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RE: Steemit has too many articles on Crypto! Try something else, this niche is saturated.
I am talking less about onboarding new members, as much as a drop off on already "established" members (over 54 reputation), or at least their activity.
As for being a social network, well, it is one. Just a really bad one. And yes, it's very hard to measure burn-out metrics. Except to know that the growth in active users (as opposed to registered users) is very slow.
3-6 months is an interesting figure. And I guess it's even worse when you come to earn money and don't, and the site being so small means getting creative feedback or networking is also better had elsewhere. Hm.
I'm sure that the drop off an already established members is pretty ugly, too – especially at the three-month and six-month breakpoints. I expect our next major onboarding to be in the summer, when the kids get out of school and have more time to poke at systems – and then at the end of the summer we should see a pretty dramatic falloff in activity.
Yes, Steemit is a really terrible social network. It's bad at being social and it's bad at being a network. Honestly, if we stop thinking about it as a social network and start thinking about it as a blogging platform with a really good comment system, and leave the social networking to platforms that social network well, you can do fairly well in terms of getting views and getting people talking about your work.
If you're looking to court money, however – we know that there are some very narrow paths to that particular Hell, and the daily round up of up votes and rewards is the most clear and clarion expression of the truth when it comes to that question.
Dunno, in terms of page-views, a failure of a post of mine on Steemit does #10 trending pageviews here. My successful posts on reddit make in 24 hours more than the #2-3 trending posts do here in a week.
But yeah, I plan to write about all of this. In depth. Been promising it for a while, but was not in the mood, but it's happening.
People on social networks want things which are socially related to them. Things that they care about. Things that encourage them to go to a place and do a thing and read a thing and experience a thing that they couldn't before.
Steemit doesn't do that. So if we want people engaging with our material, we have to put it in front of people who are interested in that kind material.
In that sense, the migration off of steam.chat to Discord has been a godsend. A variety of communities who actually share common interests, all hanging out together in one place. If you share that common interest, you have a magnificent opportunity.
But all that functionality is unrelated to Steemit itself.
It's definitely worth an article or two talking about the dynamics of acquiring an audience. I've made at least one post of that nature myself. I'm not proud of it, but I've done it.
"When we say decentralized, what we really mean is we're only patching buttons, and letting you actually do all the heavy work. Not our responsibility!"