1) From the beginning, giving one person the chance to occupy a whole community is not even healthy because naturally everybody else slowly becomes a tenant in a land that was built by everyone’s sweat together.
And we already know what usually happens once that “messiah” is not active anymore. Chat messages from 25+ slowly drop to 15, then 4. Suddenly nobody talks for 2 or 3 days correctly. Momentum starts slowing down and before you even notice it, scammers begin flooding the group with fake airdrop links and everything starts becoming boring to new members joining the community.
2) The hardest part of this for me would be letting people solve things themselves.
I’m a Leo so naturally I like helping people a lot, not in a dramatic way but in a strategic way. Seeing someone ask for help when I already know the answer and still keeping quiet would honestly make my heart heavy. Most times I would rather step in and solve it than sit back watching confusion grow.
3) Majority of times, the question eventually gets solved by other people. But a lot of times it’s not explained in a beginner friendly way.
There are many young people entering Web3 through Discord and Telegram daily and you can’t explain things like everybody is already an expert. That’s one thing this material made me realize deeply. As a community manager you need patience and you always need to keep that beginner mindset when explaining things to people.