The Ultimate Guide To Killing it on Blockchain-Based Steemit or Anywhere Else
Recently a lot of people have been asking my advice on how to be a successful blogger on Steemit.com, the decentralized, blockchain-based social media site that pays its users to participate. I decided to just go ahead and write the ultimate guide to blogging on Steemit for those who are serious about it.
STEP ONE:
Know yourself and your strengths.
I chose three bloggers, @sweetsssj, @mynameisbrian and myself for very specific reasons: we are all very different and we don’t hide it. Perhaps most importantly, we are all prolific bloggers with idiosyncratic world views. We all live on different continents, too. We write a post at least every other day and sometimes two in one day. Each of us offers readers a different menu but we’re all very passionate and don’t really follow the worn-out self-help guru meme that still seems to be infecting the blogosphere.
Brain (@mynameisbrian) is mostly a comic artist now, but he used to write about other topics.
He also is a programmer who built the ultra useful Steemit tool, Dead Followers. But there are tons of programmers on Steemit, so creating hilarious comics was a wise move because there still aren’t a lot of active comic artists who are as good and prolific as Brain. At one point, during Steemit’s lowest point, Brain was about the only reason I logged into my Steemit account. I am most likely his biggest fan.
@sweetsssj documents her travels, cuisine explorations, social life, hi-tech toys, and gives us a peek into the world of the thriving and dynamic Chinese youth culture.
She has a sizable following on other social media platforms as well. My heavily robed crypto trader-muse in Steemit, Tuck Fheman, is convinced that Sweetsssj is a robot pretending to be a Chinese woman. I had the same hunch, and we both are still not entirely convinced that Sweetsssj isn’t some kind of android. Look at the size of her pupils.
gamsahamida steemit
yes. im robot to