Genx Blog

A Japanese web3 beatmaker. I make music and art.

Why Charging for Digital Gardens Defeats the Purpose

y s 9UN SXYdcOQ unsplash scaled
Genx Avatar
Share This:

Charging for a digital garden goes completely against its core philosophy. Digital gardens are built as open spaces for freely sharing knowledge and ideas, which is totally different from monetized content platforms.

The Philosophy of Digital Gardens

Digital gardens don’t mesh well with paywalls or subscription models. They’re transparent spaces where you can share your thoughts and knowledge without the pressure of creating polished, sellable content. As one digital gardener puts it, “With blogging, you’re talking to a large audience. With digital gardening, you’re talking to yourself. You focus on what you want to cultivate over time.”

The whole point of digital gardens is being an “open blogger” – making your thinking process and creative journey transparent and accessible to anyone.

Why Charging Doesn’t Work

Easy sharing is what makes digital gardens special. They get updated frequently (sometimes multiple times a day!) and instantly reflect on the web. Adding payment barriers kills that effortless sharing vibe.

Long-term sustainability is another big concern. Most digital gardeners care more about keeping things going long-term and having portable data than making money. They choose platforms and methods that don’t depend on subscription services or proprietary formats that might disappear someday.

Budget-Friendly Options

Using WordPress is a good idea.

Digital gardens work best when they’re treated as personal knowledge spaces that happen to be public, not as products to sell. The real value comes from authentic idea sharing and growing knowledge over time, not from creating exclusive paid content.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

1 × one =