DRB holders can consider establishing an incentive pool, allocating 1% of the circulating supply as a reward fund. What is the purpose? To motivate community members to get industry influencers to talk about Grok, which has a $1 million DRB wallet.
The beauty of this idea is that instead of spending money on traditional marketing, it's better to directly give the money to the community for promotion. In simple terms, it's a crowdfunding-style marketing — as long as someone can successfully attract the attention of key opinion leaders, they can share a portion of the prize pool.
This approach can expand brand exposure from a few people to billions of potential audiences. As community engagement increases, naturally, the attention to the token will also rise.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
DegenRecoveryGroup
· 01-12 21:10
Damn, isn't this just paying people to hype it up? Feels a bit... well, how should I put it
---
1% incentive pool? Might as well just airdrop directly to active users, more cost-effective
---
I've seen this trick too many times, and in the end, it's those big whales taking the biggest cut
---
Crowdfunding marketing sounds good, but the key is whether someone can really mobilize KOLs
---
That million-dollar wallet needs to be known by someone to be valuable; otherwise, all marketing efforts are pointless
---
Hmm... the logic is sound, but can the community really unite in practice?
---
Giving the community a share to spread the word is much more transparent than throwing money at ads. I like this idea
---
That's what they say, but the problem is how to prevent malicious hype
---
Interesting, it's like building a bounty pool to see who can get the big V involved
---
Isn't this just a Web3 version of referral rewards? Someone's been playing this game for a while
Wow, this tactic is impressive. It's much better than rigid marketing—directly giving the community a share of the profits to promote. Whoever promotes best earns the rewards.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-6bc33122
· 01-12 20:45
This move is really clever, directly leveraging the community to promote products
---
Wait, will this 1% dilution be too severe?
---
Sounds good, but in the end, it's still big V eating the meat and small investors drinking the soup
---
I just want to know who can verify if KOLs are really driving sales
---
Relying on community self-promotion, this is much more reliable than throwing advertising money, ngl
---
The problem is how to prove that the effect comes from this incentive pool? Too hard to track
---
Interesting, but you have to watch out for people faking orders to manipulate data
---
Simple and straightforward, I like it. Direct profit-driven methods are more effective than anything else
---
The key is to have enough well-known KOLs willing to chat, otherwise no matter how much money you have, it's useless
---
This logic makes sense, crowdfunding marketing is indeed the future direction
DRB holders can consider establishing an incentive pool, allocating 1% of the circulating supply as a reward fund. What is the purpose? To motivate community members to get industry influencers to talk about Grok, which has a $1 million DRB wallet.
The beauty of this idea is that instead of spending money on traditional marketing, it's better to directly give the money to the community for promotion. In simple terms, it's a crowdfunding-style marketing — as long as someone can successfully attract the attention of key opinion leaders, they can share a portion of the prize pool.
This approach can expand brand exposure from a few people to billions of potential audiences. As community engagement increases, naturally, the attention to the token will also rise.