How To Be A Really, Really Bad Steemian, In 13 Steps

in steem •  6 years ago 

165 how ro be a really bad S DSC01314G-TiledRotation+Anguish.jpg

(For minnows. Or not.)
Steem fans are giving you a lot of tips and advice on how to be a “good Steemian”. Mostly suggesting you have to buy a lot of Steem at any prices. And then: “Always power-up. Never power-down. Curate manually. Contribute to the community.” Etcetera.

But I’m your real friend, so I’m telling you the truth, describing the real way to convert you in a successful Steemian.

  1. Always power down, never power up. They are telling you this thing of power up, forget it. But you need liquid capital, new and fresh, every week, so power down. Don’t waste time, see nr. 2.
  2. Buy votes. Invest all your liquid Steem and SBD in vote buying. I mean, literally all of it. That has various advantages: your reputation skyrockets. (At least at the beginning, very fast, later slowly.) Your posts get more attention, and perhaps some unselfish votes, too. You will be more known between the approximately 40 thousand daily active users here. And with all positive upvote bot-returns, your wealth will grow.
  3. Keep it positive Only buy upvotes with positive ROI (or at least with zero, in the worst case). Or, do you want to lose money and power? No, losing cash is not the way of success. But keep reading:
  4. Use time machine. Better make publicity to an old post than a newer one, where possible. Buy votes for 2-3-5 days old posts first, to boost the annualized ROI (return on investment), accelerating capital turnover rate.
  5. Write more and less. Write the maximum number and the minimum size of posts possible. (Size can be subjective, but at least approximately 150 words, or 1000-1100 characters by the rules of some bots.) With the minimum effort possible.
  6. Quality? Subjective. It is not really important if the title is good, if the post is interesting or if there are some grammar errors in it. (But use at least the spell checker of your word processor program.) Avoid repetitive content, or make it very wisely to avoid the appearance of being a robot.
  7. Sell your votes or delegate your Steem power. That is the effective way to get an interest-like return. You can use the income immediately to buy more votes.
  8. Never vote manually, never give anybody a penny for free. Did nobody got rich being unselfish, right?
  9. Follow only the most important persons from which you can learn or earn something. Follow witnesses and whales and be very polite and cautious with them. Use all your votes, and vote for the most successful witnesses.
  10. Don’t participate in any community or dApp which isn't paying you enough. (Doesn’t upvote you regularly.) Evaluate the situation in a rational way if upvotes are worth the effort you make participating or posting there. No feelings or sympathies.
  11. Commenting is mostly futile. Except if you need answers, or want to be the friend of an important personality here.
  12. Protect yourself of downvotes. Avoid all conflicts. Be like a diplomat, never say no, be positive, never show real feelings. Write things people always want to hear: “Cryptocurrencies will disrupt the traditional financial system”, “Steem is the best”, “Steem to the Moon”, “Steemians are genius people”, “You are the king”, “Steem=Lambo”, “Steem is more worth than Facebook” etc.
  13. The bottom line, the policy: The cryptocurrency space is a jungle. Steem(it), also. The main rule is, there are no real rules. Try to be very strong, collect quickly the maximum power and influence possible. You can accelerate this process buying more Steem now as it is near record lows. But don’t put all your money in, there can be better prices in the future, Steem is a very inflationary asset.

This post is already more than 600 words long in my word processor. What a waste of efforts and time. I should have made it in two parts, part one, part two. Next time I ‘ll get better (worse).
(Picture: Own work, see here)

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Seems like I am doing it wrong. With your advice, I will go to the moon. Sometimes. I guess. 😉

Posted using Partiko iOS

LOL savage post man...

is that new way of teaching? because people never do what you exhort them to do, they always do the opposite. i think results will be magnificent :D

Many humor or satire contain serious truths hidden in it. The ax can also be used for killing and building.

You are damn right about this. But I also comment a lot and sk
Sometimes I earn penny from it. Different strategies on steemit for success

Comment pennies FTW

Very good advice indeed.
Each and every single tip has a serious truth to it (whether it is the ugly truth or not.) You did forget to mention one thang.

GUNGHO TIP#1:

★ Play in the Internal Market.

I usually make around 200 SP a month just buying and selling. Not only do you get profit (if you buy and sell right) but the SP is free! What more could you want?

Posted using Partiko Android

One wins, the other looses. There is no safe recipe on short term. I bought Steem at 0.25 and 0.30 US, but also much higher. I'm not a day trader.

Pair trading really. It's different with pair trading. With pair trading, you're only taking advantage of the difference between the two. There's no winning or losing. You either gain something or gain 0. It's kinda like the keep away game. The ball is always there. It's not as hard as it sounds. I'm a mom with 2 kids (7yr + 4yr) and with as busy as I am doing dishes and laundry and cleaning the house, I always manage to put in an order and go off. When I come back, there's usually a gain of some sort. There's no minimum. I started out only selling 0.001 steem ('cuz I'm a chickenshit) until I could figure it out.

Posted using Partiko Android

Are you a market maker? (Putting sell and buy orders at the same time with a margin between the two.)

I thought who does it well does not talk about it. Anyone who talks about it doesn't do it well. But exceptions can always exist.

I got my Account activated today and this is one of the first things i read. Gotta learn what is ironic and what is not lol

My advice: Search for this on the top right of the page: "successful on steemit" and read a lot.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Glad that i am not too much bad

@deathcross purchased a 76.42% vote from @promobot on this post.

*If you disagree with the reward or content of this post you can purchase a reversal of this vote by using our curation interface http://promovotes.com

You got a 76.27% upvote from @spydo courtesy of @deathcross! We offer 100% Payout and Curation.

Umm... It feels like I have to follow this on a trial basis.
Is there any tool to manage what I am giving to bots and what profit I'm making. I have a little idea about bots. That's why asking how do you track your progress/profit?

Posted using Partiko Android

Most robots are calculating their upvotes' ROI themselves, but better begin with Minnowbooster.net (upvote service, not bid bot). Bid bots can also have a negative ROI. (See Steembottracker.com)

I know the basics.
I had a different question.
At the end of the month how do you calculate how much profit you made against your investments?
Is there any tool to keep track of that what amount I'm transferring to bots and what I'm getting at the end?
Hope it clears to you. Help!

Posted using Partiko Android

Bots are providing you with information on yields. If you want to control them, it is easy in some cases: You sent X SBD to the bot, and you got Y STU of upvote.
In other cases, "upvote services", like MonnowBooster, you have to relay on the data they provide. Because it can happen that an upvote is made by 500 vote sellers...


I make a daily balance. I make balances and compare them. Data is very volatile, the daily balance depends also on exchange prices. So I make balance in USD terms and Steem terms, and I'm watching more the longer term trend.


or use
https://steemworld.org/@rem-steem and http://steem.supply/@rem-steem
They have data about author and curator rewards on the way. Steemitwallet, hasn't.