I’ve managed crypto communities of 5,000+ members across Telegram and Discord.
Most of them were built on hype. Here’s what separates the ones that actually lasted 👇
Reminder to every Web3 founder reading this your community manager is the face of your project to thousands of people daily. Hire well. Pay well. Trust them.
Reminder to every Web3 founder reading this your community manager is the face of your project to thousands of people daily. Hire well. Pay well. Trust them.
Random thought best CMs I know aren’t just online when it’s their job. They genuinely live in these communities. You can’t fake that energy and Web3 people can tell.
Random thought best CMs I know aren’t just online when it’s their job. They genuinely live in these communities. You can’t fake that energy and Web3 people can tell.
Bear markets don’t kill Web3 communities. Silence from the team does. I’ve watched communities of 4,000+ members evaporate not from bad news but from no news.
Bear markets don’t kill Web3 communities. Silence from the team does. I’ve watched communities of 4,000+ members evaporate not from bad news but from no news.
CM Tip #3: AMAs are only as good as the questions. Prime your community beforehand. Collect questions early. Brief the team. An unprepared AMA does more damage than good.
CM Tip #3: AMAs are only as good as the questions. Prime your community beforehand. Collect questions early. Brief the team. An unprepared AMA does more damage than good.
The best Web3 communities I’ve seen don’t just have members. They have missionaries. People who defend, educate and recruit without being asked. That doesn’t happen by accident
The best Web3 communities I’ve seen don’t just have members. They have missionaries. People who defend, educate and recruit without being asked. That doesn’t happen by accident
FUD will hit your community. It’s not a matter of if, it’s when. The projects that survive it have one thing in common they communicate before the community starts guessing.
FUD will hit your community. It’s not a matter of if, it’s when. The projects that survive it have one thing in common they communicate before the community starts guessing.