RE: Greed is upon us
I think it is pretty universal to upvote one's own posts on Steem. Self-upvoting comments seems to be frowned upon.
Attention economy is the keyword when it comes to Steem. It's perfectly fine, in my opinion, for conversation partners to reciprocally upvote each other. That's what monetization of attention means. A conversation is a tango that takes at least two to dance. You can put out quality content in a post, upvote nobody and receive a ton of upvotes. But if you're the sort that is drawn to comment section action, not upvoting anybody there is kind of lame even if you honestly thought you were the only one making quality comments.
I think there still is quite a lot of organic curation here. Most people upvote each other in their own circles which is natural and what this platform is all about. Then there are people who are early adopters with massive SP who have a more platform wide perspective and who create manual curation guilds and stuff, which is great.
I truly wonder though how sone people have the amount of followers that they do. It’s kibda baffling to be honest. Is it all just horseshit? Should I just keep doing what I’m doing and my following will slowly build? I dont mind the organic growth but it sucks seeing inferior accounts tear shit up in the circles im in. Ya know?
A lot of the 2016'ers have large numbers of followers. That's because they also have large amounts of Steem Power. People gravitate to their blogs in hopes of upvotes. Then there is a small number of superior content producers who may have started much later. Others may have been very popular on other social media before starting on Steem.
Otherwise, organic growth is the faster the better your content, the more powerful your supporters and the better you market it and the more money you spend on purchasing Steem Power.
Fantastic explanation! Thx a ton. Make a tad more sense. Didn’t even think of a few of those factors.
I forgot to mention that the passage of time alone is enough to make you rack up more followers. Slowly, though.