I remember myself 3 months in.. I finally learned how the place works. Then 6 months in, I learned more and went, wait a minute, I found some whales, I'm ahead of the game. Then 9 months in, that happened again.
....and what I learned....
Was.. if I just put out my thoughts and feelings into my blog, it's not whales or tricks of the trade that will help me. It is mostly just being honest with the people that want to read my stuff. For that I'm super thankful I can just be me.. and appreciate those that like me... and so that's my secret. Just be real, and over time it will work out on its own.
Good luck to you.. and thanks for the comment.
One suggestion: PLEASE don't think about dropping out anymore. The whole place needs people like you. :)
I like this comment and am curious how it compares if you were a brand new person today.
Does joining 15 months ago, like you did, confer an additional advantage by:
But, I'm new, so I'm guessing at some past activity.
Some of the bigger challenges, though, are that we follow people and not topics. To follow topics, as I understand it, I need to click on them. I would much rather follow topics, so when Papa or Stella write on a topic that I'm following I'd be more inclined to read, comment, and (maybe) upvote. It's what I like about Reddit.com, even though Karma there isn't worth anything. I focus more on topics rather than authors.
However, I may be more interested in trying to earn curation rewards, and I know that Papa and Stella (and Jerry B, Stan, Fuzzy, etc.) will have a solid following, so I may just upvote without reading or commenting because the possible payout is worth the risk.
With Stan and Fuzzy (and you too, Intellguy), what they post is usually on topic with my interests, so I'll purposefully look at their home page each morning to ensure I'd didn't miss anything they've posted. I'm also looking at using a bot (like Steemvoter.com) to upvote them automatically to get in early on curation because I know I'm always going to read their stuff and likely throw in a comment, too.
The push to make some $$ when I'm putting in time on steemit makes me want to help maximize both what I'm learning and what I'm earning.