Why I'm Not Taking Steemit Seriously Anymore.
One thing on Steemit that bewilders me is the fact that a post can make so much for something so little, and it is very discouraging.
Here is one example of a stupid post making a lot of money:
All the @greatcornholio put was a dumb 2 minute video of beavis and butthead and got over 60 dollars. Nothing wrong with what he did, it's just very discouraging for many. I understand that you shouldn't focus on how much your post makes, but if you are putting in over half and hour to and hour on your post or more and get a few pennies, it makes you wonder. Especially when you see someone barely put any effort into their post and gain more momentum on this platform.
So, that is really that fact of why i'm not going to be taking steemit seriously anymore. Why should I spend time and dedication for a post that will barely get noticed by my audience and have an actual effect when all people are voting on is beavis and butthead videos. Honestly, it is kind of funny, but still, I don't think it's right for someone to spend over an hour on their post and barely get their post to have any views, comments, and earnings when someone just posts a video of beavis and butthead and nothing else and makes 60 bucks. Something is not right with that picture.
That is really just my opinion, I still love steemit, but i'm not going to be continuously posting every time window I get because I have responsibilities, especially now that I am back at school and I have less time to do spare things. But yes, I will still post on here on a regular basis. And to be honest, I'm not really on steemit for the money, because I barely make any, I'm on here to share thoughts, opinions, and adventures. And of course earnings and growth is a bonus.
I've been reading a lot of posts lately on the topic of "quality content" which many of us feel is the better way to go. This is one reason that I've waited before starting my own posts here- to really get to know the "culture(s)" and find out what people want to engage with. With all that said, I look back on what I learned before I found Steemit- from countless hours of blog niche research (another form of procrastination) and you know what? Pretty much anything goes if you have an audience (and you are respectful, of course). If you value adult conversation, life lessons, shared revelations and gut wrenching hardships then that is what will be worth writing about until you thrive. Think about your job, or your last job. There was someone who did less than you who was valued and praised. Good chance they may have even "thrown you under the bus" while you did thankless work that others let pile up- because it needed to be done. So which is worse? By the way (re: color photo above) Nice shorts! lol
I'm so close to the "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" point.
Yes!!! Me too.
😆🤣🤣
Hey @alex-icey
I totally agree with you.
I've seen many such posts which worth 0 dollars. I have posted many blog posts but I've earned more from low quality content than quality content.
It makes me think about Steemit.
I think we should focus building our own blog and use Steemit to syndicate our content and get traffic while earning.
I am with you @asoloperneur that is a good conclusion.
Actually not a bad idea. There was a point in time when I first started on Steemit and was thinking of shutting down my blog... that would have been a big mistake. Since joining Steemint (and not making any money), my blog has been doing much better! Go figure. I'm still sitting here on the fence hoping someone will notice the content I spend hours on!
Just have fun with it. I think the outcome will come into alignment with your attitude.
It's an unfair world. Do you think all the richest 0.01% of the people out there did more to deserve their money than the other 99.99%? Did they work harder or add more value to the world?
A few, certainly? But most? Who knows? All of them - certainly not.
It sounds like you've got the right attitude. Keep doing what you love and improving yourself and the rewards will come. Crap rises to the top sometimes but so does cream.
Well said.
It is incredibly hard to know what kind of post will take off. Stay focused on the stuff you like and people will share your passion.
Im actually thinking of building a downvote robot to punish people making money from rubbish and spam
I myself have thought about creating a downvote bid bot. An "opposite side of the coin" to things like randowhale and all the others. It would simply flag a url sent to it instead of upvoting it. 😂😂😂
I would stand behind that. I just wrote a post yesterday about how bad bots and spam are destroying Steemit (and got hardly NO traffic. Go for it!
It is not about the numbers of eyeballs you get but the number of people you can get to automatically upvote your posts. Those who upvote post may not read those post. Those with a large following are usually the early birds to Steemit.
that's how free market works alex
Unfortunately, it does. I've put hours of work into a few of my posts, and it gets little attention. Some people are just lucky.
There several "communities" here on steemit. The first group are the initial producers of steemit. This group has a great deal of wealth tied to steemit and need a way to transfer that wealth out of steemit and into their pockets. These are the people who need to promote steemit as a way to make money. The second crowd is here for the MONEY. Two of the easiest ways to make money is one resteem service. The second way is to have a group that agrees to upvote regardless of content. I think that these folks are the people you are referring to in this post. The third community are those of us who post content for the sake of the content to share knowledge and experiences. The fact that there may be some reward to that is secondary. Although I must confess it is a little discouraging to work hard on content and receive little for it. I post every weekday a blog that perhaps only two or three people actually read. For what it is worth I do read your posts and upvote. Steem on and by the way your school work should come first. Perhaps you might want to write about that a day in the life of Alex at school in California? Am I remembering that correctly? Any way keep calm and chive on!
For what it is worth @handofzara, you do write to a specific niche which will have a very limited audience. I too work hard in my writing and at this point if I earn anything, I look at it like a bonus. I have a blog that does much better... with the motto "One Day at a Time!" Maybe Alex should take your advice and do the "School - One Day at a Time" format!
You are absolutely correct about my niche audience. The truth of the matter is that I write more for myself, to keep myself honest in what I do, a personal log for my trading that I share. Anything that is gained from steemit is as you say a "bonus", the real value to me at least is to so that "to thine own self be true." I think Alex is a great young writer, with much to share. By the number of views and comments, clearly he has insight, and a real finger on the pulse of this community.