Unfortunately, if you want the biggest reach, that means clickbait titles, using tiktok or similar platforms. If you want to keep your integrity, I do not know. If I knew I would have done it myself.
It could also be that your content sucks and you're not as smart or interesting as you think you are :P
In the past I have written books; mostly technical stuff - some of it moderately remunerative. For technical books/articles it's easy: provide information that people need and can't easily obtain. Obviously, they need to be the type of people who are willing to read. If not, then a video might be a better choice of medium.
For fiction, you need more imagination and it's not easy to predict what will sell. I helped an up-and-coming author called Owen Mullen to succeed but he and his wife did all the hard work of writing "whodunnit" stories. For a guy who was a working class Glaswegian, he's done really well.
Also consider J.K. Rowling and her "Harry Potter" series. Unfortunately, I had no hand in her success but it's worth reading about how she (allegedly) achieved it.
So, my answer is this: look at how successful people do it and copy their strategy.
Rule 1 ------ never brag about how smart you think you are.
Unfortunately, if you want the biggest reach, that means clickbait titles, using tiktok or similar platforms. If you want to keep your integrity, I do not know. If I knew I would have done it myself.
It could also be that your content sucks and you're not as smart or interesting as you think you are :P
And modest, too; you forgot modest.
In the past I have written books; mostly technical stuff - some of it moderately remunerative. For technical books/articles it's easy: provide information that people need and can't easily obtain. Obviously, they need to be the type of people who are willing to read. If not, then a video might be a better choice of medium.
For fiction, you need more imagination and it's not easy to predict what will sell. I helped an up-and-coming author called Owen Mullen to succeed but he and his wife did all the hard work of writing "whodunnit" stories. For a guy who was a working class Glaswegian, he's done really well.
Also consider J.K. Rowling and her "Harry Potter" series. Unfortunately, I had no hand in her success but it's worth reading about how she (allegedly) achieved it.
So, my answer is this: look at how successful people do it and copy their strategy.