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Robert Höglund's avatar

Totally agree with this.

Maybe it has to do with if your audience reads everything you put out or not. For tweets the advice publish a lot is probably right. Low-performing tweets are not seen by anyone anyway. But few people would give that advice to an author. One really bad book and you have perhaps lost half your audience. Substack is not as extreme as writing books, but in todays overcrowded content space I really only start reading articles I have reason to believe will be very good.

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Samuel Reid's avatar

Thank you so much for putting this out in the world.

I speak for myself when I say that I am slower to fully grasp an idea or concept. It's wonderful to move slower and mull something, to understand its true nature, and there is an immense amount of complexity and nuance you can find spending time with superficially simple looking ideas. Naval Ravikant speaks about this... his favorite books being the kind you can read a page of and then spend a few hours thinking about. When you post, I know that there is no way I will not read it and spend time with it. I appreciate that the content is thoughtful and nuanced, and that's what makes it special. For other authors I subscribe to, I will scan the headline and see if it pulls my interest. I think this speaks to the results you are seeing in the way content is produced, with some posts going viral being a function of larger sample size. But as you point out I'm not sure that's the "best" approach. For an author with a core group of subscribers that they are very connected with, it seems more thoughtful content lands better. In the age of information it is easy to forget that less can be more.

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