Chapter 214: Episode 214: Each Graduating Class Is Harder to Manage Than the Last
Zhang Jingwan moved to Sun Miao’s place over the weekend, and after some effort, her account’s followers returned to normal. Although she occasionally had to join Yuan Weicheng for meals, it never affected her regular work hours, so Zhou Xueyin didn’t intervene much in her business anymore.
On her own, through the contact information of a major Weibo account, she connected with some account groups. Although the cost was higher than with Yuan Weicheng’s services, she found that the results were significantly better after a few tries.
Moreover, as these account groups allowed the selection of major accounts to boost traffic without monthly or annual fees, Zhou Xueyin began redirecting traffic to her own account from these major accounts.
However, the only downside was that these major accounts occasionally copied content from subsidiary accounts of Xueshan Jiying onto their own accounts...
Although the behavior was a bit rogue, she couldn’t resist the pleasant increase in followers. Zhou Xueyin thought it over and decided to let it go, as online plagiarism was indeed difficult to control.
By mid-2012, the subsidiary accounts under Xueshan Jiying also began taking on smaller account activities. One commercial advertisement followed another, and the content for operation continued relentlessly. To distribute the ads, Zhou Xueyin reluctantly created a batch of smaller accounts, significantly increasing the workload.
Some people were not accustomed to the intense workload and planned to resign. Sun Chanjuan was the first, resigning due to health reasons as she couldn’t endure it anymore.
Of course, when some leave, others arrive. During graduation season, the company welcomed a batch of post-90s graduates.
It must be said that this group of newcomers truly did not compare to the old timers. Not only were their skills inadequate despite their great expectations, but they also weren’t diligent at work. They were asked to learn how others organized Weibo copy, but soon they started browsing entertainment news instead.
As a result, many didn’t even last the three-day trial period, quitting due to the excessive workload or simply because they disliked the job.
In the end, only two girls remained in the company, Sun Jia and Xun Fei.
