If I had to start a SNDCT community from zero tomorrow, my first move in the first 48 hours would be identifying active Web3 users who already participate in airdrops, onchain activities, and ecosystem discussions. I would start conversations with my friends, CT creators, and early adopters to understand their biggest pain points when discovering opportunities. Instead of immediately promoting the product, I would focus on discussing how people currently find campaigns, avoid scams, and evaluate whether an opportunity is worth their time. Those insights would help create authentic content and attract the first group of believers. However I already started explaining the syndicate to my friends and community members who are either new in web3 or facing difficulties in finding early campaigns.
If I took over a community that was already in trouble, my first 48 hours would be spent listening rather than posting. I would review previous announcements, community sentiment, support tickets, social comments, and conversations across Discord, Telegram, and X because whenever I joined a new project as Ambassador I go through past conversation I took me 2-3 days to examine everything previously happend .I would speak directly with active members . Before making any public statement, I would gather enough information to understand the root problems and identify the concerns that matter most to the community.
Building a community from zero suits my personality better because I enjoy creating relationships, educating users, and growing awareness from the ground up. As an ambassador, I naturally focus on representing products, creating content, and bringing new users into an ecosystem. Taking over a struggling community would be more challenging for me because rebuilding trust after negative experiences requires difficult conversations and crisis management, but I would still approach it by listening carefully and maintaining transparent communication.