I got into community management almost by accident. When I joined Entity Finance, it became clear pretty fast that in crypto, the community around a project is not separate from the product. It basically is the product. If people don't trust it, talk about it, and care about it, nothing else really matters. That reality shaped how I approached the work from day one.
One of the projects I'm most proud of is the Entity Project Dialogues, a live interview series I put together on X Spaces. I handled everything from booking guests to running the actual sessions. We had founders, executives, and well-known names from the Web3 and trading space come through, and the series built up over 100,000 total listeners with around 1,500 per episode on average.
Disclaimer: Some live recordings are no longer available. X automatically removes certain recordings after a period of time. Only what could be recovered is shown here, and a few episodes are still missing.
Over three years, I ran the communities on Discord and Telegram, which grew to over 50,000 members. A lot of that came down to consistency: showing up, keeping people informed, and making sure there was always something worth engaging with — be it conversations, contests, subject debates, or just pure tomfoolery. Nothing magic about it.
On X, we took the account from 16,000 to over 200,000 followers and crossed over 9.2 million impressions. The content that worked best was always the stuff that took something complicated, like how a blockchain mechanism works or what a trading protocol actually does, and explained it in a way that didn't make people feel stupid. That became a real focus for me.