A platform's design heavily influences a creator's motivation. Twitter's near-instant dopamine hit of likes and engagement encourages frequent posting. In contrast, LinkedIn's slower feedback loop can make it harder to build and maintain a consistent posting habit.
Don't blame the algorithm for poor engagement. Truly compelling content, like a major company announcement, still breaks through and achieves massive reach. The platform rewards exceptional content, not just consistent posting.
Posting daily on platforms like LinkedIn can feel like an "exercise in futility," yielding minimal tangible results like new subscribers. Time is often better invested in creating high-quality, long-form "cornerstone" content that can be repurposed later and provides more lasting value.
Mindless scrolling seeks a "fake" dopamine hit from passive consumption. By contrast, structured, intentional engagement—like sending five meaningful messages—creates "real" dopamine from accomplishment and relationship building. This purposeful activity can paradoxically reduce overall screen time by satisfying the brain's reward system more effectively.
Platforms like TikTok have shifted the paradigm where success is tied to each post's individual merit, not the creator's follower base. A single viral video can generate massive reach and sales, even if other posts have low engagement, a trend now adopted by LinkedIn, YouTube, and others.
The act of consistently producing content, even imperfectly, is a powerful exercise in identity transformation. It rewires your self-perception from someone with ideas to someone who executes and follows through on commitments. This identity shift is more valuable than any single piece of content.
Learning from Instagram's evolution towards passive consumption, the Sora team intentionally designs its social feed to inspire creation, not just scrolling. This fundamentally changes the platform's incentives and is proving successful, with high rates of daily active creation and posting.
During a maternity leave, the speaker stopped posting on social media and discovered her sales and list growth remained consistent. The instant feedback of likes and comments was a "dopamine hit," but Pinterest was the quiet engine actually driving 80% of the results, revealing a major misalignment of time and effort.
Creators who see massive success with daily social media posting, like Tom Alder on LinkedIn, often treat it as their sole creative outlet. Those balancing it with other major commitments like a podcast or newsletter will struggle to dedicate the necessary brainpower and consistency.
The "more you post, the more you grow" principle favors frequency over perfection. Creators are often poor judges of what will go viral. Instead of spending 30 minutes on one "perfect" post, spend 10 minutes each day on three separate "good enough" posts to increase statistical chances of success and improve faster through repetition.
When a social media platform like LinkedIn introduces a new feature, such as 'comment impressions,' it's a direct signal to creators about the algorithm's new focus. Early adoption and testing of these features can lead to outsized reach and engagement.