Why Creators Choose YouTube/TikTok Over HIVE: The Onboarding Problem
hive-167922·@chiren·
0.000 HBDWhy Creators Choose YouTube/TikTok Over HIVE: The Onboarding Problem
# Why Creators Choose YouTube/TikTok Over HIVE: The Onboarding Problem --- ## TL;DR HIVE promises to pay creators directly without corporate middlemen - a compelling vision. But when a creator can start earning on YouTube in 5 minutes versus spending hours learning about resource credits and power-ups on HIVE, the choice is obvious. This post explores why HIVE's onboarding friction and tiny audience keep creators away, even when the underlying technology might be superior. **What's Inside:** - The brutal reality of creator onboarding comparison - Why "no audience" is a dealbreaker for creators - How complexity kills adoption before it starts - Some thoughts on what could help *This is Part 1 of a series exploring why HIVE struggles to attract content creators.* --- ## The Five-Minute Test Here's a thought experiment: imagine you're a creator who just heard about a new platform. You want to test it out. How long until you can post your first piece of content and potentially earn something? **YouTube/TikTok:** - Sign up with Google/email: 30 seconds - Upload video: 2 minutes - Add title and description: 1 minute - Publish: Done - Total time: ~5 minutes **HIVE (via most frontends):** - Find a frontend (PeakD, Ecency, etc.): 2 minutes of research - Create account: Wait for approval or find someone with account creation tokens - Learn about keys (posting, active, owner): Confusing - Understand resource credits: More confusion - Figure out where to post: Which community? What tags? - Learn about power-up vs liquid: Why are there different tokens? - Write and publish: Finally! - Total time: Hours (if you're persistent) The comparison is brutal. And I say this as someone who uses HIVE regularly - the onboarding experience is objectively terrible for newcomers.  --- ## The Audience Problem (The Real Dealbreaker) But let's say a creator pushes through all that complexity. They've figured out keys, resource credits, and communities. They post their first video or article. Then comes the crushing realization: *almost nobody will see it.* **YouTube** has 2+ billion monthly active users. Post a video, and even with zero subscribers, YouTube's algorithm might show it to hundreds or thousands of people if it's engaging. The potential audience is massive. **TikTok** is even more aggressive about showing new creator content to test what resonates. Go viral on your first video? Absolutely possible. **HIVE?** The entire ecosystem has maybe 10,000-20,000 truly active users on a good day. Post something, and unless you get lucky with a whale's upvote or already have followers, you might get 5 views. Maybe. For creators, this is the dealbreaker. It doesn't matter how good the tokenomics are or how fair the payment system is if nobody sees your content. Creators need audiences first, monetization second.  --- ## The Complexity Tax Hardfork 28 is bringing light accounts, which should help. But even with easier account creation, HIVE has a "complexity tax" that other platforms simply don't have. **Questions a creator shouldn't need to ask:** - What's the difference between HIVE and HBD? - Should I power up or stay liquid? - What are resource credits and why did I run out? - Which frontend should I use? - Do I need to understand blockchain to use this? - Why is my voting power depleting? - What's a witness and why should I vote for them? Compare this to YouTube: "Upload video. Add title. Publish." That's it. Everything else is optional. I get that HIVE's decentralization creates some inherent complexity. But the question is: does a casual content creator need to know any of this to get started? The answer should be no, but currently it's yes. --- ## The "Crypto" Problem There's another subtle barrier: the moment you tell a creator "it's a blockchain platform," a certain percentage immediately tune out. Why? Because: - **Scam association** - Crypto has a reputation problem. Many creators don't want to be associated with it - **Audience skepticism** - Their existing followers might be turned off by crypto content - **Perceived complexity** - "Blockchain" sounds technical and intimidating - **Volatility concerns** - Earning in a volatile token feels risky compared to dollars HIVE might be one of the more legitimate blockchain projects, but it carries the baggage of the entire crypto ecosystem's reputation. That's not HIVE's fault, but it's a real barrier. --- ## Some Ideas Worth Exploring **Make Onboarding Invisible** What if new users could post, comment, and engage without ever knowing they're using a blockchain? Light accounts from Hardfork 28 are a step in this direction, but we could go further. Abstract away everything technical until users actively want to learn more. **Seed Initial Audiences** The chicken-and-egg problem is tough. You need creators to attract audiences, but creators won't come without audiences. Maybe HIVE dapps need to focus less on "be everything to everyone" and more on "be the best platform for X specific niche." Dominate one content vertical with an actual audience before expanding. **Simplify the Value Proposition** Instead of "decentralized blockchain social media with cryptocurrency rewards," what if the pitch was simply: "Post content. Earn money. No ads. No corporate control." The blockchain is the *how*, not the *why*. **Cross-Posting Tools** Let creators keep their YouTube/TikTok presence while easily mirroring content to HIVE. Don't ask them to choose - let them test HIVE as a secondary platform with zero switching cost. --- ## The Hard Truth Here's what I've realized: HIVE might be technically superior in many ways, but for creators, it fails the most basic test - it's harder to use and has way fewer viewers than the alternatives. Light accounts will help. Better UX will help. But even with perfect onboarding, HIVE still faces the audience problem. And I'm not sure there's an easy solution to that without either: 1. Massive marketing to bring in users (expensive and hard to sustain) 2. Finding a specific niche where HIVE genuinely offers something competitors can't 3. Making it so easy to cross-post that creators use HIVE as a bonus platform, not a replacement I don't have all the answers here. The people building HIVE dapps are working hard on these problems. But I think it's worth being honest about why creators aren't flocking to HIVE despite its advantages. The promise of "get paid directly for your content" is compelling. But it doesn't matter if nobody sees that content and the platform is too confusing to use. --- **Next in this series:** We'll explore why HIVE's monetization model doesn't work for professional creators, even when they do build an audience. --- **What do you think?** Have you tried to onboard friends or fellow creators to HIVE? What were the biggest barriers? Are there solutions I'm missing? Let me know in the comments.
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