I learned this lesson the hard way in web3. 8 years ago, I believed every founder with passion, a pitch deck, and big dreams.
I connected them to my network, introduced investors, and used every resource I had to help them succeed. Some became success stories.
But others?
They took the money, disappeared into the noise, and left reputations damaged behind them. Those moments change how you think.
Because in web3, your network isn’t just a contact list. - It is your currency. - Your credibility. - Your legacy.
And protecting it is far more valuable than chasing fast money.
Today, as a KOL Manager who connects founders to VCs, I’ve learned to spot the red flags that signal:
“This startup is here to extract liquidity and exit.”
Let me explain what I look for now.
→ Product-Market Fit Before Pitch Decks
If the product does not solve a real market need, it will collapse at listing.
We don’t need another:
- basic DEX on EVM - NFT marketplace - new L1 or L2 - AI trading bot - launchpad
These spaces are oversaturated with giants who already own the market. New founders entering these categories rarely survive long enough to justify investment.
A weak, silent, or artificial community? That is a slow death.
→ The Team Mindset Reveals Everything
You can tell within two calls whether a founder thinks long-term or short-term.
Ask the hard questions:
- What makes you different in your niche? - How do you defend market share? - What is your competitive edge?
If the answers sound like hype, walk away. Web3 is still evolving. It is full of brilliant ideas and passionate builders. But enthusiasm without strategy is dangerous.
My advice?
→ Do not sacrifice years of network building for short-term pennies. → Bridges take time, respect, trust, and consistency to build. → And they can burn in seconds.
If you’re a founder or builder in web3:
• focus on real products • build community with intention • think long-term • respect the networks that support you
Because the people who open doors for you remember everything.
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Don’t Burn Bridges for Pennies.
I learned this lesson the hard way in web3.
8 years ago, I believed every founder with passion, a pitch deck, and big dreams.
I connected them to my network, introduced investors, and used every resource I had to help them succeed.
Some became success stories.
But others?
They took the money, disappeared into the noise, and left reputations damaged behind them.
Those moments change how you think.
Because in web3, your network isn’t just a contact list.
- It is your currency.
- Your credibility.
- Your legacy.
And protecting it is far more valuable than chasing fast money.
Today, as a KOL Manager who connects founders to VCs, I’ve learned to spot the red flags that signal:
“This startup is here to extract liquidity and exit.”
Let me explain what I look for now.
→ Product-Market Fit Before Pitch Decks
If the product does not solve a real market need, it will collapse at listing.
We don’t need another:
- basic DEX on EVM
- NFT marketplace
- new L1 or L2
- AI trading bot
- launchpad
These spaces are oversaturated with giants who already own the market. New founders entering these categories rarely survive long enough to justify investment.
→ Community > Code
A strong community is a growth engine:
- partners join
- exchanges list
- revenue flows
- sentiment drives liquidity
A weak, silent, or artificial community?
That is a slow death.
→ The Team Mindset Reveals Everything
You can tell within two calls whether a founder thinks long-term or short-term.
Ask the hard questions:
- What makes you different in your niche?
- How do you defend market share?
- What is your competitive edge?
If the answers sound like hype, walk away.
Web3 is still evolving.
It is full of brilliant ideas and passionate builders.
But enthusiasm without strategy is dangerous.
My advice?
→ Do not sacrifice years of network building for short-term pennies.
→ Bridges take time, respect, trust, and consistency to build.
→ And they can burn in seconds.
If you’re a founder or builder in web3:
• focus on real products
• build community with intention
• think long-term
• respect the networks that support you
Because the people who open doors for you remember everything.