Do earnings increase for individual authors when the Steem price rises, or not?

in #utopian-io7 years ago (edited)

This study is inspired by a comment I saw on an article last week. The commenter noted that the Steem price had risen rapidly over January but, rather than benefitting from the rise, they felt that their author payouts had not increased. The question thus arises:
Do earnings increase for individual authors when the Steem price rises, or not?

earningsQuestion2.png

Whilst the answer may at first glance appear obvious, there are in fact drivers that act in both directions on an individual’s payouts when the Steem price rises:

  • The amount of Steem paid into the reward pool each day is constant. So the Steem price rising does increase the total overall payouts when considered in USD terms or when expressed in $1 SBD as seen on the Steemit interface.
  • The increasing Steem price attracts new authors. The overall payout is diluted as it is spread between a larger number of authors, meaning the amount paid to each author is reduced.

In this study I will look at various metrics to attempt to address this question. I look at the period from 1 October 2017 to 22 January 2018 (the most recent date with completed payouts at the point I started this study). This period takes in significant changes in the Steem price.


0 Summary of Findings and Conclusions

I start by presenting the summary of findings for readers who have limited available time. The full details of the analysis are included in the later sections of this article.

All payouts considered throughout this article are Author payouts only (both articles and comments). The currency is as seen on the Steemit interface, i.e. SBD treated as $1.

0.1 Rising Steem price impact on Total Author Payouts

This first chart illustrates the total Author payouts per day and the Steem closing price in $USD (Steem closing prices obtained from coinmarketcap.com).

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 09.32.29.png

We can see the correlation between the rising Steem price and the rising total payouts. The amount of Steem paid into the reward pool each day is constant. So the Steem price rising does increase the total overall payouts when expressed as $1 SBDs (or when valued in $USD terms).

It appears that the total payouts increase prior to the Steem price rising. However this is simply due to the fact that the total payouts have been grouped by the date on which the comments are created rather than the date on which the payments are made, so there is a seven day lag between the two measures. The reason for this presentation become evident when we look at average payouts below.


0.2 Rising Steem price impact on Daily Author Numbers

This second chart illustrates the total number of daily authors (articles and comments) and the Steem and SBD closing prices in $USD.
(Steem and SBD closing prices obtained from coinmarketcap.com).

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 10.39.50.png

Here we can see the relationship between the rising Steem price and the number of authors publishing articles or comments each day. The rise in authors may be due to new authors arriving on the platform or increasing activity from existing authors (i.e. existing authors post every day rather than once a week). The relationship is clearest at the start of January where the spike in the Steem price is mirrored by a spike in daily authors.

(The relationship between the Steem price and the number of daily authors appears stronger than that between the SBD price and the number of daily authors, at least in December; January is less clear. I have not investigated this question in detail as it is not the topic of this study; I include here only for interest).


0.3 Comparison of Total Payouts and Average Author Earnings

Combining the information from the two studies above we can now look at the average author earnings per day (i.e. total payout per day / number of daily authors).

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 10.54.27.png

Here we can see that the spike in the Steem price and the increase in total payouts increases the average author earnings for a few days. However the increase in authors numbers soon drops the average payout back down again.

Over the full study period the average author earnings per day (mean, not median) increased from around $4 to something around $7, an increase of 80%. The total payouts increased by nearly 400% over the same period.


0.4 Percentiles of Average Author Earnings

Widening this third study from average author earnings per day to the percentiles of author earnings per day we can see a similar pattern.
(The percentiles are calculated by arranging author earnings for each day by size, then taking the result of the author who is 10% of the way up the chart, 20%, 30%, etc up to 90%. The 50% level will thus give the median author earnings).

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 11.12.39.png

The pattern seen for average (mean) payouts is repeated here for each percentile.

The 50th percentile (median) is well below the average (mean) due to the skewed nature of the distribution of payouts.

It is perhaps a stark conclusion from looking at the 80th percentile that 80% of authors posting on a particular day earn $4 (i.e. 4 SBD at $1) or less, even after the rise in Steem price.

The average payout and the percentiles give a little weight to the viewpoint of the original commenter on which this study is based (i.e. that the Steem price had risen rapidly over January but, rather than benefitting from the rise, they felt that their author payouts had not increased.) Certainly the average has not increased in line with overall payouts.

However this is far from the whole story. It is likely that an influx of new users from a spike in the Steem price would bring many users who are, initially at least, earning very little. This would reduce down both the average payout and the percentiles but would not necessarily affect the payouts of an established author.


0.5 10th, 100th, 1000th, 2000th Author Earnings levels

In an attempt to view the issue from a different angle, I now look at the 10th, 100th, 1000th, and 2000th Author Earnings levels across the study period. These are not the earnings for particular authors over time, but will (most likely) be for different authors each day, depending on who happens to achieve that ranking on each particular day.

Here are the relevant charts for the rankings.

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 11.43.22.png

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 11.43.30.png

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 11.45.03.png

We can see that the earnings at each ranking follow a similar pattern to the total payout and are inflated by the rising Steem price. From the last chart we can see that the earnings for the 2000th author keep pace with, or potentially even exceed, the rate of growth of the Steem price.

Based on these charts we can see that if an author manages to maintain the same ranking over time, posting consistently every day, then they will benefit broadly in line with the rising Steem price.

Again however this is not the whole story. An individual author may start to fall down the rankings if a large number of the new authors that arrive are big earners. This was potentially the case over January with the success of platforms such as DTube attracting vloggers with large followings.


0.6 Following 10 Authors across the study period

As the final part of this study I took the 10 authors who were ranked from 995 to 1004 as at 1 October 2017 and followed their earnings progress across the full study period.

Here is the chart:

  • The dark blue line is the 1000th author, to see if our chosen authors keep pace with their former ranking.
  • The dark green line is the best performer from our 10 chosen authors (earnings are a 4 day rolling average to remove volatility).
  • The orange line is the average of the next 3 best performing authors.
  • The red line is the remaining 6 authors, some of whom posted very little after October.

Screen Shot 2018-01-31 at 11.56.37.png

This final analysis is very “anecdotal”. A larger study with a much greater number of authors would potentially bring greater insight. However high level conclusions are as follows:

  • The best performing author has posted very regularly and managed to keep pace with the overall rewards available and the 1000th author ranking.

  • The next three best performers have also posted very regularly and seen an increase in rewards per day but nowhere near the level of the overall increase in available rewards.

  • The remaining six authors all have very significant gaps in their posting over the study period (i.e. gaps of a whole month) and their data is perhaps not relevant to the question being investigated.


0.7 Conclusions

Returning to the original question: Do earnings increase for individual authors when the Steem price rises, or not?

We have seen in this study that:

  • With a rising Steem price, the average author earnings increased over the study period by around 80% whilst the total payouts increased by nearly 400% over the same period. There is a dilution in average earnings from the increased number of posters per day.

  • If an author manages to maintain the same ranking over time (i.e. they remain the 1000th top earning poster) then they will benefit broadly in line with the rising Steem price. However the ability to do this may be the exception rather than the rule.

  • With the limited data in the last study in the analysis, it appears that even those authors who post consistently may drop down the ranking. These authors will benefit from the rising Steem price but to a much lesser extent. This may be the phonemenon seen by the original commentor.

Although I have not touched on these points in the study, two other conclusions are obvious:

  • The rise in Steem price will benefit those who hold Steem! (the study only looks at earnings, it does not consider capital gains).

  • Steem Power will be harder and harder to accumulate over time if the Steem price rises. It is not just that it is more expensive to buy-in, but that the constant amount of Steem given in rewards each day will be diluted between an increasing number of authors as they arrive attracted by the rising Steem price. Whilst the US dollar value of the earnings per author may still increase, the amount of Steem this represents will be lower. (So if you are setting targets for the year, you may want to think in “Value of Account” terms rather than setting goals based on Steem Power).


Outline

0 Summary of Findings and Conclusions (see above)
0.1 Rising Steem price impact on Total Author Payouts
0.2 Rising Steem price impact on Daily Author Numbers
0.3 Comparison of Total Payouts and Average Author Earnings
0.4 Percentiles of Average Author Earnings
0.5 10th, 100th, 1000th, 2000th Author Earnings levels
0.6 Following 10 Authors across the study period
0.7 Conclusions
1 Scope of Analysis
2 Tools Used
3 Scripts


1 Scope of Analysis

The analysis is based on the data for all user accounts who posted articles or comments on dates across the period October 1 2017 to January 22 2018.

The data has been obtained through SQL queries of SteemSQL, a publicly available Microsoft SQL database built and maintained by @arcange and containing all the Steem blockchain data.

The data has been filtered by date using the .created timestamps in the comments table.


2 Tools Used

DBeaver, a free data management tool, was used to run the SQL queries. The raw data was then verified and analysed and the graphs and charts were produced using Numbers, the Mac spreadsheet tool.

SQL scripts are included at the end of this analysis.


Summary of Findings

Analysis findings have been included in the Summary of Findings at the start of the report.


3 Scripts

The script required to run this analysis is long mainly due to repetition. I have removed the repeated terms so this analysis is not unnecessarily long - if there are any further questions just ask!
(The ... marks indicate where lines have been removed due to repetition. For example the code for the 20th percentile is exactly the same as that for the 10th, just with 0.1 changed to 0.2 and 10 changed to 20. I have also removed the names of any of the 10 authors followed as it does not add to the study.)


SELECT
    x.ArticleDate,
    MAX(x.Cent10) AS [Cent10],
        …
    MAX(x.No10) AS [No10],
        …
    Count (x.author) AS [CountAuthor],
    SUM(x.ArticleAuthorPayout) AS [TotalPayout],    
        AVG(x.ArticleAuthorPayout) AS [AVGPayout],
        MAX(x.Author1) AS [Author1],
        …
FROM(

SELECT
        Comments.author AS [Author],
        CONVERT(Date, Comments.created) as [ArticleDate],
        sum(round(comments.total_payout_value,2)) as [ArticleAuthorPayout], 
        round(PERCENTILE_CONT(0.1) WITHIN GROUP (ORDER BY sum(round(comments.total_payout_value,2)) ASC) OVER (PARTITION BY CONVERT(Date, Comments.created)),2) as [Cent10],
        …
       CASE WHEN RANK() OVER (PARTITION BY CONVERT(Date, Comments.created) ORDER BY sum(round(comments.total_payout_value,2)) DESC) = 10 THEN sum(round(comments.total_payout_value,2)) ELSE NULL END as [No10],
        …

        CASE WHEN comments.author in (‘insert_name_of_author_here’) THEN sum(round(comments.total_payout_value,2)) ELSE NULL END as [Author1],
        …
 




From
Comments (NOLOCK)
    WHERE
        CONVERT(Date, Comments.created) >= '2017-10-01' and
        CONVERT(Date, Comments.created) <= '2018-01-22' 
    GROUP BY
        Comments.author,
        CONVERT(Date, Comments.created)
    ) as x 

   
GROUP BY
    x.ArticleDate   

ORDER BY    
    x.ArticleDate   

That's all for today. Thanks for reading!



Posted on Utopian.io - Rewarding Open Source Contributors

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Wow, this is impressive! Great work! So "in average" we can stick with the old habits and will earn more over time - great perspective ;)
When looking at individual users, I think there are also a lot of other effects playing a role that barely depend on the Steem price. Posting frequency, changing post topics, formats/apps and "quality", network building, ...

You can contact us on Discord.
[utopian-moderator]

Thanks @crokkon!

It's very much a scattergun approach, looking at this question for the first time and trying different ways to find an answer.

I think that people can take different conclusions from the stats. I would say that one of the key take-aways is not to expect your blogging earnings to grow at the same rate as the Steem price, not to consider this as the natural progression. You have to continually raise your game to maintain your ranking if you want that kind of growth.

But it's true that the average earnings and the "next 3" authors saw some growth, so some benefit from the rising Steem price. So yes, the old habits look like they will earn more over time, just not as much as the phenomenal growth in the Steem price itself.

It's spooky how this exact question was on my mind this morning and your article was at the TOP of my feed. Stellar research and presentation @miniature-tiger. I learned SO MUCH about the relationship of Steem prices to author payouts and now I'm just a little bit confused: You saw that posters who post CONSISTENTLY may not experience as much of the benefit of Steem price growth (as reflected in their payouts). Does this mean that we should be individually monitoring our "returns" on posts by frequency, the same way we monitor our upvotes for potency?

As well, I'm curious about the 'dollar' amounts reflected on Steemit. At this juncture, your post has a "$2.69 pending payout." Does that reflect the current price of Steem Dollars (currently: valued $5.22 in USD conversion) or is this still a 1:1 Steem Dollars ration valuing them at $1 USD?

In essence, is the value I'm seeing .5 STEEM DOLLARS or is it misrepresented and actualy $2.69 STEEM DOLLARS means your post is actually $14.04 (approximate) USD?

Hey Amelia!

For the consistent point:
By "consistently" I just meant authors who post every day, which is a good thing as far as I'm concerned. When looking at the ten authors I followed I saw (a) One author who posted pretty much every day and managed to increase their rewards in line with the reward pool (b) Three authors who posted every day and whose rewards increased but at a much more moderate level (c) Six authors who posted infrequently and whose rewards fell away over time.

That section needs a full study to itself really with a lot more data. But it did give an idea of what might be happening to the original commentor who asked the question. And could help to set people's expectations of the change in their earnings when the Steem price rises.

For the 'dollar' amounts:
It's misrepresented. The system always considers one SBD to be one $USD. I'll try and give you the full run down:

If the Steemit number shows $10 post payout (easier to work with than 2.69!) then broadly:

  • Curators get 25%ish - so $2.50, and they get it in Steem Power so it will be converted to say 0.50 SP (if 1 Steem = $5 according to the 3.5 day median average of the witness price feeds).
  • As this is a Utopian post it has a reward-split - the Utopian beneficiary gets 25% of the Author payout. So this would be $10 * (1-25%) * 25% = $1.88 and again (I think) this would be translated to Steem Power (although I need to check as obviously missing a trick here).
  • As the author I would get the remainder: $5.62.
  • As I have a 50/50 payout scheduled I get half in Steem Power ($5.62 x 50% = $2.81 so 0.56 Steem Power) - this should be worth broadly USD$2.81 at the time of payout (a little more or less if the market value for Steem is different from the median of the witness price feeds).
  • The other half is in SBD, with SBD always considered by the system to be worth $1. So I get SBD 2.81. If SBD is worth $5 then this is worth USD$14.06.
  • So in total as author I get a value of USD$16.88 from a $10 pending payout.
  • For Steemit or busy.org posts there are no beneficiaries and you end up at $USD 22.50 for the author from a $10 pending payout (easiest way to get to this is starting with the SBD conversion rate: (5 * 50% + 1 * 50%) * 0.75 = 2.25 per dollar payout)

I wish I could resteem your comment 😅 Thank you SO MUCH for explaining this in great detail. Would you consider making this into a post? Or, would you allow me to quote you in a beginner's post on my own profile (and include this research as a portion of it?) Understanding the values, calculations, and ratios is next-level for me as a new steemian but I want to make sure I'm interacting with the platform MOST BENEFICIALLY in as many factors as I can control. I will at least be copying this into my notes for further us.

Hey Amelia, you're very welcome to use the above example as a quote on a beginner's post. I look forward to reading it!

Thanks for so much detail! I love learning about how this platform works. I didn't make it through its entirety, so I resteemed! I'll read more later!

Ha, it is a long one to get through! Thanks for the resteem, always appreciated!

Thank you so much @miniature-tiger for sharing a very good post... :)

No problem; I'm glad you enjoyed it!

What a marvelous and super interesting analysis. I think Utopian is a way for authors to keep up their high earnings even if they receive less from other Steemians. Great prospects for our earnings this year!

Thanks @flauwy!

Yes, my analysis is very meta, looking at the overall picture rather than looking at individual cases or trends. But if I were to look more at individual level then my guess is lots of Utopians will have launched themselves up the rankings and may well be outstripping the Steem price growth with their own earnings growth over the last few months!

yes, i haven't thought much about the dilution of upvotes of more and more come to the platform and vie for rewards pool. it seemingly becomes more and more important to align with communities to have a network or supporters and those you boost, like any socio/economic community

I wish I understood something of your articles about how Steemit works (glum face). Not a numbers and charts girl, here.
I have learned, now, that to comment is to post, but would that then also count as posting regularly (if you only commented)?

(Not relevant to this post I think, but still, something I can't figure out for ages now, and you're the only one I can think to ask: Is there any point in upvoting a comment? Even if there is only one comment and you don't need it to rank higher above all the other non-comments, say?)

I don't think that there's much structural difference between an article and a comment (apart from one sitting underneath the other; the "depth"). In terms of rewards, upvotes on comments give author rewards and curation rewards just like upvotes on articles. So there's no more or less point in upvoting a comment than there is to upvoting an article, if that's not too existentialist.

Although having thought about it again I suppose upvoted comments don't go on the trending page, so the upvote doesn't give them exposure. Maybe they should. Maybe there should be a trending page for random comments. I would visit that page.

I tend to upvote comments, particularly if they can improve on something in the article I've written, or if they generally add to the sense of discussion or community, or if my fingers get clicky. Or sometimes just to thank people for stopping by. It's never very much but I think it can add up and help to keep people rolling. Look after the pennies and all that. Maybe I will do an analysis to find out. Are there people that just comment. And how much do they make? But not today. Today I must write a story about an island.

This reply-comment-post certainly added up for me. Thanks for taking the time to explain! You sounded human again: I get that about the keeping it rolling. I am amazed at the job you do at that! (So many fingers in so many very diverse pies).

You did such a great analysis! The most important thing you can do is POWER UP. keep up the great posts @miniature-tiger

Thank you for reading and upvoting!

Good post brader, thank for information

Thank you for reading and for your upvote!

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