I think I would endorse the truth of multiple of these arguments at various points in my career. My ambient impression is that folks think blogging is "so saturated right now" and: a) blogging is a terrible form factor for impact and value b) virtually no one writes enough well.https://twitter.com/david_perell/status/1227612675334660099 …
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Because all of the above are known about blogs, it is excessively difficult to cause non-blogging decisionmakers in your life to value them effectively for the purpose of deciding to collaborate on them, reward you professionally for professional work done in making them, etc.
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People reading blogs have interesting preferences with regards to the form factor which may not match your interests, such as a strong preference for them being short-form. There are many pieces whose natural length is not 800 words. If you call them a blog, readers nope out.
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There are people who are engaged in the life of the mind who would seriously consider reading your blog on an iPhone for 4 minutes on the subway to be an adequate, effective environment for idea exchange, which they *would never consider in any other context.*
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End of conversation
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Is that your stripe ebook or another book?
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Depends on what you write. My personal blog has barely been touched over the last 5 years but I have a few evergreen posts that are still regularly referenced by many and most important to me, provide a handy set of links I refer people to often for questions mentees ask most.
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Funny, but true. ;)
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