Best Steemit Strategy: "Persistence Hunting" or "One Lucky Shot"

in steemit •  7 years ago  (edited)

So, you just learned about this new great place on the internet (or should I say, "on the blockchain") where you can get paid for writing valuable content. The place is called Steemit and some of the people contributing here are making far more than just a living.

How can you be like them? How can you actually create some predictable revenue from this place? How can you convert your writing skills into money, easier and faster than on the "traditional" social media platforms?

Alas, there is no easy answer to these questions.

But there is some hope.

In this article I'll try to sketch two of the most common strategies I spotted since I joined Steemit, more than a year ago.

But first things first. Let's see what are the prerequisites of actually being able to perform here.

  • first, you should take some time to learn how the platform works. There is a very steep learning curve, and, before bitching about it, be grateful: it's this difficulty that keeps regular spammers and freeloaders away.

  • second, you should set up a reasonable time window for measuring your efforts. Any decent traditional content platform expectation starts with a "few months". Same goes for Steemit.

  • third, you should be consistent. But ready to change if something goes wrong. I know. It's not easy.

I'm going to use an analogy with hunting. I don't know how familiar are you with these concepts, but hopefully you'll understand as we go along.

The Scorer Strategy: "One Lucky Shot" - a.k.a. "Whale Hunting"

Have you ever seen how felines are hunting? They are on the watch for hours, waiting for the perfect moment, slowly getting closer, until the prey is within the reach of one fantastic leap (or a short, but explosive race, no longer than a few seconds). I'm sure you've seen that, if not in the wild, at least with your cat, while watching birds or mice.

Alas, the felines are not always successful. Their strategy, which I will call "the lucky shot" is failing more often than not. If there's the slightest fault in calculating the jump, or the distance, the prey will simply escape. And that's because felines, although incredibly fast, are not resilient at all. Even cheetah, the fastest feline in the world, can't sustain maximum speed for more than a few minutes. And then is game over, the watch must start again.

On Steemit this strategy might be translated like this: spending long hours identifying the most valuable stakeholders, (also known as "whales"), understanding their likes and dislikes, learning their schedule and habits and then, once you get to know them a little better, go for the kill: publish a post, or a series of posts and expect to get a huge upvote, probably in the hundreds of dollars.

This strategy has the same chances as the felines's "one lucky shot" strategy described above. I mean, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. "Whale hunting" is a risky game. It has a lot of uncertainty priced in and it's very unpredictable. Yes, the payout is huge - most of the times - but there's no guarantee you will get that payout.

So, the chances I give to this strategy are "unlikely to moderate".

The Hustler Strategy: "Persistence Hunting" - a.k.a. "There's No Shortcut, Just Write"

By now you have realized that my preferred strategy is not "the one lucky shot" and, indeed, you're right. My preferred strategy has a lot in common with "persistence hunting".

I'm almost 100% certain you never heard about "persistence hunting" before, so I'll try to briefly describe it: when humans were barely walking on two feet, something extraordinary happened to them: at some point, they started to sweat. They started to regulate their body temperature by eliminating liquids (and a lot of minerals, but that's another story). Humans are the only mammals that sweat, if you didn't know that. Humans, because of their increased number of sweat glands, are the best at thermoregulation across the entire mammal spectrum. And the implications of this difference were huge: humans were able to delay overheating for hours or days, whereas any other mammal couldn't.

As such, humans were able to perform a fantastic feast: pursuit a much faster prey, like an antelope, for hours or days, at a slower, but consistent pace, until that antelope will fall dead simply by overheating. These hunts were incredibly boring and exhausting. But they were almost always successful.

On Steemit, this strategy is translated by: there's no shortcut, or lucky shot, just write. Sometimes - most of the times - you'll only make pennies (if any). But as long as you keep writing, these pennies will add up. And also your follower numbers will increase. And your reputation will go up. And, at some point, you'll realize your writing got better.

And all this will create a virtuous cycle in which you'll slowly, but steadily advance.

Whatever Rocks Your Boat

While I'm a firm supporter of the "persistence hunting" strategy, I do think the right mingling skills and a bit of good karma will give you the "one lucky shot" you're waiting for. You may even become friends with a whale (or a group of whales) and then things will be easier.

But I'm just saying this "lucky shot" is a bit more unpredictable - as the word "luck" in it implies, obviously.

So, my pick is "persistence hunting".

But, hey, whatever rocks your boat.

Steem on!


I'm a serial entrepreneur, blogger and ultrarunner. You can find me mainly on my blog at Dragos Roua where I write about productivity, business, relationships and running. Here on Steemit you may stay updated by following me @dragosroua.


Dragos Roua


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I think the chance of getting noticed by a whale are next to nothing so it's not something I would spend any time pursuing.

I'm definitely a persistence hunter and the hardest thing I find about that is the transparency of Steemit. That means it's easy for me to see what others are doing and then I get down when I'm see I'm not doing as well, especially looking at people who started around the same time.

It's also hard when you see them using tactics that you're no using e.g. delegation, memes, short steepshot posts etc.

I'm keeping on keeping on but I've hit a bit of a tough patch this week. Too much comparison to others. But I don't seem to be able to stop myself! 😊

One thing that helps in these troughs is having support like you give so I want to say a huge thank you to you. I really appreciate it! 😍

Comparing yourself to others is one of the most toxic habits you can have, IMHO. Not only on Steemit. We're each unique in our own ways.

Couldn't agree more. I didn't realise I had so much of that left in me until I joined Steemit. Now I get to practice letting here here as well. 😊

It's funny how much we learn about how we're REALLY doing with all those things we thought we'd transcended once we start blogging on this platform, isn't it? Yes, comparison is a lethal habit for self-esteem and satisfaction in life. At the same time, we do need some sort of measure and feedback so that we know when we should make some changes. It takes a lot of skill to learn from others so we can improve without comparing ourselves to them unfavorably.

Couldn't agree more! 😍

I fully agree: it is important to do your own thing, write and post about your own things and the things you are really interested in, only than you will be able to keep up and stay motivated.
Writing / posting about subjects you dislike is nearly impossible.
Just like trying to learn something you are totally not interested in as many teenagers have to do in high school, is killing their motivation to learn at all...

!! :D This makes me happy.

All the time I've been here, my only instance of comparing myself to others is setting them as goal. But I've never gotten discouraged by the fact that someone is going faster than me or that they're bigger than me. It just means I have something to learn from them.

i fall into that too sometimes @gillianpearce, and as dragosroua says, it's one of the most toxic habits. sometimes if i get in a mood like that i have to actually just stop myself and take a moment to feel grateful for what is already happening and realize each person is on their own path, including me... and i can only DO ME. <3

Glad I'm not the only one @mountainjewel. 😊 I love that phrase - I can only DO ME. Thanks for joining the conversation. 💙

Dayum, girl, 2900 comments and you've been here only one more month than me. I need to catch up, only 1200 so far.

I totally agree that "Persistence Hunting" is the best strategy to be successful on this great platform with a long-term approach...Be consistent in your writing and enjoy it..... never give up and just push, push, push until you succeed.

Pushhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh :D

Rep 60 is my next goal. Beware! I'm pushing.

Good for you!

The best strategy is to be yourself, write about what you like and what you think can add value to the Steemit.

You got to love what you are doing, people will feel you if they sense your passion.

Well, you can show passion for things you don't really like. Just saying... There are good actors out there.

Best post I've read from you so far I think brother 🙏🏼

Unique analogies, solid writing, and profound thoughts 👍🏼

Whatever fuels your rocket is definitely true in a sense, although going after the one lucky shot I believe is fundamentally different in one aspect. And that is that if you pursue that strategy your are in a sense attached to a certain outcome, and will more likely measure your performance depending on that wildly lucky hit.

Pursuing the hustlers strategy allows you to follow a path were the journey is self are more likely to serve as the metric, which I personally believe is key to doing anything in the long-term as you'll encounter less negative emotional reactions were randomness plays a big role. The path is then, as you say, virtuos in itself.

A bit of a rant perhaps but I think you'll understand my thoughts 😉

Very good work!

Excellent post well its not for everyone but great for those who are awesome content creators they have a good platform to showcase their talent

Your Steem Supply App is really cool.

I understand users also get curation points from resteeming posts that are going to get big in the first 30 mins.

Do you know how / where one can see that ?

The curation rewards aren't yet included in the app, the feature is in the pipeline.

I had a weird experience in that the first (well, the second) thing I wrote on here made $15 before I even really knew how to use the platform, so then I thought that everything I'd ever post on Steemit would make that kind of money. Turns out that's not the case... I'm just hoping that if I keep writing quality content regardless of the money and think of it as motivation to keep up my writing, that eventually I will find an audience that appreciates the time and effort I put in.

THIS SO MUCH!!!

We joined as a group, we were 14, and we joined bigger communities with more than 80 people. Out of all the 14, only 2 are left, me and my friend. The rest most of the time got some "big" votes on their intro posts from whales fishing for followers and then just said "this isn't worth it" when their next posts got cents and a few views at the end of the day. It's terribly demoralizing and it broke their spirits.

I've tried to bring some of them back but it's only now that they see how I'm doing that they want to come back in. Now they'll have to go through a month or two of induction and getting their accounts back into the game, where if they had stayed they'd be in a similar level as me.

The most important advantage of Steemit as a content monetization platform is that it eliminates 95% of the friction you get in other platforms, or, in layman terms, it makes the road to money shorter.

But that doesn't mean the road is easier, the same thing about building and maintaining an audience, being persistent, careful, etc, applies here as well.

So, steem on :)

It's a good thing that doing things the easy way has never been my style :)
Thanks for the tips!

Dude. You're just so freaking wise. Srsly.

The old wise man in a mountain cave, except that he's only accessible right after he posts! :D

HAHA very true.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Such an interesting post....loved your analogies, they are simply awesome...
There is one point I would like to add about "Whale Hunting":
If you are looking to hunt a whale, just remember what is at stake. For because of miscalculations on your part you may not only lose your prey but also can get injured during the process....
Sometimes whales can be ruthless...
So Whale Hunting is a dangerous sport, it is highly rewarding but with high stakes.
e.g. If @dragosroua is a whale and I am trying to hunt him down with a comment, there is a chance that he may not like my comment and get annoyed, if my comment is not good enough. So instead of having a huge vote from @dragosroua, I would be in his shit list.:D

That would be terrible u_u I don't want to be in a whale's angry splashes. I've seen what happens in all of Bernie Sander and Haejin's threads and it's terrible for the people who just want to pull to the other side. They get flagged to rep 0 and they lose a lot of privileges.

But at the same time, it's a bit questionable to just agree with whales because you don't want to get flagged. I try to give up the least of my freedoms as possible on my road to success.

In the end the truth triumphs....
I would say set up a few principles for yourself and then stick to them like one man..

Well, there's no way that "truth" would not triumph. It is, it cannot stop being. But don't start me on existential philosophy. Let's just say that sometimes evil people win because they have more power and smarts.

My principle is doing what I like, so I'll go around sticking to it! Thanks for the advice.

Hahaha.You are right...
But If I make choice to stick with truth then maybe I don't care about winning or losing....Sticking to the truth is enough for me.

<3 Now that's the way to go!! Stick to the choice that pleases you the most and if you lose, well, you fought for what you believed and had a good death on the battlegrounds. :)

The term I'd heard was 'cursorial hunter'....
and yeah, fascinating....I'd heard of it quite a few years ago.

Dunno about humans being the only mammals that sweat...ever been around horses?

In humans, sweating is primarily a means of thermoregulation, which is achieved by the water-rich secretion of the eccrine glands.

From here. I think I worded it badly, because what I had in mind was this:

Humans are simply more proficient at it than animals are, owing to the fact that we possess a greater number of functional sweat glands.

From this answer on Quora.

yup...
I dunno of another mammal besides horses however...most other critters either wallow (like a pig, which does not sweat) or pant like a dog or a cat to thermoregulate. Odd that horses and humans have partnered of so long?

fun fact. dogs can NOT stand the heat..
cats can.

but all that's beside the point.
you're exactly right about steemit...BUT.

I've seen some accounts which consistently get a hundred or hundred(s) of dollars for every post. I dunno if it has to do with whales. I suspect not. What i think is happening is that it's a well established writer who has been writing stuff for a long while who has attracted the attention of redfish and dolphins. ten or twenty $10 or $20 votes add up...

which ever the case.
Youre exactly right about persistence..
The only way to get rich quick on Steemit is to already BE rich and get richer by self voting.
if you have a few hundred thousand dollars invested...a self vote is pretty good ROI.

for the rest of us...it takes time..
A LOT of time.

I started writing a long comment but it got way long so I guess I need to write a post - intriguing article @dragosroua :)

Nicely described from the beginning loved the approach i personally know how tough the start is and almost give it when i started but then give it a second shot and its cool got to know a lot about block chain , community ,crypto analysis and many more things i don't even think about.

it's really funny @dragosroua... cuz last night as I was doing a random google "how to get a delegation" I actually came across one of your posts from over 8 months ago where you talked about similar things. Things were much different on Steemit then and it was really educational just to read the comments... it showed a lot people who are performing really well on here now "just watching" at riding the necessary ebbs and flows of the platform. Your post made around $2 and had sooo many upvotes. A popular comment had over 15 votes and made under .20 cents... My point is that this platform changes so much and it's interesting to me to see you cycle back around to this topic.

Personally I am totally a hustler. Put good quality content out there at least once a day, but regularly more often and just persist. THat's the only strategy I can really get behind as I'm not good at sucking up or approaching people with ulterior motives. i really have to truly like someone to be able to comment on their stuff often... and so i guess i can't really be a whale chaser... seems like a lot of time spent in the wrong direction. early on i learned on this platform that it's all about one's network- so i've focused on growing that.

thanks for the though-provoking piece :)

We shouldn't make our content's quality dependent on whether a whale votes for us or not. When the Heart lies in the work it naturally has its very unique footprint and even if only one person reads it, it can help this person more than if hundreds read it but none of them draws personal positivity out of it.
Whenever we compare we create differences, which implies that one is giving more than the other or less, is more important or less. Each one is a piece in the puzzle and the absence of only one piece makes the rest incomplete.

That is my take at least, take it for what you will :)

I thought about going on a whale hunt when I first joined Steemit. But I got bored with that pretty quickly.

So I do what I do. If I get paid, that's great. If I don't, I still do what I do because I like doing it.

Steemit is not my job, it's a hobby. And while I might like it to be my job, I'm a long way from being able to make that happen. And in the meantime I have other hobbies that will keep me entertained (and give me stuff to blog about)

How would I feel if i was a whale and everyone was hunting and hounding me for votes, and then giving me grief when I don't deliver what they want?

Steemit would not be a lot of fun for me then, would it? So give a whale a break, and focus on putting stuff up that is worthy of being voted by a whale. That way you can't lose.

If a whale spots it and votes, you win.
If they don't, you still win because you created good content that you are proud of.

Sad that I can only vote once for your witness vote !
A great post for newbies in steemit like me!
True legend U are @dragosroua

Make more accounts and vote with them! :D

Hai, @dragosroua you have always been my motivation, tool your work steem.suply always be my mainstay every day to see many things in it, and your post this very interesting at all, may I share and translate it into Indonesian?

Yeap, go for it :)

Wooooo, nice! If my blog didn't have a theme I'd do the same for Spanish. Damn, why did I pick such a niche when I want to make pretty tutorials. I should maybe make another account for that.

I have done youtube for 4 Years. It was tough. For first 4 to 5 months i got literally zero earnings. Yet i kept doing. After 8 months i earned my 1st pay check of 100$. Yes i waited for 8 months. I did not give up because i knew how it works.

I am planning to do same thing here. In-fact i have achieved success much faster here than i did on youtube. I am going to post and comment consistently because i have realized that on steemit this thing works. I am not here for one lucky shot because that would mean that i am not looking long term. I want a long term consistent success.

Well, if you get the "lucky-shot" of being set on auto-vote by some big-ass whales, you're set for life lol. But that's super hard and is probably not gonna happen.

That would never happen. Most of the whales operate here as bid bot and that to only 35 of them are here. So, i think there is no chance.

Hmmmmmmmm, check my profile? I've been on those lists this week. It's hard and nigh impossible to get in on your own initiative, but it's possible.

i say just write. write because you want too. then keep writing, even when you don't.

Hmmm that's also a bit of a sad way to go. I mostly do what I want. Steemit is my playground. I just try to go about it with high quality comments and posts.

i'm not sad. i'm happy.

Well, at least I'd be sad.

we are all different. that's why we are human. i am happy! :)

I'm happy too. :) Let's be happy together.

great! happy about that.

Pls don't stop the happiness. :O Keep it rolling.

As someone still a month and a half in, I've dabbled with the different strategies. I think as time goes on, I'll just continue to be more of myself rather than worry about building out a specific strategy or needing a whale to give me an upvote in order to feel like the time spent was worth it.

I'm just glad to be here!

Born to Run, right, Dragos? :) I like the analogy you made here.

Exact, Born to Run :)

Yeah, I've tried the first strategy and with no result. I was given this advice when I first came here, so not knowing how the platform works, I gave it a try. Then I realised this strategy doesn't represent me, I really want to connect with people and to be rewarded if they truly like what I post. Being persistent in what you do is the better way to go, as is on other platforms and even in life. Someone will eventually notice you.

Yup-yup! When I first came here I was actually mentored by a group of Nigerians who gave me a list of the biggest players on Steemit and just told me to go hunt dem whales. I tried to follow their advice for a little while and then got bored. It just doesn't fit me, it feels fake and unsatisfying. I prefer to go around being myself, only commenting on threads I like, etc.

I still see them around in the biggest players' comment threads, pretending to care about everything. They're smaller than me now hahahaha. It's cute.

Hahaha! Yeah, it's like "hey, look at me! I'm down here! Heeey!" raising hands and jumping around
Also, those people up there receive a lot of comments and follows from minnows.

It's a bit hard on them since a lot of fake people come to their comment sections and pretend to have read the post, so they cannot distinguish the lazy commenters (I've had some who I know read the post but go "Good post :)" in the comment section) from the spammers who just copy and paste the same thing over and over everywhere.

But at the same time it's great since they can be assured that if they ever produce something good, it's gonna be read! Some of my stories, I'm scared they might not be appreciated even after putting a great effort on them. I'm super glad that I've been getting a ton of views and comments lately tho. :)

I bet it's hard! Going through the comments may take as much as creating the initial post. Fortunately, spammers don't have a long life on steemit, even though it may take some time. Too bad that people do not realise that comments are actualy posts and they should give the same attention like anything they publish.
I am glad you got good response on your work! Keep it up! Even if you fear readers won't like it, publish it! Some will like it and appreciate it!

Most posts which show a very high pending payout are inflated from vote bots. A pending payout of $100 does not mean that the author earn that much. After subtracting all the upvote costs, it could be that the author has a small loss in the end.

Knowing this, I'm not disappointed when my posts have only a small payout amount.

Hmmm, my posts usually say around $15 and my true earnings may be around 1.2 SBD. I try to use vote bots with returns as first priority. I use those that will give me a bit more than a 2x multiplier, maybe 2.2, and use them right after I post. I may get a few cents, but I'm also getting a lot of SP and this one is rising in value as crazy. So even if I get a loss in SBD, I'm earning SP and that's worth more in the long term.

@dragosroua

You forgot one of the most important things in monitoring all this is steem supply its packed with useful insights into how your posts and all the different interactions you are making on the platform are impacting the revenue cycles. Whoever created that deserves a massive pat on the back 😉

He, he, thanks :)

How about spending less time on upvote bots as a whole community and going back to manually curating each others posts? This place has become full of greed.

i like the sound of that. i dabbled in voting bots, but it just seemed so artificial. it is so much more satisfying when you get natural upvotes from your network!

Not going to happen. Wait for the next hardfork and we'll see again. But for now, this is what we have and it's going to stay that way. The blockchain itself promotes the current behaviour.

This is a wonderful write up. So helpful. I love the hunter's approach so much. Some of my friends have tried it and got lucky. I have not been so lucky yet but the hunting continues.

Whale hunting is a risky game. It has a lot of uncertainty priced in and it's very unpredictable. Yes, the payout is huge - most of the times - but there's no guarantee you will get that payout.

It is risky in that it could even get you flagged, maybe over and over. Understanding the techniques is however imperative. Newbies are also advised not to concentrate on high payouts (i.e. in the hundreds) as this might get them frustrated over time.

Mmmmm, I prefer to be natural everywhere. I'm me and it gets me results, so I don't have a need to be fake for internet points.

On Steemit, this strategy is translated by: there's no shortcut, or lucky shot, just write. Sometimes - most of the times - you'll only make pennies (if any). But as long as you keep writing, these pennies will add up. And also your follower numbers will increase. And your reputation will go up. And, at some point, you'll realize your writing got better.

Agreed, this is the best strategy to work with for the patient and persistent writer but most steemians I have known using this strategy has been discouraged at one point or the other as the results in terms of getting something at payout wasn't forth coming.

:/ This is the sad truth. If you try to put at least 1 or 2 hours a day into Steemit and you still get $0.04 per post at most, how are you going to want to keep doing this? Many would rather believe that the system is wrong and it's not worth it. I perfectly understand their lack of motivation and why they leave. This is why it's important to promote the value of persistence. I've made many stay, showing them my results, and they've had great results too thanks to that!

I like to think that we have to teach what dragos said today to every new person in Steemit. There's no point in thinking that just posting and not commenting or engaging with the community will bring you results. Unless you just wa nt to keep a diary or save your writings for later... But then use something else where it's easier to sign up.

Being persistent is the key I here!

The chances of coming up with a truly new, unique content idea on Steemit are great. I just want to give it a new angle and add some new value. If you are sitting down to write just to fulfill your day average posts it will sound rubbish. You actually need to feel inspired to write your post.

:P I don't feel inspired to write each post and I still make top-quality stuff. I'm more about forcing my "inspiration" to come out, about putting myself in the right mood for creativity to sprout. You won't have inspiration every day, and I write at least one good medium-sized story every day.

And it is my humble belief that not everyone can come up with a "truly new, unique content idea", but that everyone can be successful at Steemit with proper observation and through perseverance.

Heyyy, I was just talking about this with my mom!

My Venezuelan friends think I'm already successful, and that's to be expected since they're earning 0.01-0.12 per post, some even going as far as 0.89! I'm instead on the two digits, using promotion bots and getting "lucky" all the time. My explanation each time they ask is, look at the number of comments I've made. I have more than a thousand. At least one of these is going to get noticed, right?

And that's what happened at the beginning. I got a head-start because I commented a bunch and I got put on auto-vote by a bigger voter. I was then able to use this tiny money to increase my bandwidth, I got invited to communities, I learned more about Steemit, and like a river taking me from consequence to consequence, now I'm rep 50 and they're stuck at rep 33.

I'm far from successful, but my ride has been less bumpy because of my persistence. They post once every few days? I try to make the best quality everyday. They post and go to sleep? I post and make comments everywhere to get views. It isn't always successful, but as you said, the best way to go around this is keep trying, and to try a lot. Some lucky shots are bound to come if you throw a 22-faced dice 1000 times.

cool success always for you, hopefully i can like you greet me ilhamnur80

So cool man

Steemit is a platform where we earn some money from some beautiful articles.but for that we need to remember some things, such as applying beautiful language.respecting steeimans etc. . Thank You @dragosroua

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@dragosroua really this strategy will help many new users...... I remember the days when I was new and i got demotivated because there were no one to guide me what I should do and all but now I see a lot of people helping new user.... Really steemit is amazing..... Loved your work keep steeming

The schooling of minnows and the schooling of whales is very different. Minnows are like krill and we are part of the food chain here. If the whales create giant reward pools and just upvote each other's banal content, it damages the ecosystem or even destroys it. So I'm curious why you added adsactly as a keyword here. Have you seen this post by @lennstar ? I think he? raises many good points about @adsactly and reward pools.

I know your post isnt about reward pools or curation bots, but ultimately minnows cant hunt, we are the hunted .. but it is our presence which gives Steemit value. Not to say whales are unimportant, but if they break the machine its game over. What do you think?

I don't have time for whale hunting and all of that. I just write! Over time I follow people I think are interesting, read their stuff, and write my own stuff. I'm interested in building communities and relationships with people on here.

The reason I don't use my real name is that I'm a pastor, and I think my church members would think it's weird that I'm getting paid a bit for these writings. I think they'd think it's odd.

Also, I'm a very curious person and have lots of interests, so I can't write about a lot of things on my personal "ministry-related" blog. So, here, on Steemit, I actually feel quite free to write about whatever interests me. People can google my name and not bump into these writings.

Anyhow, have a great rest of your Tuesday!

How can you convert your writing skills into money

It is not only writing Skills you need.

You need a Subject Matter and be aware of the audiences within Steemit.com, it well may happen that there is none and that you will have to bring them here.

Case in point: Job Search, Recruiting and Headhunting.

The first action any one expecting to make some coins is to build a Network of followers of your ideas or interactions.

The second action is to design an strategy based on findings.

Finally, you must be patient and make a routine of posting every day if you want things happen

agree with this -- but I also think that the ability to discover on here is nascent at best, and that a lot of the communities/content consumers DO exist. They're just not as obvious as they might be on other platforms. There is a way to galvanize the groups within the platform itself for sure!

Agreed. Steemit.com is a tremendous Data Base for new discovery and learning. And maybe to find your way. But still some strategic direction is needed.

To back up your Point. If it not were for Upvote Bidding Bots I would still be not be aware of new ways of Marketing. Steemit.com invented a new way of marketing which have not been yet discovered by companies