How My Love for Blogging Returned Thanks to SteemitsteemCreated with Sketch.

in #steemit8 years ago (edited)

Blogging Became a Chore for Me. I No Longer Enjoyed Doing It.

Then back in July I was introduced to the blockchain social media platform Steemit. My love of blogging has returned with a vengeance. I have written more in the last three months than I did in the prior four years on my personal blog RandyHilarski.com.

I started blogging back in 2011 for a few clients. I was paid nicely for my blogging. My blog posts about gold, silver, economics, trade and Panama would earn me $100-$250 per post. I would sit and write 3-4 posts in one day and take the rest of the week off enjoying time with my wife Anabell and beautiful Panama.

At the same time we were perfecting our social media skills and growing an amazing following on Google Plus. We became masters of getting content to go viral on the social network. I was motivated to produce content because my following rewarded me with accolades. It sure felt good even though there was no financial reward.

Then the money from blogging dried up as the precious metals market went into a tough period financially. On top of that the travel website I was writing for about Panama pulled their funds due to issues with the parent company. We were in a pickle. It was time to start monetizing our social media skills since blogging money evaporated overnight.

Blogging for My Personal Brand.

This may seem odd to my fellow bloggers on Steemit but there was a time when a blogger had to find other ways to earn an income. Thousands of bloggers are still struggling and trying to find ways to monetize their work. Here are some of the ways bloggers traditionally make money.

  1. Affiliate Marketing
  2. Brand Ambassadors
  3. Product Reviews with Links to the Products on Amazon.
  4. Blogging for Brands.
  5. Blogging for Media Outlets.
  6. Producing and Selling eBooks and Training Courses.
  7. Google Adsense Revenue.
  8. Selling Ad Space on Their Blogs.
  9. List Building.

Over my years of blogging I have known people who have used each of these techniques to monetize their content. In our case we used our blogging to build our personal brand in order to sell our social media services. It has worked like a charm because over time we built a great reputation online. The hardest part for us is complete. Now it is all about maintaining and growing our presence online. I like to use the term, "rinse and repeat". That is the key to success online.

My Blogging Hit a Wall in 2016.

In early 2016 my love of blogging really took a hit. Our favorite social network Google Plus was no longer fun to participate on. My favorite way to collaborate with fellow bloggers Triberr.com was loosing its brilliance. My blogging traffic was down about 30% over the previous year which sure did not help my motivation. Our business VIP Panama Tours was floundering after the Zika Virus news broke and traffic to our site was down 50%. I was dismayed with blogging.

Then the Blockchain Blogging Platform Steemit Appeared!

I don't know why it took me so long to take Steemit serious. When I say a long time I mean a few weeks. Since Anabell and I are heavily involved in the crypto currency and Bitcoin communities it just made sense that we would start blogging on Steemit. Like I said above, the joy of blogging disappeared. Then one day my friend and client Jeff Berwick of the Dollar Vigilante wrote a post where he made $15k on Steemit. I almost fell out of my chair when I saw it.

So without hesitation all of that drained energy came back in a rush of excitement. My first post on Steemit netted me $5,209 worth of Steem.

I was hooked and I decided that I was going to write everyday on Steemit for the next 30 Days. In that time I made about $8,000 in Steem. It was good times indeed. At that time the price of Steem, the crypto currency used on the Steemit Blockchain, was valued much higher than it is currently. Today I typically make between $10-$20 worth of Steem per post.

Those numbers are deceptive because the great thing about Steemit is that when I blog half of my earnings go back into my SteemPower which is my investment in the platform. During my first month I would immediately sell my liquid half of my earnings. Today I choose to invest 100% of my earnings back into SteemPower.

I know you are wondering how we are paid on Steemit. Well we earn when other members upvote our posts. The more SteemPower an account has the more you can potentially earn when the account upvotes you. We like to call the big accounts on Steemit, whales. Medium accounts are called Dolphins and small accounts are minnows. Everyone starts off as a minnow. Most whale accounts are founders and part of the development team. Most of the dolphin accounts are people like myself who rose up through blogging on the Steemit platform.

The next question you might ask is, "where does this magic internet money Steem come from?" Steem is mined like many other crypto currencies. The difference is that a portion of the mined Steem are used to reward content creators when a fellow Steemian upvotes your content on Steemit.com. This is how bloggers are paid in the steemit attention economy. Steems value is based on the perceived value of people holding and trading Steem within the crypto currency economy. The price fluctuates minute by minute like any other currency.

Infographic Explaining How the Steemit Economy Works.

Why Bloggers Should Get Involved with Steemit Today.

If you are a blogging veteran then you understand first mover advantage. I went through this once before when Google Plus launched. I joined early and took the platform serious which helped my growth immensely. The same is happening on Steemit. The platform is currently in Beta but that won't last for long.

We recently had our first SteemFest in Amsterdam the first week of November and it was amazing. The applications for Steemit are groundbreaking. The Steem blockchain will be used to power many other social media applications where you will be able to earn an income in the attention economy.

CEO Ned Scott Opens SteemFest in Amsterdam.

Join Us Today on Steemit and Make Sure to Engage with Other Steemians.

Warning, once you go down this path you will no longer enjoy creating content for platforms where you do not have an opportunity to earn an income for your time and energy.

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You wonder how you get paid here? Currently by investors and speculators, they are buying the Steem from the Market.

Nope, not wondering I know how it works. This post was for non-Steemians and was put on my regular blog which will reach a large audience.

Get 'dem bloggers in! Hehe. That's an awesome intro post reward, way to go! I really like the infographic here.

I wrote this post specifically for my followers that are outside of the Steemit economy. Going to repost this on my regular blog which has thousands of readers which are peers. It is time that I start doing some evangelizing. ; )

Great post for planting the seeds of Steemit addiction among those on the outside looking in! I enjoyed reading about your history before Steemit. For me blogging is kind of a part time hobby, not something I have to rely on as a primary source of income. I imagine doing it as a full-time job could be fairly stressful when times are tough. I never seriously considered giving it a try, even as a hobby, until Steemit came along and I had a "wow, people can get paid to do this!?" kind of moment.

Kudos to you on that first post payout. I joined in early August, when those days were already on the way out. But I'm kind of glad I missed that, because those kinds of payouts were never realistically sustainable so it would have colored my expectations too much. I'm quite happy with my $10-$20 payouts at the moment, and the Steem Power from those may be worth considerably more in the future.

Blogging for a living is not what I would consider enjoyable. Some folks can write 3-4 articles per day but not me. My quality definitely suffers. The issue with the early payouts was the false sense of entitlement which it generated. Now most of the folks who grew disenchanted are gone. It is time to build a stronger foundation.

I can't imagine trying to churn out 3-4 articles a day. If I can manage one well written, quality post per week then I'm satisfied.

Agreed, now that all the "gold rush" type folks are gone, those who are left are the dedicated, enthusiastic kind of people that are great to have in the community and I'm hoping we continue to ramp up from here, growing slowly but steadily. I'm greatly looking forward to seeing what kind of impact the upcoming hard fork has.

I would be lucky if I had a few $ on every payout lol

Persistence pays off.

Thank you so much!!

Great piece and thanks for sharing. Upvoted and shared on Twitter✔ for my followers to read. Stephen

https://twitter.com/StephenPKendal/status/804053546509406208

StephenPKendal Stephen P Kendal tweeted @ 30 Nov 2016 - 20:04 UTC

How My Love for Blogging Returned Thanks to Steemit..!! @RandyHilarski
@Steemit

steemit.com/steemit/@hilar… / https://t.co/V7ZSLg5dDI

Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.

I appreciate it Stephen. I am sharing it all over with my regular blog as well. It is time I start informing my peers about the power of Steemit.

Fantastic post man. UV for you. Did you see the one I wrote up where you and I were commenting on Jeff Berwic's postings about the flags and the money and the fire? lol.

I remember when you posted your first stuff about Steemit and same when Jeff's $15k post rolled across my newsfeed, seems so long ago now.

When you said this, sums it up nicely:

Warning, once you go down this path you will no longer enjoy creating content for platforms where you do not have an opportunity to earn an income for your time and energy.

Exactly, old social media is just a way for me to drive traffic to Steemit now.

Been enjoying your posts Randy. Your social media tips have been helping me out tremendously!!! Thanks for the great work!

#HighFive Brandon, I will keep it up. I am happy that you and I are connected all over now.

Nice post. I completely agree @hilarski with your sentiments for steemit, and your warning :)
Just to set expectations for new users many people don't strike gold on Steemit first time and it can take practice, time and perseverance to get your posts to a stage where they are making money.
But I personally find this platform really rewarding in terms of user engagement and support for new bloggers. For new users looking for a guide on how to get started with Steemit it's worth having a read of this site https://www.steemithelp.net/ by the @thecryptofiend

Steemit puts the Social back in Social Media. I love that about the platform. Trolling is discouraged so people who are new to content creation will feel more comfortable posting. When I first began my journey I was scared to death of Reddit due to the trolls. That fear is gone now but it was definitely there 6 years ago.

I enjoyed reading your post and all the useful information regarding the way steemit works. :)

Actually prior to Steemit I never loved blogging enough to remain consistent with it.

Now it's something I look forward to doing.

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