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Pichi. I'm always attentive to your posts. I think you're a great reference for what's happening on this network, and I really appreciate your dedication to helping others understand certain things.
That said, here's my opinion on channels.
When I was starting out online, I published on channels in my native language. I worked hard to create quality content that would help others learn or discover tools, apps, features, etc. Overall, the feedback was very poor. On many occasions, I wasted hours of work in vain, and my posts went unseen by anyone, or almost no one. This was due to several things: my visibility was poor (because the content wasn't in English) and the lack of a community, meaning a consistent group of people to interact with.
Fed up with all that, I created my own channel, with content in English. Based on three non-negotiable guidelines:
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- I would have no financial incentives. That is, don't reward people for posting. Why? Very, very simple: when you stop giving money, people disappear. And I always preferred two people to write, but for it to be genuine.
- The content would be by and for the people. Everyone would have the opportunity to share their experiences, their stories, their thoughts. That's how the interview series was born, thanks to the great support of my crazy ideas from my dear @noedmb.
- You can't post anything that isn't personal and genuine. Otherwise, I'll delete it immediately. If my goal is to help, there can't be spam on the channel.
The result? People usually interact with my posts, and few people post casts on my channel, but at least when they do, they do it genuinely.
That's the goal we always pursued, right?
P.S. Thank you so much @monitalan for the mention. It was always a great honor for me to write for 90 days on your channel /comunidadesweb3. 2 replies
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