Chainfeeds Guide:
We don't want to be just another typical crypto community, so we decided to focus on stablecoin education and promotion - a topic long overlooked because stablecoins themselves do not appreciate in value and are not easily speculative.
Article Source:
https://x.com/proofofnathan/status/1949488178173288810
Article Author:
Nathan
Perspective:
Nathan: I'm fortunate to lead Plasma's growth, and the core of our work is the community. From the beginning, we didn't want to establish a typical crypto community. Compared to currencies that can surge in price and be speculative, stablecoins have been long ignored, simply because their prices are stable and not easy to hype. But it's precisely this overlooked corner that inspired us to create the Stablecoin Collective. In the past six months, stablecoins have gradually entered the crypto industry's spotlight, and Plasma has always been at the core of this change. This may have an element of luck, but true community success relies on natural interest and participation, not surface-level activity purchased through so-called InfoFi rewards. From policy to industry trends, the entire industry is gradually recognizing the real-world implementation value of stablecoins, which is a genuine, externally driven trend, and we just happen to be standing in the right position. Here are some common issues: 1) Excessively pursuing quantity while ignoring quality and signals can backfire. Communities obsessed with tweet numbers rather than meaningful content will ultimately lose credibility and user loyalty. Members posting ten AI-generated contents daily do not truly care about the community's deeper goals. 2) Content only oriented towards the internal community: You never want to build a closed community that deters potential new members. When every meme or post only makes sense to insiders, external newcomers will feel excluded, and the community's growth momentum will stall. 3) Not timely retiring memes: Not all memes are worth keeping. Some memes might only be interesting to a small group or maintain popularity for just a week. If a meme is completely incomprehensible to outsiders, it should be retired early to maintain the community's clear and focused expression. 4) Copying other communities' models: Lightning doesn't strike the same place twice, a principle equally applicable in community building. Copying another community's successful formula will never work. True community culture is naturally generated and cannot be cloned. Each community should showcase its unique values, goals, and vision. 5) Overly listening to community voices: Don't misunderstand, community feedback is indeed important, but most members don't understand long-term development routes. Community leaders must find a balance between listening to opinions and maintaining the company's strategic direction. [Original text was in English]
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