My Hive Onboarding Journey

Onboarding people to Hive can be one of the most exciting and exhausting things. I always start out so enthusiastic, trying to explain what Hive is, and how it works. But most of the time, I end up looking at someone who has already zoned out or is just nodding to be nice.


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I can’t recall the number of people that I have tried to onboard. The story and things they say never stops being funny. One time, a guy at my workplace asked what I was always typing on my laptop and what I was looking serious about whenever I was on that "blue-looking" website. I smiled and told him about Hive - how it's a platform where I get to write, read, connect and earn at the same time. He seemed so interested. He said he liked writing too and wanted to join Hive also.

I was so excited that I started explaining everything I knew about Hive to him. I showed him how posts look like, and how communities work. I really thought I had him. But when I told him to bring his phone so we could register his account, he said, "Let me just finish what I'm doing. I'll do it later".

That later never came.

Everytime I reminded him, there was always another excuse. One day he laughed and said, "It's like you get paid per person, because I don't understand the way you've been disturbing me about it". I just smiled and asked him to forget about it. Because, what else could I have said at that point?. Some people simply don't get it.

Then there are the ones who do get it. Like a friend I onboarded recently who appeared so serious about it that I actually paid 3 Hive just to get her registered when the free registration didn't work. I begged her to take it seriously because I didn't want my effort to go to waste. And she did. She's been posting and engaging well. Seeing that made me weirdly proud, like a proud Hive mama watching her newbie grow wings, lol.

But my favourite part of onboarding has to be the funny things people say. Someone once asked me, "So, if I write there, by the end of the year I'll have thousands of dollars in my bank account?". I've also heard, "Isn't that crypto yahoo?" Another person said, "Ah, I don't want to join before they use my account to do ritual". I almost choked laughing that day. The misconceptions people have about online platforms can be wild.

Still, I get it. Some people can be skeptical. There are a lot of fake platforms out there and that’s why it sounds like a scam when you tell people you earn from just writing and engaging.

There have been times where I feel like I am talking to a wall while trying to onboard someone. Some will join and some won't. The few that do make it worth while. There's a quite joy that comes with seeing someone you introduced to Hive actually enjoying it. It's not about rewards or anything, but the feeling of knowing you helped someone find a space where they can truly express themselves.


Thanks for reading.


Image was generated using Gemini

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People like that get me irritated because why will I spend all my energy briefing you about the platform and then you’re, acting like you're doing me a favour.
People often tend to allow former experiences cloud their judgements. Although I don’t blame them, but there’s no harm in trying again if you really want something, is there?

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Seriously some people are so wild and if you are telling them everytime about hive they seemed it as disturbance and be asking you questions like what is your reward if I join. That's what they keep asking me instead of them to join and explore in hive . They are thinking that if they join they have become elun musk

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