I chose not to receive payments on this post. It didn't seem appropriate since it was kind of a mild rant about not having enough opportunity and control here.
You could do blurbs with Zappl, but yeah, you'd probably just earn a few cents at best.
Steemit LOVES long-form content, but in my experience, the compensation ranges from nil to maybe $10 if you're lucky.
I can be ignored posting on my own website, you know? The main incentives for posting here to Steemit is the community (aka NOT being ignored), and the potential for compensation.
I've seen a lot of people posting books here in serialized format, and I just want those people to know they're going to experience problems when they are ready to publish outside Steemit, and since we can't delete the content here, you're locked in here. It's like it was part of the plan to trap your content here and not pay you passively for it beyond the first week it's published.
Now I'm wondering what would happen if I published on Amazon first and then posted on Steemit. Would Amazon want to remove my publication from their site?
No, but they will "price match" if your content is found cheaper somewhere else online.
Someone has to tell them about it though, so you could probably get away with it for quite sometime, and given the fact that my 5-month-old tutorials have less than 500 total views COMBINED, that's unlikely with Steemit, I'd say.
The thing to do would be to just post excerpts on Steemit with links to buy the full version of the content on Amazon I suppose.
I will definitely be re-evaluating how I use Steemit from here on out.
No more long-form content or lengthy tutorials. I'll save that stuff for my podcasts and blog posts on MY OWN website, and post from DSound or whatever to here.
Don't get me wrong, I like Steemit a lot, but having put in the work here, the results I'm getting don't match the effort and the limitations here are, well, they're crap honestly.
At least on my own website I can delete and edit as needed. I can update posts with new information so they stay relevant. The content there is alive. This is also true of Medium.com...a major Steemit competitor.
Here on Steemit, it ages very quickly and goes into oblivion. What's the point of the longevity of the blockchain when it's shadowed in darkness never to be seen again?
It only makes sense to post a general blurb and a link to where the content can actually LIVE and evolve. I actually can't believe this isn't something that is in the works and top priority to fix on this site.
It seems to me otherwise Steemit is kinda dead...at least as a home for content beyond a link.
Suddenly, I get @Zappl...at first, I thought how dumb it was and how they needed to disconnect from Steemit, but now I see....it's actually a rather ideal way to post to Steemit when I think about it. Just enough space for a blurb and a link.