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KINGMIRAX pfp
KINGMIRAX
@kingmirax
Lately, I’ve been observing a strange trend in Web3 Founders are starting to reward noise over conviction They chase the loudest voices… but forget those who believed when no one else did Here’s what I’ve found In the early days of any Web3 project, the most valuable people are often The first 50 who minted The first testers who gave raw feedback The community members who stayed when the hype died But lately, they’ve been replaced with “trend peddlers” I ran a soft research check Top projects now allocate over 70% of attention to “influencers,” not grassroots believers These trend voices amplify quickly but rarely stay What happens next? Retention drops Conviction evaporates Roadmaps stall As a strategist, I believe this is a misalignment of value Conviction is long term sustainability Noise is short term metrics When you trade believers for visibility, you weaken your project’s foundation No amount of retweets can save a project that lacks core loyalty
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KINGMIRAX
@kingmirax
This isn’t to downplay content creators or influencers they matter But influence is not belief One shares the project for reach The other backs it with heart, patience, and feedback even when no one’s watching Founders must balance both!!! Identify your believers (early testers, consistent supporters, low-noise contributors) Build a private loop with them insight ➡️ feedback ➡️ reward Use “hype agents” to amplify, not replace belief Treat hype as marketing fuel, not a mission compass To the founders reading this… Your believers are your moat Ignore them, and your product becomes just another trend Empower them, and they’ll build your legacy… one use case, one feedback loop, one conviction filled action at a time 🖊️KINGMIRAX
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Tracyit 🫧
@tracyit
In the perfect world, we would have the exact right amount of both.
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