Helpful Tips on Growing Your AudiencesteemCreated with Sketch.

in #writing7 years ago (edited)

Truthfully, we all want to be liked and rewarded for our efforts, but how can we be rewarded as newcomers to a platform such as Steemit when we started later on in the game and didn't bring a large following with us from the start?

I'd like to address these questions and provide some potentially helpful suggestions to those who are just beginning on the Steemit site.

The most important tip I can give anyone is to BE YOURSELF

Be authentic, and make a real connection with your followers.

No one appreciates the generic comments on their posts as I have mentioned before and often times, if you have nothing to add to the conversation, it may be in your best interest to say nothing at all.

If you have questions and don't understand how something works, ask questions!

By asking questions, you let the content creator know that the subject could be further explored and he/she could spend time developing the subject in order to help their audience comprehend the message being sent.

Never hesitate to ask a sincere question, especially if you are truly interested in the topic at hand. No question is dumb, and no one is going to look down on you for asking!

The only stupid question is the one not being asked.

There are plenty of people within the community who are willing to help you if they see you need assistance.

Most long term users would much rather you receive the help you need than to see you spam the comment section of posts, copy and paste other people's work, or give up on the platform altogether because you didn't understand something.

Acknowledge your audience!

One of my biggest pet peeves is reading a quality post from a well known author or internet "celeb" who feeds off a platform such as Steemit or Patreon but finds himself above commenting to his long term supporters.

If you ever find yourself in that position for whatever reason, I suggest you take an honest inventory of what deems you to be above honest engagement.

If it weren't for your lowly fan base you would have no audience to read your content and with this overtly egotistical behavior you will eventually lose those fans who have supported you for years and rightly so!

There are tons of authors out there sharing great information on the same ideas you are, so never get too big where you feel you're above relating with people who are where you were years ago.

Remember where you came from, and know that there is someone eager to take your number one spot at any moment.

I am sorely tempted to cease lending my support any time I see a person who has let their ego get out of bounds on social media. If you're too good to respond to your audience's often innocent and sincere comments, then you are just too damn good for my $ 20 monthly support on Patreon and too special of a SJW snowflake to receive any upvotes from me.

Let me snatch that twenty bucks back and put it to good use somewhere else

like towards my own goals, maybe even purchasing more Steem, thank you.

Good riddance and fuck off, you outrageously egotistical, narcissistic fucktard!

No one owes you anything and with that kind of attitude you're lucky to have an audience at all.

Pay attention to what your audience appreciates and values when it comes to content

Focus on what kind of material your audience enjoys the most, you just may learn something new.

Write about what you know, write about your experiences!

If you don't feel like you have any specialized knowledge, then pick a topic that interests you, dive right in to researching the subject and share your ideas with the rest of the world.

You are bound to find someone out there who enjoys the same ideas.

Be open to constructive criticism.

There are people who will read your content and have suggestions on how you can improve.

When I first started on Steemit, I knew little, but I acknowledge that I had ample room for improvement. I took the suggestions I received to heart and quickly learned how to improve my format and layout. I'm still working on improving my writing style and technique. I figure I will always be learning and therefore, I will continuously evolve as a content creator.

As long as I am evolving, I am benefiting and so is my list of regular followers who enjoy my posts because they are learning as well. I take pride in being able to help them along and I can be an example to others in how to grow an audience as a small humble little guppie (redfish) with aspirations to grow to the status of dolphin or whale with consistent effort.

Most of all, have fun!

If nothing else, you'll learn and grow as a writer, learn a little about HTML and create new friends! So have fun with it, laugh and enjoy learning your way around the site and you'll soon find more people laugh with you!

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This is such great advice. Funny enough, my dad always used to tell me "No matter how successful you get, never forget where you came from!" It's scary how many people end up letting success turn them into self-absorbed jerks. But then again, I appear to be successful only at keeping a roof over our heads and the bills paid, so I can't actually speak from experience of "great" success when I slam these people lol.

I came to SteemIt knowing that Bitcoin exists, that it eventually (and somehow) translates into "cash in hand" and that it's entirely possible for me to make money here. I find it all incredibly confusing, but it could be because for the most part, I want to enjoy being here and let the money happen (or not happen) naturally. If I succeed in that, I'll research it more. I have never blogged before, so I have no idea what I'm doing or whether it will go anywhere, but I'm jumping in anyhow.

As a side note, I genuinely love constructive criticism, so if you run into anything of mine and you find you have suggestions, feel free to tell me sans sugar-coating. I used to have an art teacher that everyone hated because he was so honest, but I loved him, respected the crap out of him, and constantly harassed him for feedback. We would laugh at how I'm a sucker for punishment while everyone else was crying in the corner lol

Your Dad had some timely advice, in my opinion.

I was thinking early this morning, how if I ever make it major league I should never forget where I came from, regardless of how I get there, let me never forget that if it weren't for other people appreciating what I share, my thoughts and ideas that I would have never made it out of the bottom rungs of the ladder.

I thoroughly enjoy the community spirit here at Steemit and being a part of this community has made me a better writer in a short period of time. I have gained so much from interacting with others that I value this site more so than any other currently.

I am learning HTML, letting my creative spirit finally shine and gaining in wisdom from listening to various opinions on concepts such as Bitshares, Bitcoin, Steem, etcetera.

By listening to the constructive criticism, I have learned how to improve my formatting in just a matter of mere weeks. I could have easily ignored the suggestions but decided to take it upon myself to learn how to do what other people are doing so that I could gain more followers and provide something that others would enjoy and learn from as well.

So, surely if I ever find anything to add to your posts by way of constructive criticism, I won't hesitate to add my thoughts. I see it as we're helping one another along and that is something I truly value, helping others and receiving help when I need it, also.

Great piece. Extremely helpful for Steemit "noobs", such as myself. :)

Thanks for the compliment on my work!

My full intention in writing this post was to bring to the attention of relatively new Steemians methods of gaining reputation on the platform and growing a loyal audience.

I'm glad that some of you found the piece to be helpful!

That point about engaging with fans is so true. I consult with artists each day and some of the well-known ones develop this god complex, ignore their fans and then later ask them for votes for awards. This leads to a backlash from the fans and confusion from the artist.

Exactly, and the idea of engagement is something I want to bring to the forefront. It is important to engage with others on a social media platform as that's the whole purpose in it being social, otherwise the site may as well be a museum for others to look at the artwork and keep going, finally exiting the scene and going on to something else that provides an outlet to interact with each other.

I didn't come to this platform to post my stuff and hope everyone upvotes what I share, I came to learn and BUILD COMMUNITY.

Totally agree. This is the main reason Im spending most of my time here.facebook never did badly IMO, steemit just offers more value.

Steemit has some of the most intellectually captivating people on its platform and I gain more over the long term by being a part of the community.

Steemit also motivates me to actually write instead of being more of a consumer of other people's literary work.

Here, I can learn by trial and error what works and what doesn't. I can improve my penmanship and the rewards are an incentive.

As I'm writing this out to you, I am brainstorming ideas on my next piece to add to the Steemit blockchain.

Thanks, combofrenzy. If you enjoy this post, please consider sharing it in your feed so that others who may find the info useful can gain from my personal insights.

Hi there and thanks for the advice! I am a complete newbie and don't yet know how to resteemit...could you fill me in? I have seen some great posts that I would like to help promote and also to keep for my own reference. Thanks lots and all the best 😊

It's really simple, just click the button that looks like an arrow making a U-turn next to the reply button underneath the article itself. It's also good to upvote the posts, as you might earn some curation reward. Just give it a try.