Another week of rewards have been distributed to HIVE authors, and it is time to look, again, in depth at who and what got rewarded, based on word counts, post structure, images, and a number of other bits and pieces. Before I begin with the report, there are some new features I have built into my data set, that enable greater analytical depth.
Whats New since last week?
I have published a post yesterday showing a deeper breakdown in to publishing habits, with insights into how posts on different hive-powered applications tend to have different types of content.
The TLDR of that post is that ecency and peakd are the dominant applications that users choose to create content with.
I have also revised a plot showing the difference in word count and rewards per word count category day on day:
The top of this chart shows the number of posts in each category, represented in the clustered bars. The line tracks the number of unique authors.
The bottom of the chart shows the total payouts assigned to posts published on that day. The line tracks the average net votes on a post.
Anyway, onto the usual reporting:
The third week of July is now over.
For the third week of July, there was $39,590.93 in rewards distributed, compared to $34,222.9 for the prior week. The average payout increased by six cents. The max increased from $87.79 to $118.41. The median was increased by four cents, to 62 cents.
The highest word count was 10,637, 20% shorter than last week, while the average was up to 444 words, from 436, and the median increased from 268 to 273.
The overall trend of shorter posts being the more dominant on the platform continued, with even less posts (35%) being longer than average.
8.2 million words were published in total on HIVE for the period, and here is the distribution
Pay per word was about the same since the last set of data was imported, and the majority of the payouts went to posts under 750 words (same as last week). Average payouts to shorter posts increased (again), but payouts were up across the board, seems like there was a little more in the reward pool.
What about the typical post on HIVE? What does that look like? Well, thankfully, here's some stats - this week with some new data points, average replies!
Posts got slightly longer, included more pictures. Engagement was slightly down.
This Week
Last Week
It will be interesting to see how replies change over time.
There still isn't much difference between the median and average post, other than the fact that there's significantly more words in the average, and a few more pictures.
How does total, aggregated payout look, compared to the word count? A little bit like the distribution of the posts, it seems, with a steep falloff for longer posts.
Shorter posts continued to get "more" rewards proportionately. A good uptick in the 501-750 words category, and a reduction in rewards for longer posts under 2000 words seemed to continue, as a percentage of the total.
This Week
Last Week
Three Weeks Ago
How about when we consider a few more variables, and look at the reward factor? That is to say, the highest payout in a word count group divided by the average?
The reward factor grew by 13. That means the highest rewarded posts are taking 55x more than the average payout across all the word count categories.
This Week
Last Week
Three Weeks Ago
Moving On
14.82% of all posts published on Hive were above average word count and above average pay out. 10.13% were below average word count, and above average payout. There is room for awards to be allocated by curators to those appearing in the above average word count and below average payout category. There's ~$15k of awards allocated to shorter posts.
There reward factor for "below average word count and above average pay out" grew sharply. Again, that's max payout divided by average, presented as a number.
This Week
Last Week
Three Weeks Ago
What about when we look at authors on an individual basis, for the period? (Or at least the top 20 for each category?
This Week
Last Week
Three Weeks Ago
I have added engagement, by measure of total number of replies to an author's top level posts here. I am curious as to the range of comments received by authors in these categories. There's a wide variation in the engagement each author gets for their rewards, regardless of their word count.
The same authors tend to appear in the lists, week on week. They're consistent and persistent.
What about those potentially "emerging" authors, with Below Average payouts?
This Week
Last Week
Three Weeks Ago
Different authors are appearing in these, but there are a number of curation / token projects appearing in below average payout and above average word count week on week.
Finally, I have put together a view of the key metrics I'm looking into for this data set into a slice by community, sorted by total payouts.
I've reordered some of the columns in the data for better readability. HIVE CN took the most rewards. Vibes is a growing community, and Worldmappin and Photography Lovers remain quite close to the top. Spend HBD had a little less volume again this week.
This Week
Last Week
Three Weeks Ago
Who the fuck swears the most in their posts on HIVE? (Not comments, just posts!)
The only words, as an Aussie, that I consider swearing are "shit", "fuck", "cunt" (or variations thereof, so this captures "fucker", "fuckhead", "motherfucker", "shithead", etc
Step aside, @galenkp, you no longer swear the most. @nahueldare3627 takes the swear jar all to themselves, just beating out a few other users.
This Week
Last Week:
Three Weeks Ago:
Thanks for taking a look at the data. I'm still keen to get more ideas from you all on how this can be improved for future iterations and hope you enjoyed the new features, or whatever other metrics I might be able to extract.