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Publishing Wildly Successful Content Online with David Smooke of Hacker Noon

Episode #048

David Smooke (@DavidSmooke) has been working with content since he got a job as a teenager at the local newspaper. In this episode we discuss the progression of his career from employee to contractor to the owner of multiple online publications, and we learn how he bootstrapped Hacker Noon and the @ami network to over 600k subscribers and 10M monthly pageviews.

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    As a regular contributor to Hacker Noon, I am so happy to discover that David is such an amazing, jovial guy in real life! Makes me proud to be contributing to his network.

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    I didn't know Hackernoon before getting a request to contribute to the publication. Hackernoon is helping me tremendously to reach my audience .

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    One of my favourite episodes ever, very inspiring! "You absolutely should have your own blog. But you should contribute to sites like Hacker Noon" [...] "People should always have their own blog. They should be thinking about sites like Hacker Noon as sources of inbound links."

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    Wise questions, great episode!

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  6. 1

    My Main Takeaways:

    • When you contribute articles to Hackernoon, they keep your story as your story. Conversely, when you contribute to "the Forbes of the world", you worked with an editor who waters down your message and pigeonholes it into something in their own categories.

    • Before starting AMI and Hackernoon, David worked at a tech company.

    • Leverage your background knowledge - Between age 18 to 23, David gained experience working part time at a Newspaper company, and saw all the ways things that make a media distributer inefficient, he wanted to fix this.

    • It's easier to go from a 60% good story to an 80% good story, than from an 80% good story to a 100% good story. Focus on getting to 80%, don't fuss about getting to the 100%.

    • After moving to San Francisco, David got a job at a company called SmartRecruiters and working in marketing. And here, he had a mentor who was an expert in marketing. He worked for about 3 years and the company went from about 6 people to 120 while he was there.

    • Because of David's experience at the early stage startup Smart Recuriters, other people who had early stage startups also wanted to hire him. Then David started doing 6 month consulting contracts working with these companies.

    • After working for and consulting various startups, David started a blog called "Art Plus Marketing" where he would publish startup related posts, and soon he became more interesting in this blog than in doing client work.

    • David gradually pivotted from doing client work to working on his blog, over time.

    • Be yourself and put something out there rather

    • Get your first or second client while you still have your job. And work an additional 20 hours on this per week on client stuff (while still working your full-time job hours).

    • At the time of this interview, David is the only full-time employee, but he has a lot of part time employees. And he likes it this way.

    • David believes that we should build as many income streams as possible, rather than having a dedicated 9-5 job that covers everything. Hence why he has many part time employees and no full-time employee.

    • Don't rely on social media news feeds to get traffic. Because social media platforms do not give you (or any user) much control over the news feed, because this may affect the social media platform's monetisation, THEY control what users see.

    • In the early days David would send out lots of cold emails to get people to write for his site.

    • You should have your own blog but also publish on platforms like Hackernoons and medium for SEO, and sources of inbound links.

    • Early stage startups should focus on reducing the barriers to produce one story.

    • David lets the market determine editorial lines more than anything else.

    • For his writers, David prefers expertise in subject matter over expertise in English grammer.

    • David says that you can literally make a successful blog that makes money, on anything.

    • David says the one trait you definitely need in entrepreneurship is: Willpower, are you willing to power through to the end?

    • Make sure that you can actually picture your customer.

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