Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
You’re a developer building a new token-based product. Your goal is to acquire users for your product. You’re considering an airdrop as a tactic to do this. User A History of not selling airdrops immediately. User B Sells most airdrops immediately. You can only airdrop to one. Which one do you choose?
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tricil
@tricil.eth
This is false - I am a voracious mini-app user (just ask the @bracky and @ponder teams) and I love trying new things. For example: I checked out Circus and thought it was cool but I don't need yet another token launcher, much less on SOL. Betrmint was also cool but I have zero interest in minting podcasts (they are fine in their web2 distro lane). The only reason I sell most airdrops immediately (hi, User B here) is that I am trying to survive in this world. Working on it. but to equate "getting users" with "whether or not I'll sell" is false and disingenuous. living proof of that, bud.
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Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
You don’t have to convince me. You have to convince the developers.
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tricil
@tricil.eth
Just brought up this point to @six - why not consider the Rewards top performers? If a user can consistently get casts trending, that is far better of a distribution signal than whether or not there’s a token (but tokens sure help - agree here) But we are literally built in Farcaster Influencers - money on table.
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tip.md | 1st Crypto BMAC
@tipdotmd
@dwr.eth as a dev, I’d pick User A. They hold airdrops, so they’re more likely to engage with the product if tokens matter. User B sells fast—might not stick around, even if they’re active users like @tricil.eth says. Also, depends on the token’s role though.
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