Max is a startup software engineer. He seeks to use what he has learnt as a startup founder and tech community leader to solves hard problems with innovate products or services.
Hmmm... I took a quick glance at your articles and your niche under tags. You can use my strategy for Dev.To as follows:
Including relevant tags from top 100 in Dev for my articles.
Interesting titles for my articles.
Commenting on articles that are relevant to my niche.
Reading articles for inspiration and dissect why they are popular.
Lastly, read about Crushing It & Soft Skill
are the books that inspired me to find ways to cross-post my article on Dev.to & CodeMentor in the first place.
Yeah I definitely have an issue that my niche isn't the popular one (except git).
Article titles are definitely important. Since many of my articles are D specific I hoping they make Google search results more than Dev interest.
The articles, of mine, which get the most attention are the contraversial ones like 'stop using yaml', 'I'm concerned about TDD', or 'what in with all the Python hate' it is kind of sad but not unexpected.
Max is a startup software engineer. He seeks to use what he has learnt as a startup founder and tech community leader to solves hard problems with innovate products or services.
I do have some more git related posts lined up. It is hard because I want to have uniqueness in my posts and find the material already good, well not something I can improve on at this point.
Max is a startup software engineer. He seeks to use what he has learnt as a startup founder and tech community leader to solves hard problems with innovate products or services.
Hmmm... I took a quick glance at your articles and your niche under tags. You can use my strategy for Dev.To as follows:
Lastly, read about Crushing It & Soft Skill
are the books that inspired me to find ways to cross-post my article on Dev.to & CodeMentor in the first place.
Yeah I definitely have an issue that my niche isn't the popular one (except git).
Article titles are definitely important. Since many of my articles are D specific I hoping they make Google search results more than Dev interest.
The articles, of mine, which get the most attention are the contraversial ones like 'stop using yaml', 'I'm concerned about TDD', or 'what in with all the Python hate' it is kind of sad but not unexpected.
Well you could always double down in teaching git for DevOps, building CI/CD, truck based development vs Git Flow etc.
It's normal for article titles that is click bait or controversial but you need to be your own judge if it is worth it.
As when you write it you might need to prepare for the backlash of serious critics who will do anything in their way to put your name through the mud.
Like for me I would never in my life recommend anyone to watch videos from techlead as he does not resonate with me due to his cringe & smug videos.
Focus on providing articles that is of value for anyone besides just documenting.
I do have some more git related posts lined up. It is hard because I want to have uniqueness in my posts and find the material already good, well not something I can improve on at this point.
Regardless if it is good. It is how you frame it in your own voice that is easy to pick up that matters to your readers.