Grow Your Hive Audience | Give Your HIVE Content More Visibility

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Visibility & Growth

I guess that most of us, at some point, have wondered how some authors are (or have been) 'lucky' to earn massive rewards and how these authors frequently continues to pull in rewards others could only dream about. There are no magic tricks. The core foundation consist of hard work and effort, these authors climbed a hill as well as most others. The biggest difference is that they eventually reached the top, with a bit of luck or not. At the top they made a snowball. They pushed that little snowball down the hill and it started to roll by itself. The more the snowball rolled, the faster it went, and it grew larger and larger.

  • The snowball effect.

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The common analogy is with the rolling of a snowball down a snow-covered hillside. As it rolls the ball will pick up more snow, gaining more mass and surface area, and picking up even more snow and momentum as it rolls along.


Starting From Zero On LEO

I start from zero on Leofinance, but I am not new to Hive. I joined Steem in July 2016 and I've witnessed a great deal of things. In fact, I've witnessed almost everything that has happened during that time..

Like I stated in my previous post, I stopped having fun a long time ago and just recently decided to make a U-turn and do things differently. I needed to go a different route because I was going nowhere. I am going back to my roots again, when things were new, fun and captivating. That was when I enjoyed the things I did and I was glad to be a small part of this amazing adventure..

So, what is this big difference you might ask..?
It involves a lot of different things and it would be more or less impossible to cover all of it, so I won't. Instead, I will share some of the things, perhaps the most important parts of the story.


I Did Things Wrong.

Take into consideration that my entire time I've spent on Hive (Steem) is included here, and even though I didn't do things wrong from the start, many things still overlap and is included in what I'm about to tell you. It will be a bit messy, because I can't and won't share exact dates or anything like that either..

Anyhow, for someone who was new to crypto- and blockchain when I first arrived, I got totally hooked because I saw the rewards. I definitely joined because of the rewards, but I stayed for everything else.

How a former freelancer who turned his extra freelancing work into a full time brand building business 'forgot' and lost track of himself, is probably a story of its own.. But to be a full time freelancer, working with- and for hundreds, if not thousands of clients from all over the world, and having dozens of co-workers over the years while building that business from the comfort of my home. Well, I knew things and I was good at the things I did.

It didn't take long before I started to share content and rather quickly, I started to grow both my audience and my profile. Rewards started to come my way and I tried to be as consistent as possible. I was eager to put out content frequently as it gave me a larger chance of getting some votes.

My thoughts were that more content where equal to a higher chance of getting votes on something I published.

With time, I had tried many different things. I had spent days trying to figure out the best time to publish content for instance. I spent days trying to figure out which days I would have the best results and I probably spent days trying to figure out what type of content people where likely to reward.

Doing these things while I was still eager to publish multiple articles per day was hard. The more "research" I did on these things, the harder everything became. Instead of enjoying my time, sharing things I wanted to share, I started to chase the rewards..

With more time, more anxiety, stress and misbeliefs, I somehow 'forgot' what I truly believe is, and should be, the most important ingredient on Hive. The social aspect.

I focused entirely on my own blog, on my own profile. I published content and I made sure to reply to any comment I got. I often gave each comment an upvote, not because I had enough stake to make a significant difference for someone. I did it more like a token of appreciation. While I thought it went great, and was the best thing to do.. I also missed out on engagement..

You see, I can't spend 24/7 online, so I gave up my attempts to spend time on other authors content, because I had to focus on my own. I felt that the best idea were to give 101% to my audience, which would obviously be to answer any of their questions, or by replying to their comments on my articles...

  • That's a big mistake.

Even though nothing is foolproof, and I can't know if this is truly true or not, I still believe I missed out on a great deal of fun by doing things the way I did. It was like pushing the snowball straight into a hole, so I literally stopped the snowball before it was in its full effect. That means, that I likely stopped growing my audience and ultimately missed out on a great deal of rewards over time as well. I stopped having fun, which was my main motivator during the early days.

The less fun I had, the more mistakes I made.

I brought people to Hive (Steem), but I stopped thinking of my own profile. I stopped thinking about growing my own audience, because I started to rely on the fact that the content I published would be enough.

My best advice to any content creator on Hive or any community, is to be consistent, but going outside of your own profile. Grow your audience by reading other peoples articles and by making comments. That is how you will attract new eyeballs towards your own profile and your own content. That is how you will grow your audience.. And ultimately, how you will be rewarded more, as long as you produce quality content.. And as long as you stick to it.

Give your content more visibility. You deserve it, and we deserve it too.


Engagement is key.

I am not trying to defend my actions, but one major factor for my previous mistakes is the fact that auto-votes came into place. Auto became the new thing and with more automatic means came less manual work. Which obviously included both manual curation but also comments. It was easy (at least for me) to notice how authors started to produce more content while also getting less comments. It was less interaction and less engagement, so my coming mistakes were literally bond to happen due to how my mindset had become.

With the new curve on #LEOFinance, I am sure things will be different in the near future. Perhaps I'm a bit gullible, but I don't expect everything to change. I know that auto-votes will continue and still be a huge thing. I also think that is an important part of the growth of Hive. But, I do believe that we will see more passive users become more active due to these recent changes, and that will yield great results in terms of engagement. I am positive of that fact.

And how can I be so sure of that?
It's actually simple. I think manual curation will rocket the overall engagement because manual voters are more eager to reward good content rather than just voting on whatever content there is for curation rewards, which ultimately leads to more content consuming, which should lead to more comments as well.

Content consumers, AKA potential voters, also happens to be your best chance to grow your audience, meaning an increased chance for more rewards further on.

All the tools are here for you to use as you see fit. How you eventually use them are up to each of you. I know what I'll do, and I will make sure that I don't make the same mistake twice.

Strive To Push The Snowball Down The Hill.

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18 comments
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So interesting, teaching, educating, motivating, challenging, warm and pleasure to read post.
Well done. Upvoting as much as I can.

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Thank you very much for your warm words, upvotes and reblogs. I appreciate it greatly!

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I've been blogging on here for years now and for the first few years I didn't get much, I did buy like 5k STEEM/HIVE when it was close to 10 cents and a few power up days along the way but I mostly stuck to posting my random thoughts and commenting more each day. Curating and finding content on here can be tough and making your feed a good one by finding cool peeps is the best thing you can do, i try to refine my feed constantly to get fresh posts i would actually like to read,

It's can be a mission but I tend to enjoy it, I don't have much of a game plan here, just do stuff, stake and do more stuff lol

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making your feed a good one by finding cool peeps is the best thing you can do

That is a superb tip actually, which I totally missed out on when I wrote this. Thanks!

I don't have much of a game plan here

I think that is totally fine. I don't usually have real plans for things like this either, as I tend to be disappointed if I don't reach my goals. I'll just make sure to do whatever I want, because I want to do it, and because it's fun. As long as I can continue to have fun while doing things, everything will be better. And easier too for that matter. :)

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Interesting, I can actually relate with the part of engagement outside of my posts, it wasn't always like this, I used to even be among the top 100 engagers, but ive been a bit distracted in these recent times, I have to pay more attention to that, thanks for the wake up call

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There could be dozens of reasons for people to stop spending time outside of their own profile or posts. Auto-votes could be one of them, time could be another reason and so forth. What I believe though, is that manual curation will result in more engagement overall, and I definitely think that's a good thing to benefit from.

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I was subscribed to an autovote curation trail in which I was exchanging outgoing upvote for ongoing ones and I was really wondering if it was a good thing.
I know that since the hard fork it isn't working anymore for now. But you convinced me, if it start to upvote again I'll unsubscribe !

Thanks !
!tan

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I have always been a firm believer in that manual voting is better than auto-votes, or that it will benefit the communities more than auto.. But I do understand and admit that auto-votes is a huge deal, especially for passive investors.

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I think we have all struggled at times. I know for me it’s difficult the maintain consistency in posting. It’s so important to try to keep generating content and in times where you are not authoring content it’s all about ramping up engagement to to balance it out.

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I know for me it’s difficult the maintain consistency in posting.

I know the feeling. I had the same problem, which is one of the reasons I started to focus entirely on my own blog instead of others.. But that was not a good idea, because engagement is key for any social platform.

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How a former freelancer who turned his extra freelancing work into a full time brand building business 'forgot' and lost track of himself, is probably a story of its own.

As someone who's doing something similar as a copywriter, I'd love to hear your story in full if you're keen to share it in a future post?

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Sure, I guess I could do that.. Haven't really thought about making that into an article before, but it's definitely possible. I'll try to have it out during this week. :)

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This is a great post.

I'm an old timer when it comes to online communities. But I've only wandered into Hive relatively recently, and I love the way it works.

Day job aside, what I 'do' is music. I have a (very) modest following, but one of the things I've been looking for is a place to house/grow a little community who are interested in what I do. It's not - and never will be, I think - big numbers. And I've played with a few things over the last couple of years - the usual suspects - but not got anything to stick.

But Hive feels like it might be the place to try again, and try a bit harder. So coming across your post was very timely for me. And good advice.

Definitely more food for thought...thanks :)

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Thanks for the advice. I think I focus on content and replies to comments, but I am shifting gears towards others content also and feel that type of engagement will help me go to the next level.

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