I know what youâre thinking: what took you so long?
Well, I waited for the Noonies 2021 voting polls to close, so you donât give me that look:
Thereâs no way you can ignore or admire HackerNoonâs State of the Noonion. It has been indeed âThe Year of Profitability and Product Renaissance.â Five years to be precise, since 2017.
The numbers are blurred because this is a âredactedâ version, but I couldnât care less about it. I wish that thereâs an extra zero added to the revenue and profit numbers. HackerNoon absolutely deserves it!
Both the Smooke and HackerNoon families are growing and expanding with new members. I donât even dare to think what they mustâve gone through to stay away from the paywalls. Contributors donât have to play. Readers can read as many stories as they want. HackerNoon is one of the last publications Mohicans without a paywall.
But the most important thing, we can all agree about, is that the Star-Lord âproblemâ is fixed. Finally, when you say that you are, or use the HackerNoon Contributor line on your LinkedIn profile or any other social media account, for that matter, you donât end up like this:
Talking about contributors and their contributions, letâs address the elephant in the publication room. Why? Because without it, my story wouldnât be complete, and I wouldnât be who I am.
Contributors vs. âContributorsâ
Just the other day, I had one of those cathing-up conversations with my fellow freelance writer and a friend. You know, sharing is all about caring and surviving. I invited my friend to join me on HackerNoon.
âBut you donât get paid.â
âYes, but my creative freedom has no limits.â
Then, he returned a âfavorâ by inviting me to become a contributor to one of those âVIPâ publications all businesses drool to be âfeaturedâ on. Itâs still a big deal to have one of those publicationsâ logos on your companyâs homepage.
âBut you donât get paid too. Right?â
âTrue, but thereâs a catch.â
The âcatchâ is that every now and then, some company makes you an âindecent proposalâ to âconvenientlyâ include their websiteâs link so that they can be âfeatured.â You can monetize your contributorâs status handsomely, no question about it.
âIsnât that a big no-no?â
âYes, but they (these publications) let you get away with it. They just look the other way.â
âThat doesnât seem right at all. How is that even possible? Is there a catch within your catch?â
It turned out there is. As my fellow contributor explained, you have to write and submit a lot regularly to earn your publicationâs âtrust.â There are so many contributors who are writing and submitting almost every week. It is easy to slip through the cracks of the giant publications - undetected, with a questionable link or two, from time to time.
âHas anyone ever been caught? You know what I mean. Thatâs a clear violation of these publicationsâ rules, isnât it?â
âYes, people get caught and banned all the time. But, nobody cares with so many guys waiting in a line to become new contributors, and do exactly the same.â
âBut, what happens to the articles after someone gets banned?â
âThe articles are gone too.â
âThis means that the links are gone too. Do these businesses that paid for them get a refund? Do you let them know that they are no longer âfeatured?â
Import Export Publication Business
While weâre at it, allow me to address another âtechnicalityâ of the publishing industry. Itâs fair and reasonable that since you donât get paid for your stories, youâre free to do whatever you want with them. You can delete (withdraw) or republish (resubmit) your articles to another publication at any given moment. Some publications insist on exclusivity. Thatâs a legit thing to demand.
I feel for my fellow contributors who have every right to âexploitâ their stories where and when they can. There are like bees flying from one publication to another, sharing the same stories. What about the publications that are story-import-friendly?
Well, this is a no-brainer. If a publication âexportsâ more than it âimportsâ stories, then thereâs no reputation âdeficitâ problem. Plain and simple.
I see that HackerNoon has introduced a smooth âimport storyâ feature. I have no problems with it, but I have a question for my fellow contributors.
No disrespect, and nothing but pure uncut love, but when youâre importing a story, does it mean that youâre treating HackerNoon as your Plan B and a âpublication sidekick?â
I see my HackerNoon stories reshared and republished by other people and publications, and I feel proud. If they want more of me, they know where to find me - here.
Iâm a verified and proud HackerNoon contributor. Itâs my choice to write exclusively for HackerNoon. Some stories were so controversial that other publications had to read them wearing biohazard protective suits. I didnât take all those rejections personally. Why would I? All the glory to a publication with the guts to publish my eyes-and-heads-rolling story.
Just for fun, I drop by my old Medium neighborhood. When you import your HackerNoon to Medium, not only does it say where it was âoriginally publishedâ at the bottom, but it also has âHacker Noonâ attached to your story title at the top. Priceless!
And nowâŚ
Behold! HackerNoon 3.0!!
Back in the day, HackerNoon 2.0 used to be more than just new designs and features. It was a declaration of independence and an act of defiance.
HackerNoon had me at hello, but donât tell them that.
So, here we are. HackerNoon is a publication. It can, but it doesnât have to use âtechâ to explain or justify itself. There are other publications with tech categories or sections. With all due respect, they arenât worth my time. On the other side, on HackerNoon, you can find top stories about startups, gaming, business, management, marketing, and the craziest unpredictable slogging posts. It is such a relief not to be the only one who writes under the influence - occasionally.
Where do we go from here?
The only thing left to do is to make it official. But, what is HackerNoon 3.0? It is what you say, think, or want it to be. For me, it is HackerNoon Universe, but not in the sense of those overhyped meta-beta-giga-mega things. HackerNoon 3.0 is a world of its own. One big never-ending top story.