I am not a big whale, my vote doesn't make a huge difference.
But be that as it may, I am now taking a stance and officially announcing that I will be preferring shorter content over longer content.
No, being short doesn't automatically make a post good, and being long doesn't mean that it's automatically, a waste of time, but long form blogging is a niche, and has very little mainstream appeal. The fact that blog posts on Steemit make money tends to give room to the "labour theory of value" idea, where we instinctively are less inclined to reward content that takes "too little effort". That's the content that rules on social media, though.
So, I will now try to actively prefer shorter content over longer, and will try to encourage people to be concise; don't add unnecessary padding just to make a post longer than necessary.
I was thinking of this while playing Metal Gear Solid last night.
Metal Gear Solid is a PlayStation 1 game that came out in 1998, and it includes this nerve wreckingly annoying portion right at the end, where you need to backtrack and revisit old areas and then run back and forth the areas multiple times. It adds no value to the game, and was only added in to artificially lengthen the game, so that it would seem "better" in the eyes of reviewers.
Don't be like Metal Gear Solid.
No, we shouldn't frown at longer content if there's a reason for it. But what I see a lot on Steemit are posts that just ramble and even get downright boring half way through.
I don't think that it's content that will draw users into the platform. People may even get discouraged if they see the 10,000 word essays getting the big rewards. Let's try to diversify a little bit.
So, I'm doing this for now, but if you're interested to join, leave a comment below. That way people can see the people who prefer content that's more short and sweet.