This is a pretty good post - I certainly agree with all the advice, and the original infographic is a nice touch. I would say however that in general, this type of article carries a lot more weight when it comes from an account that has been around for longer and already has a track record of writing good posts, not to mention accumulated some REP. It is almost a Steemit punchline to see a "How to succeed on Steemit" or "How to write a great post" post written by a brand new author/account who has not succeeded yet nor proven the ability to write great posts. If I had $1 SBD for every time I saw an author with REP <30 write a "How to succeed on Steemit" post I would be rich :) I do see some value in this post though, particularly with the advice to write about something you are passionate about and to take the time to edit/re-read and remove extraneous words to make the final post more concise. I upvoted the post through @r-bot. Thanks for sharing - Cheers - Carl
This is a pretty good post - I certainly agree with all the advice, and the original infographic is a nice touch. I would say however that in general, this type of article carries a lot more weight when it comes from an account that has been around for longer and already has a track record of writing good posts, not to mention accumulated some REP. It is almost a Steemit punchline to see a "How to succeed on Steemit" or "How to write a great post" post written by a brand new author/account who has not succeeded yet nor proven the ability to write great posts. If I had $1 SBD for every time I saw an author with REP <30 write a "How to succeed on Steemit" post I would be rich :) I do see some value in this post though, particularly with the advice to write about something you are passionate about and to take the time to edit/re-read and remove extraneous words to make the final post more concise. I upvoted the post through @r-bot. Thanks for sharing - Cheers - Carl