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Web3 teams, stop wasting marketing budgets on the X platform.
Original Title: How Web3 Teams Burn Marketing Budgets on X
Original Author: Stacy Muur
Original Compilation: Golem, Odaily Planet Daily
Every month, Green Dots studies KOL promotional activities on the X platform to understand the strategies of other Web3 marketing teams and track which tactics and post styles are truly effective. However, due to X’s new paid collaboration policy changing the marketing landscape on the platform_ (see: Elon Musk casually upended the crypto KOL scene),_ most promotional strategies for Web3 projects are no longer suitable. Stacy Muur reveals common issues in recent Web3 promotional activities in this article, using Starknet as a case study.
Author’s note: This is not targeted at Starknet; their technical strength remains solid. Despite doubts and skepticism from outsiders after the airdrop and TGE, the team continues to release and develop products, which is commendable. But in this article, I focus on one aspect: marketing strategy. Starknet’s recent product promotion is just a typical example.
How does Starknet handle advertising and promotion?
Recently, Starknet launched strkBTC [₿], inviting some content creators on X to promote the event. They used a very classic promotional approach:
Although this promotion took place in late February, to comply with X’s paid collaboration policy, some creators included paid partnership tags when posting related content. But the focus of this article isn’t on paid disclosures; it’s on the effectiveness of this promotional strategy itself.
On February 10, another announcement about Starknet was released, and their marketing team conducted another KOL promotion. The same routine: first a video announcement, then promotion through KOLs.
Of course, Starknet also employs other promotional methods, such as publishing long articles and conducting some campaigns in Korean-speaking regions.
For transparency, I don’t know who manages this activity or if an agency is involved. I’m just an outsider offering some thoughts from a marketing perspective.
One obvious issue throughout the promotional process is the weak screening of participating creators.
X is fundamentally a perception layer. Ideally, promotion on X should generate:
But is that what we see? Not really.
If you use simple filters on X to look at popular posts mentioning Starknet in February, the results are clear.
The most mentioned post is actually by Warhol. Overall, in February, only over 100 independent posts mentioning Starknet received more than 10 likes. For a well-known L2 ecosystem, that’s not a lot.
Some popular organic mentions of Starknet include:
These roughly represent Starknet’s mention volume on X in February. This raises a more important question—not just about Starknet, but about the decline of traditional Web3 marketing strategies on X.
Why are classic Web3 advertising and promotional strategies failing?
For years, the default Web3 marketing pattern has been: Announcements — KOL promotion — Community discussion.
In a timeline where X isn’t overly crowded, narratives are strong, and most promotions aren’t easily recognized as paid, this classic pattern works. But after certain changes, it no longer does.
Paid disclosures kill covert promotion
Once creators start adding paid disclosure labels, the promotion becomes obvious to followers.
First, users see an announcement, then within 24 hours, 5-10 similar promotional posts appear, all with similar content. Users can immediately recognize this pattern. It doesn’t spark community discussion; instead, it signals “this is an ad campaign.”
In the crypto Twitter environment, ads rarely generate community discussion; users tend to scroll past them.
KOL behavior is now very recognizable
Crypto Twitter has matured; people understand how KOL marketing works.
When the same group of creators quote the same announcement with slightly different wording, it’s easy to interpret as a coordinated promotional campaign. Once KOL content is clearly identified as promotional, user engagement drops because audiences shift from curiosity to ad filtering.
X rewards topic engagement, not announcements
X isn’t a distribution channel but a narrative space. Unless Web3 project announcements can trigger:
Without these dynamic elements, dissemination only reaches users briefly and doesn’t truly win their minds. To gain real buzz, Web3 projects should change their marketing sequence.
Old process: Announcement → KOL promotion → Community discussion
New process: Build a topic → Spark creator debates → Generate community content → Final announcement
In this way, the announcement becomes the last confirmation, not the starting point.
Skipping the narrative phase makes promotion impossible.
How to redesign a promotional campaign for Starknet?
Let’s be realistic: Starknet carries heavy baggage. The panic, uncertainty, and skepticism triggered during the previous airdrop phase can’t be solved just by explanations and promotional videos; the project needs to control the conversation. Different goals require different marketing strategies.
If the goal is to win user minds
Engage actively in controversies. Don’t try to suppress critics; instead, craft topics that spark debate.
For example:
Then sponsor posts listing rankings, compare Starknet with other projects, and create debate-driven content. Half the timeline might support Starknet, the other half attack it, but both increase exposure. Creating drama isn’t bad marketing; ignored marketing is.
If the goal is to dominate the narrative
Stop publishing lengthy PR articles; few read them. Instead, produce visual infographics, ecosystem maps, competitor comparisons, and short reusable frameworks for KOLs. Give creators space to remix content—repackaging is more powerful than mere quotes.
Leading the narrative isn’t about a single good article but about dozens of derivative posts—this is storytelling at scale.
If the goal is to attract developers
Remember, developer acquisition is B2B. Announcements on X alone won’t effectively attract developers. The project should focus on:
Once this trend is established, guiding developers becomes much easier, as they chase hot topics too.
Conclusion
The traditional Web3 promotional model (Announcement → KOL promotion) is gradually dying on X. The new approach is more like: Design a topic → Spark creator interest → Initiate discussion → Continue community content.
Announcements remain important, but they should no longer be the starting point—they should be the final confirmation.