Every single account on the site gets a token & wallet.
Free market then takes over. 📊 💬 (2/x)
When you enter the main site, you receive the option to buy #bitclout w/ #bitcoin. The bitclout coin is what gets exchanged for creator-specific tokens within the bitclout platform
P.S.covered up my public key for the site because I don’t need bitcoin in the site yet :)
but if you want to send me any 🎁 in ethereum, plz send ETH to vron.eth (4/x)
🔘It was fascinating to watch the price of #bitclout travel upward as more folks entered into the load testing, & then the price dropped as testers started buying into creator coins. [These were the sample coin prices as floated by the testers] (5/x)
🔘There is a feed where people early to the platform were posting, & it looks like a very simple Twitter
🔘The protocol is #decentralized & would allow for devs anywhere to add more features to this platform or set up nodes to power #bitclout (6/x)
⌛️your teams are talking about the past or the future
⌛️your friends are talking about the past or the future
⌛️your mind goes to the past or the future
Are you more excited about solving for the future?
Or are you stuck in the past? ⬇️
In the case of teams:
Especially in the youth-driven world of tech, the older a person is, the more the negative stereotypes of ageism follow them:
Backward. Boomer. Cheugy. Out of the loop.
Experienced people in tech tend to be bashful about their age, ironically even if they’re quite young.
If you’ve been in crypto for 5 years, you might call yourself a crypto grandparent.
These stereotypes aren’t fair, but there are reasons for them...
You may have heard there’s a huge gap b/t “traditional” marketing & web3 marketing.
This isn’t true.
The tactics may be different. The first principles are similar.
In my experience & observations, there are at least 3️⃣ areas of similarity between web3 & web2 marketing:🧵
1️⃣ Focus on the community
In web2, you may see this as focusing on the user or customer. In web3, you have to broaden this lens to the mindset of the community using your product, token, or engaging with your project.
But community marketing is not new to web3.
Education, politics, gaming, & even “traditional” tech all have community management functions. DevRel professionals blend these skills with technical chops. It goes beyond silo’d 1:1 customer support.
The best people in community in web3 tend to come from these backgrounds.
I’m doing #ship30for30 once again because @dickiebush and @Nicolascole77 have done such a great job of building a killer community that keeps us all accountable
I’ve done this before. I’ve learned a lot. And this time around, there are three commitments I’m making: 🧵
1. Be less precious
It’s so so easy with any project to craft it, edit it, dig into it and get really wrapped up in all the things that should be better, could go write, could go wrong...
...But in the world of digital ANYTHING, especially digital writing, it’s more important to just SHIP.
Your words may feel like trash. You never know for whom they’ll be a new treasure.
When I first joined the @pokemongoapp marketing team,I had never worked in gaming before. I wasn’t even a marketer.
In this MONSTER thread,I'll tell my story & give advice on how to break in👇🏽
When I graduated from college, I went into management consulting.
I did this because it was considered a “safe”, “prestigious”, and “well-paying” entry level job.
It was competitive to get, and I got a lot of benefits from the job...
I was able to travel the world, rack up hotel points, work with many different people across different Fortune 500 companies, and meet a lot of smart people.
Market experts like @NftOnce & @DCLBlogger talk a lot about how supply is important to watch when making #NFT investments. 1/1's are your best bet and are EXPENSIVE for that reason.
Want to talk supply glut?As of today, @niftygateway has released 93% the quant. of 2020 NFTs
2/5
The number of #NFT pieces in general going out in the market place is also going up as you can see in the prior table and in the below chart