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RE: My dream to become a dolphin. I thought I was. I'm not even close. But I'm going to keep trying.

in #steemit8 years ago

OK, so you and I are in a similar boat and have almost the same amount of Steem Power. Yet, I noticed that you don't post very often, don't follow many other people and yet you want to build something.

This is how it works online.

  1. Create great content
  2. Be Consistent
  3. Follow Others
  4. Engage with Your Followers
  5. Repeat

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Oh I did the first 4, and still do... and I had some huge popular posts in the month of July as a result. They've scrolled off my blog now. :(

A good example, is that I was one of the first ones to create the Steemit FAQ after steemit went public beta July 4, 2016. No one really knew me then. It is still a good read, if you want to see it.

Titled: Steemit (FAQ) Frequently Asked Questions, Common Myths, and Misconceptions

The only thing I'm leary is "the repeat" part. When I have something to say, I'll do it. I don't want to dominate the feeds all the time. I will write more about that later... :) I'm not knocking anyone that does.. but I really want to see other people get a chance. Sometimes just reading and curating for me is fulfillment in itself.

I have noticed your comments on several posts, including some of mine. Thanks for that!

We're both very similar in our "power" here. One thing I've learned from you by this post is that the number of posts isn't a major factor in a user's power. You have 7X the posts I do but have less (monetary) value overall. I too follow the general approach of only posting when I have something worthwhile to say. However, steemit offers us both incentives to think of other interests we can write about, and also like you I get a lot of enjoyment / value from reading and curating.

Unlike you I have more time available to create content basically being retired. For me it's more about being inspired and meeting the challenge of writing quality content. The feedback I've gotten about my writing is actually pretty good, but I am not a fast typist (plus I am a bit of a perfectionist) so it takes quite awhile to create new material. I tend to re-edit my posts quite frequently to get them "perfect".

There's a great deal about how things work here on steemit I do not yet understand, but I do like the ideas steemit is based on and love the people it has attracted. Most of my Internet "Idols" are now posting on stemit, and I think that's truly awesome! I have noticed some of them posting less frequently now, and I'm not sure if there's any reason other than balancing priorities and lack of time that play into that. I hope not. Actually I just began to think I could rely on steemit as my first media stop to get news and other interesting content rather than using youtube, which is becoming filled more and more with plagiarized echos from my authors of interest. Use the keywords "anarchast ep", "corbett report" or "stephan molyneux" in the youtube search box and see how many hits show up of people reposting other's material or trying to tap into the audience those authors have. I'm not saying that's wrong if they add something of value to it (and recognizing everybody is clamoring for attention), but it does make it more difficult, weeding thru all the secondary posts to get to the original source material.

Anyway, glad you're here. We'll climb the ranks towards dolphinhood as the market and our dedication to our own growth permit, at a proportional rate to those factors.

Thanks again intelliguy!

@hilarski , can you emphasize on point number 4 , that is engaging with your followers?

His name was Robert Paulson