🛑 Stop Waiting for Perfect: Why a "Shitty Post" is Better Than No Post on Hive

We've all been there. You have a great idea for a Hive post—a deep dive, a detailed analysis, or a stunning set of original photos. You open the editor, and then... nothing. You decide to wait until you have a few uninterrupted hours, until the lighting is perfect, or until you've researched every single possible angle.
Days turn into weeks, and that perfect post is still just a draft in your head.

This habit is costing you/me money.

The Reality of the Relapse
I know this trap well. After stepping away from Hive for about 1.5 years, I recently decided to jump back in. The start was slow, requiring effort to build momentum, find new topics, and reconnect with the community.
After each post, I would wait—hoping for feedback, interaction, and validation.

Then, last week, I hit the wall. I just couldn't find anything perfect to post. The longer I procrastinated, the bigger the mental block became, and the greater the chance that my blog would go into hibernation again, just as it did before.
The most shocking part? That mental block cost me real earnings.In the unique ecosystem of the Hive blockchain, the traditional content creation rulebook is thrown out the window. While quality is always appreciated, the simple truth is that, for me, a 10-minute, imperfect post is financially and psychologically superior to the 10-hour masterpiece that never gets published or read.
Here is the hard, mathematical reality of why I need to stop letting perfectionism dictate my posting schedule.

The Math of Autovotes: The Critical 15 Minutes 💰

The core financial difference between Hive and traditional platforms lies in autovotes and scheduled curation. I’ve observed that many dedicated users (often Whales or delegated accounts) use services to automatically vote on their chosen list of authors shortly after a post is published.

This creates a guaranteed baseline reward—and it is highly time-sensitive.

My personal observation has been that the majority of a post's total financial reward—often 60% to 70%—arrives within the first 15 minutes of publishing. This happens because the most powerful automated voting systems are designed to hit content early.

This speed means consistency is king. If I miss a day, I don't just lose one day's potential income; I lose the opportunity to capture that highly concentrated, early-window reward that only appears when a post is published.

Let's break down the simple math:

ScenarioPosts per weekReward per postWeekly earning
The perfectionist1$4.00$4.00
The Pragmatist5$0.80$4.00
The ghost000

In this scenario, posting short, low-effort content gives me the exact same weekly income as the person waiting for perfection. Furthermore, if I miss a week entirely because I was waiting for the muse, my earnings drop to zero.

For my account, the most expensive thing I can publish is nothing at all.

💔 The Hard Pill to Swallow: Effort vs. Reward

If I’m honest, it can be painful to see the reality: The 100-word post sometimes earns more than the post I wrote with heart and soul.

I've observed accounts that have mastered the "small post tactic," consistently publishing short updates, often connected to the right people, and slowly but surely creating a very decent Hive wallet. Meanwhile, my carefully researched article might get a fraction of that reward.

This observation led me to a crucial realization:

  • The length of the post does not determine its quality, and the effort put in does not always correlate with the financial return.
  • A long post can absolutely be an unengaging post. The accounts using the small post tactic aren't cheating; they are simply maximizing the platform's financial mechanics, a lesson I am now embracing to get my consistency back.

💡 Redefining "Shitty": Low Effort, Not Low Ethics

For my personal strategy, I need to clarify what an "imperfect" post is not.

A low-effort post is never spam, plagiarism, or malicious content. It is simply a post that is low on time investment but still maintains integrity and originality. For me, this might mean:

  • A Photo of the Day: A single, original photo with a short paragraph.
  • Quick Thoughts: A simple 300-word musing on a recent crypto event.
  • A Simple Review: Sharing an honest, unpolished opinion on something I just watched or read.

💬 My Focus Shift: Comments Over Content

While the imperfect post is the financial insurance policy, my biggest recent takeaway is about the true source of growth.

I’ve realized that if I only have a limited amount of time to spend on Hive, my effort is better spent engaging than just writing new posts. I have seen that many successful authors spend hours writing valuable comments and connecting with others.

A thoughtful comment on a trending post puts my name directly in front of active curators.

Genuine engagement builds the relationships that lead to sustainable, high-value manual votes down the road.

Plus, comments earn rewards! A quality comment can often out-earn a low-effort post.

The "imperfect post" is my baseline maintenance tool, but high-quality comments are the investment that will genuinely grow my reputation and influence going forward.

🔑 My Conclusion: The 10-Minute Rule is the Comeback Key

My recent near-relapse taught me a valuable lesson: The biggest killer of a Hive account is the gap between posts.

This has clarified my approach:

  • If I can't publish my perfect post today, I will spend 10 minutes and publish an imperfect one instead.
  • This simple shift ensures my account earnings remain active, keeps the ball rolling, and prevents me from falling victim to the crushing weight of demanding perfection. I can now dedicate the rest of my Hive time to engage deeply, knowing that my baseline earnings are secure.
  • I have learned not to let the best be the enemy of the good, especially when the "good" pays the bills and prevents another long hiatus.

Cheers,
Peter

Posted Using INLEO

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I always get a bit nervous if I have to publish my post past the 7:30 AM window that I usually get it in. I know that if I miss that I will likely not get some of the bigger curation account votes that I often do. I have a list of topics that I want to write about eventually, but not enough filler to turn them into a proper post. Maybe one day...

I don't think that the timing does matter a lot. Let's be honest 75% of all votes on the blockchain are auto votes.
You can try to post once at noon and see if this makes a difference!

Also I would wonder when 2 authors post the exact same post as a test. You will probably have one which will be voted by curation trails while the other wont get those votes.

Yeah, that is probably true. I've seen my rewards drop quite a bit when services like hive.vote are down for the morning or whatever.

nice up 🚀🚀