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RE: I'm on my grind!

in #steem5 years ago

I try to max out my curation, and comment all over the place, but you're right about resteeming. I should (selectively) look for the occasional high-quality post to resteem. I did that with my other accounts/projects more, but since I'm phasing them out, I'll increase how often I do it on DRutter.
I think the good and bad effects of the last HF are still settling out. It wasn't all roses as some people promised... some still won't admit it's not perfect. A lot of people lost a lot of money, you and I included, so we can understand how there are emotions and other factors getting involved.
Like you said, hang in there. Thanks for the vote!

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As much as I think doing stuff for the ecosystem is good, I don't necessarily think you ought to re-steem on an account where you also produce a lot of your own content. It sort of dilutes your brand.

For example, while it would have tickled me personally to have you resteem one of MY posts, I don't think your other followers would have appreciated it. They come to your feed for YOU... and you do YOU very well.

Does that make any sense?

Yeah, I hear that. When I follow somebody and next thing I see is a bunch of off-topic resteems, I unfollow them. It's true, many of us (like myself) don't want cluttered feeds with a lot of stuff that doesn't interest us. When I resteem I try and keep it somewhat on topic, so my followers aren't blindsided by something totally foreign very often, if at all. Yet I also see the need to promote important ideas and information, and I have a small platform to be able to do so. If nobody resteemed anything.... that would be a loss. Selective resteeming seems to be key. Maybe ultra-selective! :)

Good point... selective re-steeming then. :D

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