I was a bit surprised at your use of the word "exponential", so I thought it would be interesting to chart my own reputation history. By itself, that isn't very revealing. What we really want to know is the relationship between the rate of reputation growth and the rate of answering! Here it is: ![enter image description here][2] The top is a simple accumulating count of answers. The bottom is rep. Well, what do you know - _they are almost a perfect match!_ So what this shows is that there is _no_ exponential growth accruing whatsoever. This is _not_ a machine that will go of itself. The way to increase reputation is to _keep answering_. There is no royal road to geometry after all. [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/67pQK.png [2]: https://i.sstatic.net/kJNMP.png It's an interesting result. One of my earliest answers is responsible, all by itself, for quite a sizable chunk of my rep. So you see, the fact that it was _early_ was significant, like giving a child a small stock investment. That demonstrates how the mere lapse of time matters. But of course, on the other extreme, I have also given a huge number of answers that never gained me any rep at all - a long, useless tail... So for me, at least, it all comes out in the wash and reputation is more or less in proportion to the number of answers I've given. Ultimately, it's _all_ about the future. When you are answering, you are laying down a legacy. You have no idea what that legacy will be; it can be quite surprising what answers turn out to be useful for lots of people over time. But that - the inheritance from the accumulated years of answering questions - is where rep ultimately comes from. See also the second part of my answer here: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/271754/341994.