Who wants to start a blogging team?
Summary
Sporadic content is the death of a blog. Bad content is the death of a blog. Low visitor counts is the death of a blog. Many/most Steem authors (myself included) face one or more of these challenges. With collaborative blogging, fueled by beneficiary rewards, it may be possible to reduce these risks.
Work smarter, not harder
Unless Steem is our fulltime business, the time needed to contribute here competes with our daily lives: work, family activities, worship, travel and other hobbies, etc.
Unfortunately, building a blog requires hard work. To do it right, you need to produce regular content that attracts clicks and eyeballs, and the content needs to be promoted. And because we have lives outside of Steem, it's hard for many to find the time for that work.
In the book, The Amazon Way: 14 Leadership Principles Behind the World's Most Disruptive Company, I learned about a relevant concept, termed "the fly wheel effect" (companion posts here and here.).
A fly wheel is a heavy wheel that's constructed in a way that stores rotational energy so that it can be harnessed to smooth the impact of irregular energy inputs. The way the wheel is constructed means that it's difficult to start it moving, but once it's spinning fast, it's easy to keep it going. The concept was applied to Amazon in the context of how they reinvest revenue in their business. Here's how I described it back in 2016:
This is a self-perpetuating cycle that happens when the business focuses on free cash flow, not margins. By driving down margins and pursuing volume, Amazon raises revenue. This revenue is reinvested in, "the holy trinity," price, selection, and availability. Investments in the holy trinity feed back into further increasing revenues.
In the context of our Steem blogs, the flywheel might be the effort that it takes to attract an audience. When we launch our blogs (or when we let them sit idle for a while), it takes high effort just to attract a small audience. But, in theory, once the blog has an established audience the returns on the same level of effort get bigger.
One thing that I've been thinking about for quite some time is that it might be easier to keep the flywheel going for any particular blog if multiple people are all organized into a team and working on it together.
Details can be changed, but here's how I think it could be done.
- Choose a blogging topic and set up a blog account
- Find founding team members
- Agree on a reward sharing policy
- Create and fill a blogging team with up to 5 roles
- authors who create content
- editors who edit grammar; do html, markdown and image formatting; and actually post the blog content.
- facilitators who manage the roster and team communications processes
- approvers who verify that the content is compliant with blog quality standards.
- content promoters
- Authors submit their textual content to a designated location (Google Drive, discord, telegram, email, whatever)
- Editors format the content to look attractive and submit it for posting approval.
- Approvers approve & editors post (the approvers could also do other roles)
- Promoters spread the post to relevant interest groups (could be as simple as "resteem" and post promotion)
Proof of concept
So my thought is to try it out. My suggestion for the first blog would be a blog that's dedicated to development on the Steem platform. Why?
- The team would be publishing information that could go back into the blockchain by attracting, creating, and enabling new Steem developers
- We already have some people publishing on the topic
- It would be of interest to many people who are already using Steem
- Initially, there would be a lot of manual effort for this collaboration, so the developers would be likely to create tools for automation. These tools could then be harnessed by blogging teams on other topics.
In short, this topic would be building momentum for a couple different flywheels, not just one. So, here's a simplistic version:
Let's say we start with a team of six authors, two editors, and a goal of three posts per week. Each author is expected to submit a post every two weeks, and each editor is expected to edit three.
For each post, a naive split of beneficiary rewards might look like this:
- The author of the current post - 40%
- The editor of the current post - 30%
- The author of the previous post - 20%
- The author of the 2nd previous post - 10%
And here's how the rewards would be distributed across a 2 week cycle, according to the different roles:
Objection: Authors are getting less than 1 post's payout, and editors are getting less than 3 posts' payout. Answer: Authors don't have to edit, and editors don't have to create. Also, both roles are getting the audience-benefit from content produced and edited by others. (also, this is just an example 😉.)
Authors and editors take turns, and the whole team sets up some sort of approval/veto mechanism to make sure that each post meets some minimum quality standard.
All posts are published from a central account by the editors, who share the posting key, but no one has to trust anyone with rewards - except just for setting the proper beneficiaries.
Eventually, an interface could be built to facilitate this effort (perhaps using multisig), but at the beginning it would just make use of Google Drive or some other cloud storage service.
The key here is that any author is going to produce intermittent content, but when that happens, other authors give the audience something to read, and that keeps the flywheel spinning. Ideally, we'd like to see the team grow big enough to produce daily content.
Communities already address this?
There's an argument to be made that no individual blog needs to be active as long as a Steem community keeps churning out content. I would argue, though, that the ability to share beneficiary rewards and control the posting quality would provide a better mechanism for churning out regular content that actually attracts eyeballs. It might also make sense to make the blog account into the foundational account of a community where team members also contribute to discussions as individuals.
So... good idea? bad idea? worth experimenting? What are your thoughts?
Thank you for your time and attention.
As a general rule, I up-vote comments that demonstrate "proof of reading".
Steve Palmer is an IT professional with three decades of professional experience in data communications and information systems. He holds a bachelor's degree in mathematics, a master's degree in computer science, and a master's degree in information systems and technology management. He has been awarded 3 US patents.
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Good or bad idea - no one knows: it's an idea! An idea that could help to finally make the contributions on the platform interesting again (in the sense of an interested readership with ambitions other than their own progress on the Steem).
However, if I listen to myself, as an author I wouldn't entrust my contributions to an editor to make them visually appealing. I have my own ideas about this and I would like to stick to them. For example, I find many Mark Down-styled posts annoying. I like to read long continuous text. That's how I write too. And canvas-styled colourful, dazzling images overwhelm me - it's like shouting aloud at the other person...
Your description reminds me a little of a newspaper editorial office. I can't really imagine it for the Steem. I'm currently considering whether a shared account, such as @digi-me, which is used by three different people, follows the same pattern or whether there is another dynamic...
Food for thought. Thank you ;-))
Thanks for mentioning me, it's just a blog :) I get my mom to help with great photo and travel content as she loves it, my friend Sverre loves to write about anything and everything. I only post what he writes for him out of kindness and I am grateful that we can post something daily. Thats it :) Have Merry Christmas! :) -Chris
I'm of two minds on this point:
I don't like the idea of someone altering my words and phrases, but I hate doing embedded images and formatting, so I'd be happy to hand those two pieces off to an editor.
Yeah, it's definitely not something that the typical social media user would participate in, but I have to imagine that a good number of wordpress, medium, and substack blogs have task specialization with multiple contributors.
Thanks for the reply!
TEAM 1
Congratulations! This comment has been upvoted through steemcurator04. We support quality posts , good comments anywhere and any tags.I think it's worthwhile to think about ways to do things that will make the ecosystem actually work for people. The chain was set up around the model of a high-traffic discussion site like Reddit. Even if the parameters related to number and size of votes would make sense for a site like that (not really clear to me one way or the other) that's not the environment we're operating in. Personally I don't think I'd be likely to want to be part of a blogging team, I'm skeptical I could find enough people here with sufficiently shared interests and a high enough level of trust to make it work (especially since there's still a big guilt-by-association streak with the way people interact on the internet nowadays -- sometimes it feels like you need to be careful not to step anywhere that might end up being a retroactive landmine).
Yeah, the chain is definitely not being used the way it was imagined in the whitepaper. I think that ship has sailed. Now, we just have to find the most effective ways to use the tools we have.
@o1eh raised this point too. It's definitely a real challenge. Heck, forgetting about common interests, just getting people who blog in a common language is a challenge right now. I get that there are translation tools, but I think most readers probably don't want to go through that hassle.
This is a good point that I hadn't thought about. Of course, it's possible for someone to set up an alt account and contribute pseudonymously, but there's no such thing as perfect anonymity, so that's a real concern in many quarters.
TEAM 1
Congratulations! This comment has been upvoted through steemcurator04. We support quality posts , good comments anywhere and any tags. TEAM 1
Congratulations! This comment has been upvoted through steemcurator04. We support quality posts , good comments anywhere and any tags.It's generally a good idea. I admit, I also thought about something similar.
There are many topics that can potentially attract a readership. Let's take sports as an example. There have been several attempts to create sports communities, but there has not been much good quality content in these communities. In my opinion, one account, for which several authors would write, could become a kind of flagship of the community.
And now we go down to earth. Under the current conditions, I think you will have a hard time finding authors on the topic of programming who are also familiar with the Steem blockchain. There are such authors, but will they want to work in a team?
Rewards are an additional obstacle. Unfortunately, I think most authors will find them too small.
Unfortunately, I do not understand anything in programming, and the level of my English does not allow me to be an editor. However, I find the idea interesting and promising and would really like to see you succeed.
Thanks for the feedback!
Yeah, the two things you hit on, small candidate pool for team members and size of rewards would definitely be a challenge as far as "getting the flywheel spinning". To address the reward challenge, I wonder if something like this might even offer a more legitimate purpose for the delegation bots... (Haven't really thought that through yet, so that's just an offhand remark)
I think that's an important point, which I also mentioned in my post (as an afterthought). Right now, communities are anchored to rewards. Anchoring a community to a blog account that's producing regular on-topic content could be a big change for the better.
Hi @remlaps,
I would say it’s worth experimenting!
These are all great ideas, the aim is to create something standard, worthwhile and authentic.
But here is a little thought outside the box...
What if author don't have idea about a particular topic. For example, there are topics I am good at and there are topics I don't even have idea about and can't offer nothing.
Do you have a way to settle that?
Hit me up when you are ready to set this up.
My vision would be that if this works out, other blogging teams could start to cover other topics. Of course, one of those other topics could just be a sort of "general commentary" where people write about any topic that interests them. Not sure if that would be a good choice for a first try, but it might be worth considering. This is related to a point that @o1eh and @danmaruschak both raised, that it would be difficult to find enough people with a common interest.
Thanks for the feedback!
We also need a search engine for old/new Steem posts. Something like Google for Steem.
I haven't used it much, but there is one that @moecki provides. It's at https://moecki.online/. Also, at google, you can follow the search with "+site:steemit.com" to limit your search results to just articles that are posted here. But yeah, finding old posts is something I have struggled with quite frequently (including today when I was looking for those old Amazon articles).
Upvoted. Thank You for sending some of your rewards to @null. It will make Steem stronger.
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Congratulations! This post has been upvoted through steemcurator04. We support quality posts , good comments anywhere and any tags.