they have the tools and supportive community established by then to maintain the same momentum?
We’ve seen this happen already with a number of Youtube and Instagram figures who burst onto the Steemit scene in early summer with the price jump. The enthusiasm was met with several posts of extraordinary payouts that eventually and inevitably migrated to the next promising figure who would transplant large audiences built on other platforms. Very few of these personalities have stayed on past that period after that initial interest waned.
In an effort to address Steemit retention across multiple disciplines and communities, we created the @sndbox incubator. Our goal was to develop a model that could provide another layer of positive retention across Steemit, and hopefully serve as an early model for others to build off of.
We wanted our program to answer not the typical question of “how do we reward contributors?” but instead, “how do we motivate stewardship and commitment towards the long-term?” Commitment in terms of engagement, production, and curation regardless of payout and market price is the major motivating factor for us and will determine if and how new Steemians will mature in this ecosystem.
After a few months of trial and error and our ongoing first full program, our Steemit-based incubator "Sndbox" has landed on an initial strategy that we believe begins to address issues of retention while simultaneously provides an empowering model for Steemians to kickstart and create projects. Our premise is that new Steemians are likely to commit to the platform if the following are achieved over the course of a 5 month program -
Consistently ‘fair’ (manually curated) payouts
An accumulation of Steem Power with a longterm goal of becoming more self-sufficient
Introduction to a core community that is active, engaged and supportive on a daily basis
Support and encouragement for new users to take on various roles - community leaders, creative professionals, curators
Establishing long-term goals and reasons for being on Steemit
With these key factors in mind, we have been tailoring our incubator approach for the last few months. By focusing the rotating program towards these goals, we believe that Steemians - experienced and new - will be better equipped in the community, and confident in establishing a healthy commitment to Steem for the long term. For more information on the mission and trajectory of Sndbox, check out our year review here. Let us know your thoughts below. We’ve just begun the 1st Cohort of our incubator program and look forward to discussing feedback and exploring more solutions for Steem-growth.
Project @sndbox is simply an embodiment of a true definition of incubation. Through supporting leaders of various subcommunities and visible projects, far reaching ends are being met. More greese to your elbow @sndbox.
Upv by
@eurogee, the Steemivangelist and the founder of @euronation Newbie's Support Team
Using the incubator model should provide the next generation of @curie and @ocd projects, which can become self-sustaining. Longer-term I think such projects will need to be more focused on individual niches within Steemit rather than the whole community, and it seems some groups are already taking this direction by spliting curation into several sub-niches. The incubator is an exciting project, and I'll be awaiting the 1st cohort's graduation to see where this leads.
^ A great point! And we believe so too, once the "communities" feature becomes available Steemit will only become more diverse and creative in terms of support networks.
I think this idea is interesting, using the incubator mentality to distribute steem and promote good quality posting. I've like to have more visibility and this kinds of initiative give hope.
Thank you! Absolutely, especially as the "communities" feature becomes available, this will aid the incubating of lots of content niches, regions and language groups.
wow, I'm reading this post late! I want to be part of this wonderful project, I would like to support people like me who are starting a project and want to start within this beautiful network. I will follow your publications closely from now on
This is an excellent initiative. Incubators are the key to success in many areas - a tech start-up that I co-founded is currently in an incubator program and it is extremely helpful for growing and developing the platform.
I would love to be a part of the @sndbox incubator, as I'm sure a lot of people would be!
Hi @lukebrn, many thanks as always for your supportive and constructive comments. Absolutely, incubators are a powerful layer for the growth of new tech, and ideally - in the future - Steem will have dozens of incubators specializing in different niches of blockchain utility and creativity. It's an exciting year ahead for this ecosystem!
If you're curious, take a peek at our program schedule here. Cohort 2 opens up in May :)
Hopefully! I am currently creating an online course for crypto beginners.. Not an incubator but with the same idea, take people in, give them skills that they can use, then they leave with a new skillset and a potential income!
I'll have a look now thanks, wishing I got in to the current one but I hadn't even heard of it at the time, what a shame!
Do yall have a community discord channel?
Hi @florae, we don't have a discord channel, but try our best to be active and communicative through comments. Also through the Steemit-wide challenges we host each week. Always feel free to speak your mind here and ask questions :) Thanks again!
Hello guys pls help me upvote and resteem i am new here pls... https://steemit.com/introduceyourself/@jossysylvester/hi-i-am-jossy-by-name-a-singer-songwriter-and-a-guitarist
Take my word, don't do this. This is how you get yourself flagged.
gracias por la informaciones una muy buena idea
nice writing
excellent learning program