How using NFT Badges Resulted in 156 Products Sign-Ups in 24 Hours

Akash Mokashi
1 reply
Twitter link with slides if you prefer: https://twitter.com/0xKashi_/status/1638153135511449600 1/n Badges rule, don't they? The fact that over 6 million POAPs exist, and millions more badges across other platforms, shows that people enjoy being recognized on-chain. So, we decided to apply this to our own community, Dynamos! 2/n Dynamos: who are they? They're the creative backbone of Revise. They come from varying technical backgrounds and help us think through the frontiers of the NFT space. Our Dynamos group currently has 25 members and is growing democratically. 3/n Why did we use badges? We had a launch on ProductHunt on March 16. The launch was a simplified version of our SDK to help people get started building dynamic NFTs. In recognition of our Dynamos' active advocacy, we decided to add NFT badges to reward the Dynamos. 4/n How did this play out? A day before launch, we dropped the bounty on our Dynamo internal group. Badges for all participants, and a really fun reward for the best click-through. Several tweets were sent out well before launch, showing how enthusiastic the group was! 5/n How did things turn out? On Twitter, we generated 1770 views, 33 retweets, and 55 likes. We've already received 156 signups as a result of this! 6/n Want to try out our badges or collaborate with us and create a combined badge? Just leave a comment :) Claim a free dynamic NFT and a new badge just by using your twitter ID here and using the code "ReviseEarly2096" https://quests.revise.network

Replies

Kacper Srodecki
POAPs are great but not for IRL events, easy to fake it and use on multiple accounts/share the code on social media. Great thread tho, I'll make sure to come back to your company twitter profile and do some more research. ;)