This is a great post that hits plenty of good nerves in the community, while offering a success story and plenty of advice to help people find some inspiration.
Your hyperlink at the bottom is broken and needs a quick edit at the end (remove the space).
People should also recognize that writing the best posts in the world will likely not get seen until you have a reasonable amount of followers to see them in their feeds. I'm personally saving my best content for when I have 1,000 followers, and will then shower them with longer material they may actually want to see because I've recruited, engaged, upvoted, and retained them with my shorter stuff. I want my effort to be seen, so this is my strategy to not run out of content when I potentially do become popular. In other words, I've earned their respect so they'll hopefully WANT to search for my material. I've seen this in the #punchline and #funny tags in recent weeks, which has a very supportive community that appreciates humor, or by a daily fitness challenge designed to help each other stay healthy and motivated. -- All to keep me actively blogging, but not spending the hours I used to for virtually no views, and a lot of disappointment.
I recommend going easy on major blog posts until you've generated 100+ followers from actively writing engaging comments wherever you genuinely feel inspired. Don't force it and don't forget to upvote to show your appreciation. This will give your material a fighting chance to be seen and rewarded by people who will see it somewhere in their feeds.
I also recommend focusing on 2-3 key high-engagement niches so you can be recognized and earn a reputation more effectively. From my experience, spreading yourself all over the place may water down these efforts.
Resteemed.
@swissclive and @steemmatt thanks to both of you for an amazing blog and an equally heartening response.
I was feeling pessimistic about this whole thing since today morning as I read a number of blogs about the infighting within the community about self-voting and auto-voting abuse and reading it all made me feel that there's no way a newbie can make any good here on Steemit.
Your words of advice finally gives me some inspiration and motivation to carry on.
@steemmatt A good reward from me for some excellent points I didn’t make:
“Don’t force it”
“focussing on 2 or 3 key high engagement niches”
Thanks for spotting the broken link (now corrected).
Thanks for the resteem.
You get 100% upvote for this. Newbies could do well to learn from your example. Please help us all in guiding them.
Thank you very much! Yes, Sir.
Pls wat does "2-3 high engagement niches mean?
It means 2-3 topics which already have proven to have high engagement. He's saying we should stick to writing and curating 2-3 niches.
yup, especially like your second point. I am beginning to see the wisdom in 'saving the good stuff'.
Great wisdom, experience teaching, highly impacting indeed.
Thanks for this input.