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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
1/6 I was reading this new paper on how 300K academics migrated from X to Bluesky, and I wanted to share some reflections because it shows quite clearly how social networks actually grow. What I’m about to say isn’t new. I’ve often been critical of Farcaster’s current growth strategy, and that’s because it’s not grounded in how networks or virality really work. Instead, it feels that FC is based on well-funded wishful thinking: abstract ideas wrapped in the language of innovation, blending Read/Write/Own concepts with old-school Silicon Valley consumer app logic… without fully committing to either. At the end of the day it leans heavily on FOMO and incentives to drive (low-quality) growth. (Farcaster Pro subscriptions stalling as soon as users -or bots- hit the 10k NFT reward cap is a perfect example of this.) And yes, experimentation is great. Some of the best ideas emerge from it. But we also have a long-established understanding of how humans (as social and emotional animals) behave.
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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
2/6 I read The Tipping Point a while back (sorry if there are errors), and honestly, I think Farcaster has more to learn from that book than from any corporate or Web3 playbook out there According to the author there are three key archetypes that drive the spread of ideas and the growth of social networks: - Connectors: People who seem to know everyone across different social, professional, and cultural circles. You know, the kind of person who’s always like “Oh u should talk to…” - Mavens: Knowledge nerds. They're specialists and love sharing info on their field. People follow them to know what’s worth paying attention to, and they’re often the ones others love to read or listen to - Salesmen: Charismatic high-energy persuaders. e.g., if Farcaster were a great place for fitness content, they’d convince you to join. But if they’re into fitness and 90% of the Farcaster feed is about minting, gambling & memecoins… they probably won’t have the energy to sell it (unless that’s their thing)
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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
3/6 These are the types of people who create tipping points in networks. And they're necessary because influence isn’t distributed equally. And right now, Farcaster is mostly missing this people (except maybe some little-influencers in the Web3-builder bubble): Those who resonate with builders and crypto bros. This creates a self-reinforcing barrier… one that keeps pushing away anyone who isn’t already fluent in that niche (and even people in that niche that has life outside of it and finds the feed boring and monothematic). And I would say, even within that niche, Farcaster is struggling to attract its top connectors. And that’s probably why they activated the Solana strategy: searching for a more energetic, engaged community.
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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
4/6 So basically as of today with the current strategy… - Farcaster doesn’t seem interested in catching the wave when other networks fail (e.g. X being censored in Brazil, or its takeover by an unstable billionaire with far-right sympathies). - Farcaster doesn’t seem interested in attracting or spotlighting diverse voices in the feed. (Connectors and Mavens would have a hard time sticking around. Salesmen would have a hard time convincing their friends.) - Farcaster doesn’t seem interested in becoming a true social layer for the internet. (There’s a history of jeopardizing external clients instead of helping them grow to achieve diverse niches. The branding leans “app-first”, not “protocol-first”. It feels more like a Twitter replacement than an open protocol.)
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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
5/6 As of today, the only clear growth strategy is using some decent levers (like “earn onchain with Farcaster”)… but that mostly produces low-quality content or content that ressonates with the current memberbase, and blocks the inclusion of strong supernodes (connectors) across a range of topics (which is exactly what people look for in a social network). To make things worse, the growth via miniapps is completely siloed inside Farcaster and mostly focused on minting/gambling loops… meaning it can’t even drive growth outside Farcaster’s current boundaries, helping Farcaster become a social layer. So what’s happening? 👉 Farcaster is growing against its own network logic. It’s doing okay as a crypto-native Twitter clone. But if it truly wants to become a social layer for the internet (one based on Web3 principles) it’s going to need more than rewards and mint/bet buttons.
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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
6/6 It needs: - Real utility as a social layer for external apps - Cultural bridges - A feed that doesn’t feel like a mix of Cheeto dust, autistic engineer takes, bot farms, and wealthy crypto bro vibes that 99% of the population can’t relate to - Leveraged migration opportunities - A strong and diverse foundation of Connectors, Mavens, and Salesmen That’s exactly what happened with Bluesky… and why academics left Twitter to go there. Paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2505.24801 (Can't wait for the 10k char Farcaster Pro casts!)
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Ferran 🐒 pfp
Ferran 🐒
@ferran
Or maybe I should just use @paragraph instead lol
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fountain.ink pfp
fountain.ink
@fountaindotink
you should try fountain.ink instead, lol
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