That’s why it’s a team effort and content creators should be going out and sharing their content with the outside world.
The Alexa ranking has been plummeting. The site apparently has 224,700 keywords that it could be ranking for. From that, there are only 589 websites linking to our site.
If we could up those numbers it could turn into a snowball effect. Many things on this site old and new that people consider to be entertaining and could enjoy.
People atm are upset with Facebook (again no shock) so some people went out and targeted those tags talking about the alternative called Steem. It's a perfect time to sell them on such a site as this.
In the gaming world, many are not happy with some choices Blizzard made so BoycottBlizzard went trending. I wrote and shared about an alternative game to replace the one that people where unhappy with. That got more click though in a few hours then I tend to get in a week to that Steem post.
It comes down to taking advantage of the opportunity and driving traffic to content. Then getting those people to consume something else and another and another. Before they know it they sign up for an account and are telling others about some unknown content creator they found.
Outside eyes arriving doesn't guarantee paying customers. The content itself does double as marketing though. Most content production platforms enjoy the benefits of link sharing content consumers. Those consumers don't even get paid for that effort either, it's just something they do naturally.
We need all consumers, along with plenty willing to pay, to help create demand for the token. That one million in and quarter million out is really important. More money flowing in than what could potentially leave is the only way this can be sustainable, without depending solely on investors and speculators. What I'm talking about should in theory create a steady demand for the token, and the consumers spend the money anyway, without getting anything in return, so why is there a problem getting their money here?