And I was already, you know, entrenched in that game on LinkedIn. So I was like, you know what, this time let’s go really hard and, and. Put, put all my eggs in that basket and see, see where it leads. And so, yeah, it’s worked out.
Jared: You said something that piqued my interest. You said that the, uh, LinkedIn is, is very similar to running a content website, uh, or something you said something along those lines, basically.
Um, Explain that. I’m curious to hear more about that. That, that at first glance, having been someone who has run content websites for over, for probably a decade now, like, I’m curious to hear more about that. Sure. Sure.
Nat: So remember I used the example of dig and you, you remember the, the, the days of dig. I was like one of the power users, right?
Like I, I remember that. And 30 percent of the stuff I would submit eventually hit the front page because I was like a big user on that. I wasn’t quite Mr. Babyman, but I was a big, I was a big, I was a big user. Yeah, I just, I just whipped out that name. So I was, I was a big user on there and it took 3 4 hours a day to become a big user.
It’s not like you just, you know. Become a you a big user on it. They call them power users at the time. I remember that and But the similarity is how you grew on dig is very similar How do you grow on linkedin and you would grow? by Building relationships on that platform with other users Who would then support your content and your stuff will get pushed higher and higher and higher by the algorithm now linkedin has a very Similar setup in the sense that you’re on there and you’re building relationships.