This post lives in three places: Notion, Mataroa, and Substack. (Why?)

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I’ve been thinking about how to handle simultaneously publishing content on many platforms at once.

In light of Twitter’s instability and the rise of some exciting alternatives (I’ve personally enjoyed trying Bluesky and Mastodon, and will try out Substack Notes), I’ve decided to get in the habit of posting content I want to contribute to online discussions in several places. Here’s my plan:

For long-form content:

I’ll draft my content in Notion (or in a markdown file that I move over to Notion). This is convenient for several reasons. Some people might like reading things with Notion’s interface. Importantly, Notion also allows for direct comments, in case readers want to rebut a point, fix a typo, or (I suppose the best outcome) enthusiastically agree with a paragraph.

I’ll export each Notion page to Markdown to publish on my Mataroa blog. I personally like the Mataroa aesthetic (both for the posts and the dashboard) and I think there is some portion of potential readers that will like the minimalism. It can be nice to read a webpage with no frills or additional features. The Mataroa blog will include some posts that are still draft-y.

Finally, I’ll take my posts that are polished and import them to Substack. My guess is that while some portion of readers like Notion or Mataroa for the the commenting, aesthetics, or values, there’s also a larger population out there that would rather read and engage with content in a setting like Substack. I’m also excited about potential integration with Substack Notes and the large platform afforded by algorithmic recommendations and social networking features (likes, shares, etc.).

For short-form content (micro-blogs!)

I’m going to try and standardize my Twitter, Mastodon (hci.social), Bluesky, and LinkedIn accounts.

I’ll probably have some set of microblogs that are basically advertisements for my posts and papers. These will go to Twitter and LinkedIn. I’ll try to use hci.social mainly for casual conversation or posting HCI related thoughts, and then monitor the vibe of Bluesky to see what kind of content makes sense to post over there!

I’ll probably use one formal profile picture and bio for LinkedIn and my personal website, and a more casual profile picture and bio elsewhere.

Some goals

Why I wrote this

Writing up this “social media plan” was in part just useful to clarify my own thinking on the matter. But I figured it might be of interest to other people in a similar boat, especially academics thinking about blogging about their research and trying to figure out a balance between professional and semi-professional uses.

As always, I’m also curious what you think, so this post itself will be a co-published Notion page and Mataroa blog post.