RE: Should We Encourage Affiliate Links On Steemit?
@kaylinart, I've been thinking about the 'lifespan' of a steem post too. Right now, Steem highly incentivizes fast content that is somewhat bitesized or entertaining, and disappears in a week. It's pretty exciting, but it also predisposes the KIND of content that will proliferate across the network.
One of the coolest things about the internet is the amount of USEFUL information out there, in depth tutorials, DIY instructions, well documented experiences...these things tend to take a lot of work to create, but can useful for a long time. Think of StackExchange, there's a community that gets a LOT of google traffic, and helps a LOT of people get detailed solutions to whatever they're looking at. I think it's one of the coolest community systems online. Steem has the possibility of being better...but not without some work.
Stack exchange is a great example of highly targeted reference content, it excels at answering technical questions where a helpful answer actually does exist somewhere. Once somebody takes the time to Document this, that answer is then helpful to thousands and thousands of other people oftentimes over several years, if not longer.
Right now, Steem as a system disincentivizes longterm reference or tutorial content. This is a HUGE market, not to mention a hub of really competent, creative, skilled people. How can we encourage a variety of useful content beyond the "most entertaining facebook of the last 5 minutes" variety???
Amazing comment! I love your insight on this! I never thought about it like that before. I haven't really heard of stack exchange, I need to look into it !
Thanks Kaylin, here's a list of all the communities on stack exchange.
https://stackexchange.com/sites
Hey please follow me
https://steemit.com/@sharmaakash
I wonder what can be done within the Steem system to encourage this? It's a HUGE benefit to the community to encourage people to write longterm content that brings in Google Searchers. That doesn't just happen...it takes a lot of work, intent, effort. But the power of having people incentivized to write content that itself brings in new users over a long period of time would be completely insane.
I agree 100% with you. If Steemit wants to create a platform with in-depth, useful content, then the posts should be monetized long after than just a week. What happens now, is these short, bite-size blog posts are churned out so that bloggers can monetize optimally for the week.
What happens if people still upvote your posts months after they where created? What happens to that money?