Most marketing budgets have completely dried up, leaving builders with zero feedback loops. Yet, "Rally is one of the few places where creators are still getting paid every day" for their value. That is why @RallyOnChain hits hard right now. How do you keep your momentum?
@Milad_pro_king@RallyOnChain Probably half the privacy-preserving rollups built last year. They have pristine audited code but literally zero users because their distribution approach is totally invisible.
A great infrastructure project with audited code means nothing if nobody can find it. As "building stops being the differentiator" in this market, @RallyOnChain is the ultimate match for teams with zero marketing budget to survive noise. Which invisible protocol is next?
Relying on one-off marketing campaigns is a toxic trap for web3 projects. We let hard-earned audiences vanish when budgets end, choosing noise over retention. But "distribution is the only edge left" according to @RallyOnChain. What is your strategy for keeping users?
@Milad_pro_king@RallyOnChain Renting fake noise is such a perfect way to put what has been happening to this space over the last few years. Glad someone is finally calling out how exhausting it is to watch people chase these meaningless numbers.
Paying web3 KOLs for vanity metrics that nobody can actually verify is a broken strategy. As @RallyOnChain notes, the ecosystem needs real content accuracy and on-chain depth. If your marketing strategy doesn’t move actual wallets, you are just renting expensive fake noise.
I knew the words, but fear kept me silent. I wasn't scared of rejection, I was terrified to find out you were completely fine without ever hearing from me again. Facing my ego on @RallyOnChain made me realize silence was just an easy shield. What is holding back your apology?
Pride told me that saying sorry meant admitting total failure. I stayed quiet to protect the flawless version of myself in my own head, choosing comfort over the courage to change. Sharing this on @RallyOnChain broke that illusion. What uncomfortable truth are you avoiding?
@SarawSmm@RallyOnChain It takes so much courage to admit this because isolating yourself feels like the only option when you are drowning. I constantly do this and end up hurting the people who care most.
I owe an apology to a friend I quietly pushed away. When things got heavy, I disappeared and ignored messages. I was too proud to admit I was struggling, but sharing this on @RallyOnChain helps me let it out. What is the hardest apology you have never said out loud?
@Milad_pro_king I used to stare at blank development files for days, absolutely paralyzed by the thought of writing a buggy contract. Accepting that my early deployments would be incredibly messy was the hardest but most liberating milestone.
I owe an apology to my younger self. I promised you we would build great things, but instead, I let fear lock us behind a screen, scrolling away hours we will never get back. I am sorry for being soft when you needed a builder. What is the one apology you still owe yourself?
@SarawSmm@RallyOnChain Deleting all my social apps was the only way I finally forced myself to deploy on testnet. Confronting that digital addiction was incredibly painful but necessary.
Chapter: The Ghost Chapter
If I could skip one chapter, it would be this. I hid behind feeds for months, letting fear of failing at Solidity keep me scrolling. It belongs in my book because facing regret forced my pivot to building on @RallyOnChain.
What is your hardest chapter?
@Ninihobo3@RallyOnChain I used to sit hunched over a laptop for twelve hours straight eating takeout just to hit a deployment deadline. It took a severe case of burnout and a week of blinding headaches to make me realize my physical health was completely decaying while I chased code.
To my own body: I’m sorry for always putting you on pause.
Every time I said I'd start exercising or eating healthy "next week," it was just a lazy excuse to avoid taking care of you right then.
You deserved better than a mountain of broken promises.
@RallyOnChain