- New peak live viewer count: >45 (EP002)
- almost 200 youtube subscribers (thanks delonewolf)
- almost 200 Twitch subscribers
On the other hand, I've been annoyed the traction hasn't been as high as I was expecting. For years I've heard from a lot of friends things like "We get great war reports, and news reports... but where is the market reporting?" The response from /r/eve was particularly anemic.
When I wrote for TMC, market/industrial analysis was my niche. Unfortunately the truth behind that style of analysis is it's a metric butt-load of work try and roll that analysis for every investigation or report. Every major article I wrote for TMC took weeks to fetch, crunch, build charts, and publish. And despite all that work, I was always outclassed for pageviews/comments by editorial work, or ALOD content. I never received a best-of-the-month bonus on any article I produced (though I always ranked in the top 5 articles for months I wrote for them).
Now, I'm sure the issue has to do with the reactionary nature this level of analysis requires. It's a serious undertaking to try and strike while the iron is hot on news like Burn Jita when the goal is serious analysis. People want to know about the future, and really don't care about the past, when it comes to market analysis (no matter how periodic EVE data tends to be).
The part that has me riled up is the "Why isn't there a Jim Cramer of EVE?" question. I find this frustrating because I don't think the people asking it realize the true depth of analysis that is run on the IRL markets versus the EVE ones. Though I'll gloss over the part about EVE != IRL because of things like lack of credit, and no derivatives/futures markets, and our trade is purely in commodities. Instead, I don't think people understand the difference between the level of spreadsheet-jockeying that is commonplace in EVE versus what it really takes to run a show like Mad Money. No one is doing indicator analysis, no one has rolled up machine learning algorithms to suss out interplay between items, no one is plugging RSS news feeds into a bot to automate predictions. Instead, any serious analysis either requires painstaking time investment, or years of "gut tuning" to be able to play any truly speculative market game.
I know what the bulk of EVE actually wants out of a market show: Push-Button Receive-Bacon trading advice. They want to be able to tune in, and within 15-30mins be told which secret item du juor will make them space rich. The reality is that quality of tool does not remotely exist in EVE today. And though developing tools for this Prosper Show will probably get us to a place like the high-frequency robot traders of IRL, the journey there is going to take quite a lot of development and time.
To those providing critical feedback, I do hear you. I will be working to tighten up the show to add more value for the time frame I'm committed to (~40min/wk). I will be adding and removing segments to better serve up the info that is most important, and try to dig into the gross trends so everyone can get what they want out of it. But know that unless others join me in a market analysis arms race, the breadth and quality of information will never be able to deliver "CNBC for EVE".
Presented without context:
The part that has me riled up is the "Why isn't there a Jim Cramer of EVE?" question. I find this frustrating because I don't think the people asking it realize the true depth of analysis that is run on the IRL markets versus the EVE ones. Though I'll gloss over the part about EVE != IRL because of things like lack of credit, and no derivatives/futures markets, and our trade is purely in commodities. Instead, I don't think people understand the difference between the level of spreadsheet-jockeying that is commonplace in EVE versus what it really takes to run a show like Mad Money. No one is doing indicator analysis, no one has rolled up machine learning algorithms to suss out interplay between items, no one is plugging RSS news feeds into a bot to automate predictions. Instead, any serious analysis either requires painstaking time investment, or years of "gut tuning" to be able to play any truly speculative market game.
I know what the bulk of EVE actually wants out of a market show: Push-Button Receive-Bacon trading advice. They want to be able to tune in, and within 15-30mins be told which secret item du juor will make them space rich. The reality is that quality of tool does not remotely exist in EVE today. And though developing tools for this Prosper Show will probably get us to a place like the high-frequency robot traders of IRL, the journey there is going to take quite a lot of development and time.
To those providing critical feedback, I do hear you. I will be working to tighten up the show to add more value for the time frame I'm committed to (~40min/wk). I will be adding and removing segments to better serve up the info that is most important, and try to dig into the gross trends so everyone can get what they want out of it. But know that unless others join me in a market analysis arms race, the breadth and quality of information will never be able to deliver "CNBC for EVE".
Presented without context:
8 comments:
The reddit formula requires quick turnover. If it takes users ten to twenty minutes to peruse content, and then come back and upvote it, the algorithm will naturally penalize you. The upvotes counter or page position isn't on a per user basis, but what is parsed through the algorithm and is only indirectly related to actual user upvotes and downvotes. It will even add upvotes and downvotes just to "smooth things out."
Ergo, you'll have to break the content up into smaller, more frequent segments to capture the reddit demo.
I'll remember that in the future. I've had pretty good traction on my other articles/posts, I was expecting more for filling a gaping void in the meta.
I just expected at least positive comment traction, even if the upvote total was meh. Was taken aback by the attitude more than the metrics.
Honestly, you have to do what you're doing because you enjoy doing it, not because you have 50, 500 or 5,000 listeners.
I can't help but be metrics driven. I'm not throwing in the towel by a long shot.
Just is weird to talk about EVE media and hear countless requests for market news, then get "meh" feedback from (my personal) first stop for EVE content. They bring up valid feedback, I was just underwhelmed by the traction.
First I've heard of it.
Will watch on youtube if I can find it
(I dvr TV shows,,, twitch is just not practical)
EVEProsper on Youtube
That looks like my face! http://evewho.com/pilot/Raziel+Walker
OMG someone did a Face/Off with my face...I really hope I don't look like Nicholas Cage the next time I log into EVE...
Hey - I just got to your blog via your YouTube video via http://marketsforisk.blogspot.com/. I'm pretty new to playing the market and have 0 background in finance.
That said, while a "Push-Button Receive-Bacon trading advice" show could help people in the short run, I'm really looking for something that explains the markets and how to think about them. What are the things I should be watching for? For example, I noticed T3 subsystems getting bought up before the release but didn't have a clue what was going on. I know I sold out of all my inventory. I am hoping that through your blog and show, I'll learn how to think about the market and what affects it, being able to prepare pre-release etc.
Anyhow - just a rambling note to say thanks for doing this.
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