Why I Don’t Chase Virality: And Focus on Long-Term Value

Published: (December 15, 2025 at 09:57 PM EST)
3 min read
Source: Dev.to

Source: Dev.to

Introduction

Virality is seductive.

  • A spike in views.
  • A surge of followers.
  • A burst of attention.
  • A moment of validation.

I’ve seen it up close, and I’ve intentionally walked away from chasing it.

Not because virality is bad, but because it optimises for attention, not for value. In the long run, attention fades; value compounds. This is why I choose long‑term value over short‑term virality and how that decision shapes everything I build.

1. Virality Rewards Extremes. Value Rewards Clarity

Viral content usually thrives on:

  • outrage
  • fear
  • overconfidence
  • oversimplification
  • dramatic predictions
  • “X will replace Y” narratives

It travels fast because it triggers emotion.

Value‑driven content does something different:

  • explains
  • contextualises
  • adds nuance
  • respects complexity
  • helps people think better

Virality wants reaction. Value wants understanding. I’m building for the second.

2. Virality Is a Spike. Value Is a Curve

Viral moments look impressive on charts—they spike, then disappear.

Value creates a different graph:

  • slow growth
  • steady trust
  • repeat readers
  • long‑tail relevance
  • compounding credibility

One viral post can bring noise. Ten thoughtful pieces can build a decade of influence. I prefer curves over spikes.

3. Virality Optimises for Algorithms. Value Optimizes for Humans

Algorithms change constantly. What works today won’t work tomorrow, across platforms, or without constant adjustment.

Human needs change far more slowly:

  • clarity
  • trust
  • insight
  • usefulness
  • reliability

When I write, I don’t ask, “What will the algorithm push?” I ask, “What will still help someone six months from now?” That’s how you build relevance that survives platform shifts.

4. Chasing Virality Forces You to Say Things You Can’t Stand Behind

To go viral consistently, you’re pushed to:

  • exaggerate claims
  • oversimplify realities
  • speak in absolutes
  • predict extreme outcomes
  • ignore nuance

Over time, you start distancing yourself from your own words. I don’t want to explain or apologize for my thinking later; I want my past content to still represent me accurately. That constraint alone keeps me focused on value.

5. Value Builds Trust. Trust Builds Opportunity

Virality builds followers. Trust builds doors.

Trust leads to:

  • meaningful conversations
  • serious collaborations
  • long‑term readers
  • enterprise credibility
  • thoughtful audiences
  • real‑world impact

People don’t reach out because something went viral; they reach out because something resonated deeply and made sense. That’s the audience I care about.

6. Virality Encourages Speed. Value Encourages Depth

When chasing virality, speed becomes everything:

  • post fast
  • react instantly
  • jump on trends
  • comment before thinking

Value‑driven work slows you down:

  • think clearly
  • structure ideas
  • test assumptions
  • refine language
  • respect complexity

Speed creates volume. Depth creates gravity. Gravity keeps people coming back.

7. I Optimise for Relevance, Not Reach

  • Reach = how many people see something once.
  • Relevance = how many people remember it.

I don’t measure success by:

  • impressions
  • likes
  • temporary spikes

I measure it by:

  • repeat readers
  • thoughtful replies
  • saved posts
  • long discussions
  • people referencing older work

If someone remembers an idea weeks later, that’s value.

8. Long‑Term Value Aligns With How Businesses Are Actually Built

No serious business is built on virality alone. Businesses survive on:

  • trust
  • consistency
  • reliability
  • clarity
  • outcomes

The same principles apply to personal brands and thought leadership. I write the way I build systems:

  • slow foundations
  • clear structure
  • compounding logic
  • long‑term resilience

Virality is optional. Durability is not.

9. The People I Want to Reach Are Not Looking for Noise

My audience is:

  • professionals
  • builders
  • founders
  • developers
  • thinkers
  • decision‑makers

They’re not scrolling for entertainment; they’re searching for clarity. Chasing virality would mean speaking past them, so I choose to speak to them instead.

10. Long‑Term Value Gives You Control Over Your Narrative

Viral creators are often trapped by their last hit—they must repeat, escalate, or outdo it. Value‑driven creators control their narrative. They can:

  • evolve slowly
  • change direction thoughtfully
  • deepen their thinking
  • expand their scope
  • stay consistent without being repetitive

That freedom matters to me.

Here’s My Take

Virality is a tactic. Value is a strategy. Tactics win moments; strategies win decades.

I’m not building for:

  • today’s algorithm
  • tomorrow’s trend
  • this week’s attention

I’m building for:

  • long‑term trust
  • sustained relevance
  • deep understanding
  • compounding impact

If something I write goes viral organically, that’s fine. But I’ll never design my thinking to chase virality, because attention fades and real value stays.

Next article: “From Books to Brands: What I Learned About Digital Leverage.”

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