[Discussion] For You, Is Steemit a Means or an End?

in philosophy •  7 years ago  (edited)

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In the past few months, the Steemit community has grown to a size and a rate that we would never have imagined during the winter season. The price has bounced back from the very low rates of 0.25USD per 1STEEM and irrelevant of all the technicalities, Steemit has become a much more welcoming place for new users and old-timers alike.

This surge of new user traction has really put a spotlight on a question members have tossed around since the website's inception – Why are you here?

As always, the money is usually the initial hook. But for people who started a year ago and are still here, we all know at least several accounts that were very popular, highly profitable, and seemed to be at the top of Steemit. Many of them are gone now and even to this day, we see a few big users sign-off permanently from time to time. Even among brand-new members, many try out Steemit for a few weeks, are dissatisfied for whatever reason(s), and don't come back.

Why?

My hypothesis is that because many, if not all of them, considered Steemit as an “End” and not a “Means.”

Is Steemit Your Final Destination?


We all use Steemit for an innumerable list of diverse reasons, but for the sake of clarity and discussion, I abstractly categorize them into 2 main avenues.

An “End” is just that, the very and only reason you are here. You probably make and present content for the sole purpose of gaining followers and getting payouts. You probably identified a niche in the Steemit pool of topics and doubled-down on it as your profile's “expertise.” You log in, put up a post, reply to a few comments, and log out.

This is by and large the main thrust of Steemit Inc's marketing effort. “Blog, Get Paid” has become one of the signature appeals for attracting new members.

But this begs the question, blog about what and why? Most of us have never maintained a blog before or used any of our previous social-media outlets (Facebook, Instagram) to establish some kind of global presence. They have always been leisurely, casual, and primarily meant to be a personal outlet to established friends and family. Now that we're incentivized by money to continuously engage with other Steemians, almost all of us are “forced” to create on a regular basis.

If you treat Steemit as an Ends, you're always going to be lacking content. What I mean by this is that your main purpose is to fill that Submit Post box as best you can as often as you can. The content isn't tied to your life or hobbies, just the website. In this avenue, the best case scenario is that Steemit becomes your little hobby. In the worst case scenario, posts degenerate into “bullshit” content like the ones that constitute plagiarism, identity theft, or textless image pastes, all devoid of a personal voice and purpose.

On the other hand...

Is Steemit Your Vehicle?


Do you have a reason to be on Steemit? Forget the payouts, does Steemit connect to and offer something to something in your real life?

I want to make the argument that if you want to sustain a sustainable trajectory on the platform, you should view Steemit as a vehicle – a vehicle to learn, better yourself, expand your personal and professional life, and take whatever passion or practice to an entirely new level.

The clearest on-site example of this is the relatively large group of crypto investors, programmers, and general enthusiasts. For a great while, this site was dominated by financial updates and code-related content. Steemit was a perfect and rewarding forum for those conversations.

Now that the platform has diversified immensely in focus and demographic, we have to start finding other ambitions for Steemit members. Here are some preliminary thoughts to spark some discssion -

1 - Does Steemit impact your profession? I've found super productive individuals like @heymattsokol and @tonesquare who focus most of their posts on not only their work but also revealing every step of the way so that others may use them as a resource.

2 - Have you regimented Steemit as a investigational and/or learning tool? I personally know many users who love supporting others on the website and use Steemit primarily as a learning device.

3 - Are you finding like-minded people to push forward a passion? If you haven't already, be sure to follow profiles like @Alcibiades who have made it a core mission to curate good content producers and bring those minds together. It's more rewarding to find fellow professionals or hobbyists on Steemit so it's awesome to see people make that facilitation their mission.

4 - Or even if money is still the main attractor, do you have solid resolutions to how you'll be spending that money? The earliest example of this was @heiditravels, using funds created on Steemit to support amazing adventures which in turn made even more great new content for the community.

Think About Where You Are and Where You Want to Be


IMHO, I don't think it's enough to set out goals like “I want 2000 followers by Dec 2017” or “I want my average payout at $XXX.” I think this is setting yourself up for a mindless grind that has little external reward. You'll probably burn out after a few months, and I only say this because many of us witnessed it happen to even some of the bigger Steemit content makers.

Instead, my tiny piece of advice would be to determine a long-term goal that isn't directly impacted by Steemit. Want to try recording your first solo album? Want to start a podcast? Want to go on a hike through the Amazon? Want to take up screen-printing? Want to organize community events? Want to institute a non-profit or volunteer initiative? When you have a goal in the horizon, the nature of your content-making will fall more naturally into place and posting/interacting regularly will be less of a bumbling chore and more of a calculated step towards your ambitions.

Anyway, let me know what y'all think. What is Steemit to you?

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Steemit is the voice I never had. I am now able to write and express my opinion on any subject I want. Maybe a deteriment to building up my base of followers as I want to express my opinion on just about anything. However I just started not too long ago so I wait to see what effect this will have. Steemit is just perfect because of its simplicity and ease of use.

I never liked FB, YouTube, Instagram or twitter because they were not the platform that suited my personality. Steemit was my perfect match. Sometimes it can be frustrating because my posts are not getting any views but what I recently found is the great support the Steemit community provided.

Not only as a mean to express my views but I have found it to be an important medium to learn. Since joining Steemit I have learnt more about the world of crypto-currencies than I have done in the last few years.

I'm still getting into the stride of things and also thinking of contents to formulate an opinion. Hopefully my opinions will begin resonate with those who have chosen to follow my posts.

and me too, i want follower grow fast, would you follow me

It feels like viewing Steemit as a "means" is good too because it encourages us to keep building up our own blogs. Getting an audience is the hard part, I feel like keeping it is actually pretty easy in comparison.

What if Steem is 10x the traffic at some point? Seems like we're headed in that direction. Being the 5,000th best Steemian will be pretty good - and being in the top 1k of viewed blogs might be really amazing by then.

For me this means focusing on two things: My Steem Power (the higher it gets the more value I can give out to people), and views, which represent the basic math of if my content is reaching people.

I like the way you put it in this post, well said.

Thanks a lot Matt! And I hope the out-of-the-blue shoutout was ok... =)

I think getting yourself out there should also be seen as a "means." What will you do with 100 new followers? 10000 new views? I've been thinking about this a lot since "engagement" is different for everyone. I'd rather have 1 new follower who consistently makes thoughtful comments rather than 100 people who upvote without reading...

Yes steemit draws you with money intially. However, if you're already from the blogging and vlogging world you're more likely stay on steemit. I think the people who maybe weren't accustomed to creating their own content may have an issue of being dissatisfied.

I came over from youtube. Steemit pays a great deal more than youtube per post. So i believe many youtubers will stay once they come over. Also if you already like what you're doing. More than likely you will stay on the network.

I would like steemit to be the new model for social media everywhere. My only concern is everyone is not a blogger or vlogger. They use social media however just don't have the time to produce good content or even know how. So perhaps if there was an all inclusive means for everyone to participate with satisfactory results that would be great.

The people who can't create content i'd like to see focus on how to read content their really interested in and make great comments. I know that's not the same as creating content. However, would be nice if there was some training on how to do that properly so people who aren't writers or vloggers could have a more worthwhile experience.

(I am not talented in philosophy.. keep that in mind 😉)
Anyway i really enjoyed your article and the sub message you put into it.
I read it like a short life advice similar to personal development books from tony/brian/robert. You know who i mean .. (Dont you?)

For me Steemit is a new, unknown social media blogging platform with alot of potential.
Not only that alot of people never heard about it, but also not realizing the big benefits of steemit behind the curtains after getting known to it.
I still have to get more into steemit, thats why i am implementing steemit in my daily routine to create a habit.
I would recommend you (other steemians) to do the same, it will pay out 😉💰💰

Thanks for the thoughtful message @tcg! I see that you're a brand new user (aus Deutschland?) so first off, welcome!

Definitely take some time to get to know the platform and figure out a way that you want to use it. Don't let the nuanced accounts with interesting ambitions slip by you.

Good points. I wonder if "financial independence", or replacing one's job, is quantitatively a different goal than simply making some payouts.

Thanks @lexiconical! I agree, those are some more tangible goals.

Thanks for sharing your inspiring writing. As I read your posting every time, there is something that resonates in my mind~

Thanks so much for reading!

확실히 단순한 보상 '이상의 무언가'를 얻어갈 수 있는 곳인 것 같습니다.
개인적으로는 이것저것 여러 분야에 관심이 많은지라, 각기 '다른 분야'의 글들이 검색할 필요 없이 모여서 올라오는점이 참 좋더라구요 ㅎㅎㅎ
요즘은 사라진 '메타 블로그'같은 느낌이랄까요?!
어쩌다 한 두개 덧글이 달리던 기존 블로그와는 다르게 교류가 많은 점이나,
외국인들이 쓴 글들을 읽을 수 있는 점도 좋구요 ㅎㅎㅎ 너무 sns 로만 이용하는 것같아 민망합니다 어허허허허
저도 좀더 나은, 좀더 가치있는 방식으로 스팀을 활용할 수 있는 방법이
어떤게 있을지 더 고민해 봐야겠습니다! ㅎㅎㅎ
좋은 생각할 거리를 제시해 주셔서 감사합니다! ㅎㅎㅎ

기존 친구들과 지인과 공유하기 위해 올리는 sns와는 다르기에 무언가 더 설명하고, 공감대를 늘릴 수 있는 내용을 만들고 또 다양한 의견이 모여있는, 토론하는
정말 메타 블로그 라는 단어에 공감합니다!

I am an artist and I post my webcomic on Steemit because I simply want to test out its potential for webcomic/graphic artists. Most of us do not get paid for sharing artworks with public but Steemit kind of compensate you for that even when you are not famous. But, will it completely replace Tumblr and DeviantArt? Will it attract more artists and viewers who use those websites? So far, I have seen some hope but it has long way to go.

@Carrotcake님, I agree that it has a long way to go (but then again, Tumblr and DeviantArt took years before they were adopted into the mainstream). Most importantly, especially for content-makers, is that you're rewarded for your process in a way that no other platform provides. With your sketches, an audience eagerly awaits your product. With a tutorial, you monetize a part of your profession that never saw any gain. It gives us artists and designers a real opportunity to focus on our process (asking why are we making this?) and expand our practice.

답변 감사합니다!

Nice post @hansikhouse
Great content.

Thanks @mcekworo

You're welcome

To be honest, even I joined steemit for money but after spending some time with steemit community I must say that I like coming back to steemit for the interesting conversations, community initiatives, checking out creative work from amazing talented pool and many more stuff. I just hope

Thanks for the honest and spot-on response Varun! I'm right there with you in terms of initiatives. Would love to see more on-the-ground projects happen.

Hi vj1309, I'm with you on this. In the beginning and still a bit now it is a bit about how much I can get. It feels good seeing every time you can claim your reward. But since a while back, my mindset changed from the "Like" and mindless content on fb to actaully going in and reading about people's experiences. This platform is very refreshing.

나에게 있어서 스팀은 하나의 실험과 증명입니다.
"아무도 나를 모르는 무연고지에서 내 그림과 사상은 어떤 평가를 받을 것인가?"
중간에 어떠한 매체도 개입하지 않은 순수한 대중들의 판단에 의한 reward가 나를 인정해준다면 그것은 현실에서의 나의 그림과 사상에 대한 'GO'사인으로 받아들여도 되는 거겠죠.
평가의 형태는 $로 나오지만 거기에는 그 이상의 '용기'와 '격려'라는 의미가 있습니다.
저는 오늘도 많은 분들에게서 그것을 받고 있습니다.

소요님 스팀을 하시는 미션을 공유해주셔서 고맙습니다. 중간 매개체 없이 순수하게 작품을 쇼케이스 하는 공간이라는 구조적 부분을 배우게 되었습니다. 소요님이 겔러리 라고 부르시는 이유도 그런가 추측합니다. Go사인이라는 비유는 저 스스로도 생각해 보게 합니다. 내 콘텐츠와 사고에 고 싸인으로 어느정도까지 받아들일 수 있을까.

I have a lot of free time on my hands so i joined just to learn everything i can about steemit and pass on this knowledge to friends and relatives who are very creative but don't have the time to learn from scratch. But i'm also finding that this could be a nice investment in the future too.

That's a great start. Looking forward what you can bring to the platform!

Well said. I've been on the platform for a little over a month, and my boyfriend and I have been discussing our experience on Steemit. (We actaully created our first Vlog on it, in a recent post I just posted). Why are we here?

At first, the appeal was that we were actually getting paid for our content. Previous to Steemit life, I was a YouTuber creating free content for folks. As I became more involved on this platform, it has become so much more. There is an amazing community. People here are smart, intelligent, with amazing ideas. I love finding other artists and people who write inspiration and motivational blogs. I love learning in general!

So I'm not sure yet what Steemit will become in my life, but I do know, that it has already surpassed what I thought it was... the knowledge on Steemit is priceless, and worth much more than money.

Thanks for the great comment Karen! It's awesome that you're meshing well into the Steemian social fabric. It's so interesting how motivating good comments/curation can really change how we interact on a social-media platform.

I'll definitely check out the Vlog!

Absolutely. I remember you were one of the first people that I interacted with when I first got on this platform. Genuine interactions​ really make a difference. Love what you have to say :)

In the beginning, getting paid for blogging sounded like a great 💡 idea. I really need to move house, find somewhere dry and warm for the winter, and this might just be a means.
But in the meantime, after meeting some really fantastic people on steemit, reading interesting articles, rediscovering old talents and finding new talents...there is just so much to find here, so many wonderful and diverse people that it has become a community...my community.
Obviously the payment is still a draw, but no longer the biggest draw. I hope steemit is still around in years to come, as I would like to become a bigger longstanding part of this amazing community.

Thank you for sharing your story @katdvine!! It's wonderful to see such a true point of view.
You're absolutely right. We'll be here for a long while and the objective benefits will come with time. In the meanwhile, let's make stronger relationships =)

whoa, lot's of questions. to quickly answer and a great number of questions there to be honest but i love the fact that it feels like a natural evolution of what social could have been with the right kind of micropayments element, we needed blockchain to make that work, it's a free blog, i don't have to have hosting and look after wordpress, that's kinda huge, means i can get back to writing rather than admin, i think like any social network it's always about the community you engage with, i'm always gonna end up with that small 20/30 close people that i sit and drink with and adventure with from the platform, i'm not trying to overthink it too much, as i learn more about crypto in general and how it's changing my way i look at money and value in general who knows. i'm just glad to be here! :)

Excellent! Thanks for the great comment and enthusiasm!

What an insightful article. Thanks for posting.

Good post we learn few new things thanks for share

Excellent post! I discovered steemit because of my interest in crypto currencies. At first, I just bought some steem and had no intention of creating a steemit account or starting to blog. A couple months later I decided that I would check it out. I've only been on here for 20 days but was surprised by how much I liked it.

I was a bit lost at first, not really knowing what I should post about/feeling my way around, etc. I've since realized that steemit is so much more than simply posting/getting paid. It can be a way for a person to focus on their own self-development and creative expression. It's also now my main hub for crypto currency news, helping me keep my finger on the pulse of the crypto world. Also, I've already met some great people that I really like and have stuff in common with, and it's just really fun.

This is the first social media platform that I've really enjoyed. I'm excited to see what it will be like in a year or two from now.

It's great that you've had these reflections within a month of joining! I really think it's one of the best ways to tackle this platform.

Also, followed! I would love to learn more about augmented/virtual reality progress.

Thanks :) I'll be following you too!

Hi @hansikhouse, thanks for the opportunity to share my reasons for being here, I've actually been thinking about it a lot lately. Despite ups and downs in rewards I've stayed involved here regularly because -

  • it has become an essential outlet where I can explore ideas that I find useful to write about and following certain threads of interest to see where they take me. Sharing these ideas has always felt risky to me and I've grown a lot through daring to write about them anyway. Hopefully these are interesting to others too but when writing I never know.

-I've wanted to improve my storytelling skills, and I've found that showing my work and discussing my studio life and process has provided an unexpected and important catalyst for me to get a perspective on my business and creative interests.

  • And another huge reason I'm committed to steemit is the friends that I've made here, such as you. This community has a real place in my life, in my heart and daily I show up to curate, upvote and give feedback because I care deeply about this platform and the friends I've made here.

great post as always, thanks!

You stole the words right outa my mouth. In the end, there's nothing better than being incentivized and rewarded for improving one's self and making great new friends =D

yes well said - there's nothing better than being incentivized and rewarded for improving one's self and making great new friends =D

I have to say that the biggest factor in joining steemit for me was definitely the money, but honestly close behind that was the idea of a place to share and learn about my creative side that I don't always get to use. I work in a creative industry but over the last few years I have felt that I've not been able to stretch my creative muscles as much as I would have liked. This prompted me to start working on my own creative projects, which is bringing me so much more happiness just into my regular day to day life. I'm new to steemit, but it seems like such a positive place for people to share ideas and get constructive help back. To me the money will always be a great incentive but I'm hoping that eventually, the creative aspect of it takes over as my main objective. So I like this idea of it being a vehicle! I hope that's true. Thanks @hansikhouse

Absolutely! I'll be following your work closely (seems like you're already acquainted with our Steem Park project!) as I'd love to learn more about your production. It's awesome to hear that more and more creative professionals are turning to Steemit. Excited to bounce more ideas off of you in the future.

Steemit for me is a place to meet new people, see all the amazing things in their posts about what drives them, interests, etc
I have meet so many amazing people who have shared their life with me, supported me and I have learned a little more everyday.
How things work here, how to write some things
like yesterday someone told me to use tags that would make more people see my posts.
Ha...no I know...lol
This isnt the End station for me, its a new beginning :0) if we go together we can do great things.
Thanks for this post, great thinking and made me think as well :0)
Followed upvoted resteemed.
Have a great weekend.

Thanks so much!

Ur welcome😊

Very interesting

Thanks for reading!

"Yeah, the money is nice, BUT..."

@hansikhouse, I had to think about this for a bit.

I write this from a Steemit account I created specifically for my wife and my small independent art gallery... we want to offer the artists we represent more exposure. So, in that sense Steemit is "another social content platform."

However, art is a tough business... so this is also an avenue to find new artists, along the way... perhaps more feasible as we establish more of a "base" here on Steemit.

Then "the money is nice" in the sense that we're hoping we can get some of the gallery's followers to become followers here, as well. By extension, we can perhaps start get enough upvotes to trickle some funds back to the gallery-- 'cuz goodness knows we're "working on a shoestring"-- to help sponsor and promote artists.

Unrelated to this, I created my primary @denmarkguy Steemit account because-- at least for me-- the format of Steemit matches something I very much missed from 12-15 years ago, called "social blogging."

Before Facebook, the "social web" revolved around "blog rings" and blogging communities where there was authentic connection over the content shared. And that content was far deeper and more meaningful than Facebook ever was able to be. Every try BLOGGING on Facebook? Of course, that's not what Facebook was FOR... but what happened to the 30 million bloggers, pre-Facebook? I was one of them... and Steemit was a new "home" to find meaningful content AND meaningful connection and dialogue about that content.

Again, "the money is nice" but above all, I love the underlying model here that this is-- in essence-- a gift economy where rewards are mostly based on "giving forward."

Great questions!

@reddragonfly/@denmarkguy thanks for such a thorough reply! I'm really curious about you and your wife's gallery effort. I'm an artist myself and have helped set up a few residency programs in galleries. I've always been very dissatisfied with the status quo of the commercial art system and would love to strike up an ongoing conversation.

I remember when Facebook first came our, many more people used the "notes" function as a pseudo-blog. Since then it's become progressively more like Twitter and actively encourages succinct updates as being inherently more noteworthy. We've gotten more and more away from substance and more towards instant gratification.

Thanks for the read!