One thing I've learned over the years is that not every position deserves an audience.
Too many KOLs use X as a running journal of every coin they touch. It's great for engagement, but terrible for the space. Long term, it makes crypto even harder for newcomers to navigate.
The healthiest version of CT is one where people only put their reputation behind their highest-conviction ideas. Not every low-cap, rotation, or impulse buy.
I probably talk about one new coin every month or two (if that). Meanwhile, I'm buying and selling things every day.
The difference is simple: most trades are just trades. Opportunities to make quick money come and go every day. Genuine conviction is rare.
If every coin is a "must-buy," your audience eventually stops knowing which ideas you actually believe in.
Will you still have bad calls? Absolutely. That's part of the game. But if you're willing to put your name behind an idea, hold it through the volatility, and publicly own the outcome, people will learn to trust your process. Even when you're wrong.
Personally, if I shill a coin on X, I'd be comfortable pitching that same coin to my mom or my closest friends. Maybe that's a high bar, but I think every investment thesis you share should be treated as an extension of your reputation.
The biggest edge in the current market isn't being first to buy.
It's having the conviction to hold.
A lot of the coins ripping today spent days or even weeks below a $1M market cap before anyone cared.
The opportunity usually exists long before the crowd notices.
$ANSEM flipping $PUMP would raise the ceilings on all our bags.
you should be rooting for $ANSEM whether you hold it or not.
rising tide lifts all boats.
Saylor selling bitcoin:native is actually bullish.
The market wants certainty. Selling means they have more funds to cover any future payments.
And that kind of protects the bigger stash which is why we’re going up.