You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
RE: How To Teach And Grow Rich On Steemit
I totally see your point in what you're saying. Being new to Steemit (2 days old!), but having traction elsewhere, I love how this platform seems to be (for the most part) filled with people who want to help one another. My question is: how do you sift between so much content? It is a long stream and weeding out what is valuable and what isn't seems to be the biggest challenge. I really like some of your posts as I have read a couple of them, I guess doing research (perhaps I answered my own question!). Thanks for your knowledge and posts. Cheers from LA.
@sammyb Follow the people who have the same interest as yourself. Look at the people that they resteem or who actively comments and adds value to a post. My main feed is the one that I browse through most of all. It has the people who I felt would create the most relevant and interesting content.
Sifting through the contents could be a backbreaking job, but every once in a while you may see an author who did an exceptional job. And if you go the blog and likes his or her previous works, you can then follow for more. There are a lot of great articles out there, just that sometimes you'd have to kiss that many frogs before finding your Prince :)
Welcome to STEEMIT ✌️
Thank you @greenrun. You're absolutely right. I guess I want to be efficient in finding the right type of content - I have found a few people that I really like and I will continue to research. In fact, I am going to take a look at some of your content now! :)
Oho. I saw you in my blog. Thanks for visiting.
Hello @sammyb
It depends on what you are looking for. You can always use tags to search for content you like.
@ogochukwu
Yes, I suppose that's true. But citing @greenrun 's echo chamber post, are people using similar tags to boost themselves up? For instance, and what I mean is that people are putting "life" - well that's really broad. I am also noticing that people don't put all 5 hashtags, just the ones that will get them the most noticed which seems to me a bit counterproductive in finding good content. At least I found you guys, but curious to get your take on that.