Ah, the glitz and glam of platforms like Facebook! Massive audiences. Instant engagement. But beneath the glitter lies a more somber reality. Leaving social platforms is becoming a growing trend. Why? Content ownership. Sure, the reach on these platforms is... CONTINUED BELOW š½
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Ah, the glitz and glam of platforms like Facebook!
Massive audiences.
Instant engagement.
But beneath the glitter lies a more somber reality.
Leaving social platforms is becoming a growing trend.
Why?
Content ownership.
Sure, the reach on these platforms is enormous.
Yet, every post, every video, every piece of content is on borrowed land.
I've felt the sting.
Unforeseen content removals.
Sudden account suspensions.
All that effort, potentially gone in a flash.
And it's led me to a conclusion.
I'm leaving social platforms like Facebook.
It's not a boycott.
It's about safeguarding my creativity.
It's about ensuring that the content I create remains mine.
Enter: My blog. My rules.
When you own your platform, you own your content.
There's a security, a sense of permanence.
You can't be 'suspended' from your domain.
Moreover, it's a space entirely curated by you, for your audience.
The aesthetics, the interaction, the content; all under your control.
Sure, social media platforms offer tools, audiences, and engagement.
But they come at a cost: unpredictability.
My move isn't a farewell to social media.
It's a strategic shift.
Leaving social platforms as primary content homes, but using them as powerful marketing tools.
Drawing audiences to a space that's genuinely mine.
So yes, I'm moving away from Facebook.
But it's a leap towards a stable, controlled content future.
Join me, won't you?
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