Today is Steemit's 2 year Birthday. Happy Birthday!!
Ok, now that we have that out of the way let's get a little serious for a minute. Some people come onto this platform with the idea that it is going to make them wealthy. Don't get me wrong, it may. It is actually the same for everyone getting into cryptocurrency now, it may make you extremely wealthy without having to do much for it but, it also may not. What is your back up plan?
I see many people here complaining about a lack of this, not enough of that and asking where is my support? It is not easy, I am struggling too, we all are in some way. I look at their content however and I think that hey, that is not too bad but then, I look at their comments. I try to see if they are adding anything else other than their content and most are not. Even their content itself is few and far between.
In some ways I wonder how many people have actually tried to start a business in the real world and how easy it was to get started, attract clients, start making an income that was able to support life. It isn't easy, it really, really isn't.
Yes, some people get lucky and do have relatively easy pathways but even then, most of the time looks are deceiving and there is a lot of work that goes on in the background to get there. Steemit is not some get rich scheme where magically everyone who signups suddenly becomes a millionaire but, many hopefully will realise their potentials.
My hope for Steemit in the near future is that is is a place where many people can play and practice their skills and earn a little along the way. Hopefully in the future, that will lead them on to bigger and better things even if it is not connected to Steemit at all.
In the long-term, my hope is that Steemit will inspire many more similar and diversified platforms that will give the majority of people in this world not only an outlet for their creativity but a way to supplement their incomes to lead better lives. I am also hoping that it will pressure the current powers that be into fundamentally changing the way they operate. This requires a great deal of work in the meantime to get to that point however and it requires a great deal of though to try to make it better than now.
For those that are talking about fair, it doesn't exist, drop the concept from thought and start building the skills you need to navigate the challenges of the future. If you are looking for reliability, it is your skillset that will ensure it.
Below is a post from 8 months ago on the concept of Workless Wealth. Some of you may find it interesting.
Again, Happy Birthday Steemit, welcome to the Terrible Twos everyone else. Ready for the tantrums?
Workless wealth
Strike it rich, that is what we all want isn't it?
We celebrate and envy people that get rich with apparently little work, even if they actually did a lot of work to get there behind the scenes. Even so, the image of easy money is so attractive that nearly everyone wants a piece.
It has become a goal, to be wealthy without work. Well, that is the idea. A lot of people that have come to Steemit have brought with them this concept in the hope that it is the answer to their prayers. A few random posts and voilá, rich.
The young seem especially attached to this idea that wealth is easy to come by, after all, they spend their lives seeing it. Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Youtube are filled with people doing very little for a lot. At face value anyway.
The problem is, even if someone works very, very hard to do the same thing, they are out of luck, it has already been done numerous times before. How many wealthy fashion bloggers, travel bloggers, fitness gurus, can the world maintain?
Regardless of skill, how many celebrities can be maintained at all? How many wealthy actors are there and how many actors? I have no answer but I would assume that past B-list, there are many, many more struggling and working multiple jobs. There are many celebrity chefs, but every restaurant has several non-celebrity chefs.
Each success story attracts more attempts and the lower the skill bar to enter, the more attractive it is for the unskilled. And herein lays the real issue.
More and more people are making a play for the dream of workless wealth at the cost of their skill set. This means that there are an increasing number of people with decreasing skills across a variety of areas.
What jobs are available for the failed unskilled? What jobs are available in the future for the unskilled when those jobs are automated?
Many of the people that are looking for workless wealth are likely also those that value material items greatly. What happens when they fail to strike it big because unfortunately for them, there are 3 million people better and more popular at their chosen 'profession'? What happens when life expectations are not only unmet, but crushed with no fall back position?
'Live the dream' philosophy has replaced the 'work for the dream' mentality. Previously, if one wanted something, they understood that they would have to work for it. Today, people think about how they can get it, working for it rarely enters into the scenario.
We live in a world of upwardly spiralling personal debt and downwardly spiralling global financial situations. The material desires are winning. Rather than be disappointed at not becoming wealthy enough to buy all of those things, we are increasingly trying to live the lifestyle on credit.
Cars, houses, holidays, furniture, jewellery, phones, jeans, shoes, drinks, food, candy... on credit.
I always find it interesting that those that seem to sell the idea of workless wealth are also the ones that are benefitting from the growing debt cycle. It is almost like they created a demand for their products, but, no, banks wouldn't actually want that. They are the ones trying to get us out of debt, aren't they?
The worry I have about encouraging people, especially children, to follow their dreams is that their dreams are often to do very little. It doesn't require skills to do very little, that is why sitting on the couch playing an Xbox is so easy to do. Which is lucky, because that is all that many people are going to be skilled enough to do in the future.
People dream of grand designs, having grand things, doing grand things but most do not take the first steps into gaining the skills necessary to do them. They do not research and investigate what are the hurdles, risks, market depth and range or competition. They go in blind and when they meet disappointment, they do not look at their own work or lack thereof.
Workless wealth is likely a fallacy except for the few that get in very early or get lucky along the way. There are others that get wealthy doing lot of work too and some are lucky to just survive on doing what they do. Most however, never make any significant inroads into it at all.
It isn't that I think we shouldn't chase dreams, quite the opposite, we should do all we can to do the things we enjoy. But, if we want a financial return out of it, we better have as much understanding about what we are getting into as possible. That is part of the skill set.
We better also understand that if there are many trying to do the same thing, one has to be highly skilled in it or marketing oneself to be successful.
The thing with obtaining skills, once they are possessed, there are generally no regrets. Plus, one pursuit tends to require several skills and these compound in many unexpected ways and bring much varied opportunity and potential.
Who knows, maybe you are already living a life of workless wealth and you will look at this as nonsense. Good luck to you. But if you are dreaming of doing the same, someone is already doing it so you better do it better at the very least.
Taraz
[ a Steemit original ]