We need a new, more unpopular discovery engine for tech people and geeks?
[0]: https://teclis.com
TBH I only really started looking at traffic in the last year and I'm gratified it gets a bunch. But honestly not for the topics I would imagine (and often hope for).
The other useful aspect: writing about a topic flushes out my areas of ignorance and clarifies my thoughts. That's a useful exercise.
I'm one of the few that kept going out of a love for writing. It was only three or four years that I put GoAccess on my server, ran analytics, and realized that I actually had traffic!
If the motivation is intrinsic, it will keep happening until traffic comes naturally. If it is not, then it is easy to stop.
I wrote a niche blog for several years. Why did I stop? Simply because hardly anyone was reading the blog!
At first, I was writing for myself and an audience was not important. But over time, I came to realise that, although the size of the audience was not important to me, the interest and engagement of readers did matter (especially for a blog with a very niche topic). Hardly any readers commented on my blog posts - which was important to me.
I don't regret writing the blog at all. Writing down my thoughts, experience or research all helped me better at writing.
On the not promoting it side of things, there is too much disdain for self promotion. It's often looked down upon to promote yourself. So some people won't do it because they dislike others doing it. Their refusual to self promote hurts them more than others. The people who do self promote have a higher chance of success because they told everyone about themselves.
The giving up too quickly side of things, it takes time to build up a following, to build a reputation. You're not going to get 1000 views daily on your blog overnight. I've written multiple high traffic blog posts that are widely linked to, translated into other languages and even then, I barely get 100 users a day on my site when I'm not actively promoting it and creating new content. Most of my blogs probably get 1000 users overall. Very few get 1,000 users in a day. Sure if I keep building up my content and I'm more consisent it'll eventually get to the point I'm getting 1,000 users a day. But it's going to take time. And most people aren't willing to invest that time.
I heard this one idea in a software development conference a while back, that went along the lines of: "Your keypresses will be more valuable if more people benefit from them." which was essentially talking about private notes possibly being more wasteful due to less impactfulness.
That's kind of why I still write things in my personal blog (and am actually working on a blog/video series about opinionated software development) even though it's not too popular.
So that in a few weeks/months/years when something that I have previously jotted down will be relevant, I'll be able to just share a link and offer up my points without trying to recall all the minutea.
That actually extends to writing about the failure modes of software, e.g.: https://blog.kronis.dev/everything%20is%20broken/nginx-confi...
It doesn't have to be the best writing out there, or even correct 100% of the time, it just needs to serve as a historical record.
It's also that I have nothing to say anymore. I'm not sure which is the bigger reason. I didn't have all that much to say in the past I think. I just found random stuff interesting and wrote about it. But that goes back to the top issue. Anyone can tweet or post to their facebook in moments so it feels mostly pointless to try to share in an ocean of sharing.
At the moment having a well made Youtube channel seems like the new similar outlet. It's hard enough that it's semi rare. Sure anyone can post themselves just talking about stuff but not everyone can make Veritasium, Primitive Technology, Kutzgesagt, CGP Gray.
Let me also add, at least for me, it wasn't a small amount of work. A typical post took ~8hrs. 4~5 writing, editing, correcting and another 2-3 hrs editing images. There were shorter posts but the ones that made it feel worth doing were the longer posts.
I love the lowkey dev blogs, they don't try so hard and often have unique insights.
I think my biggest obstacle is finding the time. Writing something worthwhile requires a decent chunk of time and brain real-estate. I have many other projects that also require the same, and juggling them all is hard. I kinda wish I had more time to write, because I really enjoy it.
This isn't a bug, but a feature so that everything I write is because I want to, not because I want to chase traffic.
On the one hand, the first youtube video I uploaded got 16 comments and about 1000 views in 50 days. Obviously this isn't "viral" but it's a lot more engagement than I've ever gotten with blogging or microblogging.