Regarding popular tags, take a look at: dev.to/tags There's also moderators that apparently can raise the visibility of your posts (potentially increasing views): dev.to/community-moderation#using-... So, writing "high-quality" articles may net you some moderator love.
External referrals also seem to count, so basic SEO may have an impact. You can see more detailed stats for each post on your dashboard (you may need to click the ellipsis).
Even though I think there are way too many of these, if you see the top posts this week, month or year they're almost always lists of things.
"Top 10 ways to improve your app performance"
"100 CSS animations to do this"
"10 useful web development tools to do that"
I think they provide good value in condensed form, but IMO they are overused and a lot of the times repetitive. So if your only goal is to get views, maybe try making a post like this, just know that I wont click on it.
Personally, I just try to write the best possible post I can. If it's good enough, people will like it, share it and it'll become popular. If it doesn't get popular (which is most of the time), oh well! I'll be content with just giving good info to a handful of people.
I think they provide good value in condensed form, but IMO they are overused and a lot of the times repetitive. So if your only goal is to get views, maybe try making a post like this, just know that I wont click on it.
Definitly not what I'm aiming for! My goal is sharing my joy in development!
Personally, I just try to write the best possible post I can. If it's good enough, people will like it, share it and it'll become popular. If not (which is most of the time), oh well! I'll be content with just giving good info to a handful of people.
Frontend developer by day, iOS developer by night. Currently working on learning iOS development and my own blog, Mike Decodes, where I'm decoding the tech industry. Come hang out with me on Twitter!
It's 100% the title. There's a ton of tips out there to help you boost your blog and one of them is creating a tangible title. Making a "top 5" or "X ways to improve Y" makes it very explicit to the reader what to expect.
I can speak with my experience on youtube so far. The main reason is audience retention. As a content creator, we want viewers to stick around until the last number of the TOP as the video doesn't get promoted to viewers if the content doesn't get watched more than 50% I think at least.
I just published a youtube video a couple of days ago that has the word TOP look at the title π I am quite not very sure now if you are talking about me LOL.
One thing I know for sure: anything web dev (be it plain JS or React or MERN or whatever) will get a ton of attention. Everything else tends to get buried (in my experience) π€·π»ββοΈ
That's also my experience, but it seems (didn't check) that the "top [whatever]" lists also get more likes related to other articles with the same tags. It just triggers me so much... and then I just have to know why π΅οΈ π
So curious what this post is going to do. If you're right it will probably get a lot of views but not that much likes. What in turn means it will have less views in the long run I guess...
Tech enthusiast studying ICT and graduating soon enoughπ¨πΏβπ. Software Engineer in the making, experimenting my way through life. I'm here to connect, learn from y'all and share my knowledge.ππΏ
Thank you for the post. I learned a lot about how to get more views on my articles, 10 /10 I will read another post.
But seriously, this seems to be a trend lately for everything development-related, and when you open them it's about web dev. I think it can be summarized into these top 3 points:
Most people want a long article
Most wants a simple list of steps to follow to achieve greatness
The path of least resistance. The easiest something is portrayed to be, the more attention it gets
According to me the reason is because those posts are very easy to produce and easy to read. There isn't a great amount of text on those pages, you can easily skim through the headlines.
Also they are well known marketing strategies people reproduce without always noticing.
and the road to get there is at least as important as the result. I think a developer that really loves programming is more interested in the why than the how, but that's me π
Maybe because those type of posts are inspirational and full of ideas. It takes all the effort out of searching online for solutions or useful content when someone just puts it in front of you.
On the other hand.. The searching and coming to conclusions on your own is way better for you development as a developer I think. Following lists can easily create some sort of tunnel vision.
Definitely agree with the first two.
Regarding popular tags, take a look at: dev.to/tags
There's also moderators that apparently can raise the visibility of your posts (potentially increasing views): dev.to/community-moderation#using-...
So, writing "high-quality" articles may net you some moderator love.
External referrals also seem to count, so basic SEO may have an impact. You can see more detailed stats for each post on your dashboard (you may need to click the ellipsis).
Even though I think there are way too many of these, if you see the top posts this week, month or year they're almost always lists of things.
I think they provide good value in condensed form, but IMO they are overused and a lot of the times repetitive. So if your only goal is to get views, maybe try making a post like this, just know that I wont click on it.
Personally, I just try to write the best possible post I can. If it's good enough, people will like it, share it and it'll become popular. If it doesn't get popular (which is most of the time), oh well! I'll be content with just giving good info to a handful of people.
Definitly not what I'm aiming for! My goal is sharing my joy in development!
Same here π
It's 100% the title. There's a ton of tips out there to help you boost your blog and one of them is creating a tangible title. Making a "top 5" or "X ways to improve Y" makes it very explicit to the reader what to expect.
So I'm letting a lot of readers down by not giving them what they expect with this postπ
SORRY! π
Good explanation! Thank you
I can speak with my experience on youtube so far. The main reason is audience retention. As a content creator, we want viewers to stick around until the last number of the
TOP
as the video doesn't get promoted to viewers if the content doesn't get watched more than 50% I think at least.I just published a youtube video a couple of days ago that has the word
TOP
look at the title π I am quite not very sure now if you are talking about me LOL.Thanks for sharing! Just talking about post here in general π
ok definitely. some people are lazy to read and losing their interest too quickly
they want something quick but concise
Hey Amelia!
Thanks for the clarification π
That's also my experience, but it seems (didn't check) that the "top [whatever]" lists also get more likes related to other articles with the same tags. It just triggers me so much... and then I just have to know why π΅οΈ π
So curious what this post is going to do. If you're right it will probably get a lot of views but not that much likes. What in turn means it will have less views in the long run I guess...
It's a good experiment I think π§ͺπ₯Ό
Thank you for the post. I learned a lot about how to get more views on my articles, 10 /10 I will read another post.
But seriously, this seems to be a trend lately for everything development-related, and when you open them it's about web dev. I think it can be summarized into these top 3 points:
According to me the reason is because those posts are very easy to produce and easy to read. There isn't a great amount of text on those pages, you can easily skim through the headlines.
Also they are well known marketing strategies people reproduce without always noticing.
you have to be a genius to become a developer π
(think I read it somewhere.. π΅οΈββοΈ)
A compilation of misconceptions non-tech people have about devs (part 2 of 2) π
Amelia Vieira Rosado γ» Apr 2 γ» 3 min read
π π€£
Top 3 of reasons these posts work :
The last one is dangerous because it usually isn't crowd wisdom. Please keep thinking on your own! π
Well we've just found a new reason : controversy :D
dev.to or other blogging viewers like a summary not a book.
TLDR - give me the details in bullet points and few lines to go with it perhaps
and the road to get there is at least as important as the result. I think a developer that really loves programming is more interested in the why than the how, but that's me π
dev.to/leamsigc/top-10-monkey-past...
Hey i fallow your steps let see how it goes :D
fascinating
fascinating indeed!
Maybe because those type of posts are inspirational and full of ideas. It takes all the effort out of searching online for solutions or useful content when someone just puts it in front of you.
On the other hand.. The searching and coming to conclusions on your own is way better for you development as a developer I think. Following lists can easily create some sort of tunnel vision.
I think:
Hey devs check my latest post , may help you in python dev.to/arkadeepnag/creating-a-gui-...