Each week I put together a post that broke down the number of accounts that were present at different levels. Here was last week's post.
@taskmaster4450/change-in-steem-distribution-levels-2-3-19-we-keep-growing
This was motivated by a breakdown I came across about Bitcoin wallets.
Knowing what the distribution of $HIVE is important. However, finding out the pace of the change is equally as valuable. Since this is a process I just started, it will take a bit of time to figure out the exact pace. For now, we are establishing a baseline of which to compare.
I use the data provided by Steemitboard put together by @arcange.
The idea is that Hive needs to keep adding depth. To be a thriving blockchain, we need users. That said, I do not feel that total accounts is a good barometer. Yes, it is the starting point but we know there are a lot of accounts that sign up, do a couple clicks, and then depart.
To me the starting point is the number of total accounts that earn a single Hive Power (HP). The reason I feel this was is two-fold. First, each new account is someone who did something to earn $HIVE. Somehow, it got into the account and was powered up.
The other reason is because we are expanding the amount of people who have some form of cryptocurrency. This is vital for the industry in general. We need more people, overall, to engage in cryptocurrency and new accounts gaining HP is a good start.
Obviously, we cannot determine if every new account is a separate, new person but we can presume a large amount of them are.
Here is the chart with the comparison from a week ago to today along with the number from when I first started this.
The "Difference" is the number of new accounts that reached each level throughout the weeks. We see two columns, one for last week and the other for this week.
From these numbers, we also see the depth of distribution going deeper. At the same time, more accounts are moving up the scale to higher levels. This is exactly what the ecosystem needs.
Another chart I created was the percentages at different levels for the accounts that did achieve at least 1 HP.
This chart is from November 25th.

This chart shows that of the accounts that get at least 1 HP, 45.12% go on to get 10 HP. Following down the column, .84% of all accounts that get a single KP end up reaching Dolphin status (5k HP).
The next column does the same. Of all that accounts that 10 SP, 21.22% go on to get 100 HP.
And so on.
Here are the numbers today.

The goal is to see the pace of accounts reaching these levels increase over time. As the number of applications on this blockchain grow and the amount of people using the applications expands, we should see the entry level, 1 HP, increase. Of course, this will require the applications onboarding users themselves which is starting to take place albeit on a minimal scale.
We all would love to see these numbers triple overnight. That aside, as long as we see progress each week, we know things are moving ahead. The pace might not be where any of us want it yet we can see, slowly, the ecosystem is growing.
This week everyone but the Dolphins showed growth. This category went negative for the first time, albeit with a -1.
It is encouraging to see a week with a couple hundred accounts getting their first HP. This is where the journey begins. Also, in terms of middle class growth, the Minnows has a good showing with 54 new accounts reaching the 500 HP level.
What I like to take away from this is the consistent growth we are seeing. The number just keep improving. By focusing upon the lower end of the spectrum, we can see the width and depth of things growing.
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