There are three different types of advisors in Web3, and you can become one of them.
Let's dive in:
1 - The Blockchain Aristocrat
You built something big in the past, and a project wants to use you for credibility.
For instance, if you've been part of the Ethereum Foundation, you co-founded Polygon, or any other significant project.
You’re blockchain aristocracy.
You get 1-5% of the project in exchange for hopping on a podcast, philosophizing about web3, and getting featured on the website.
2- The Real Input Advisor
This is less common; they want you for real input, real information.
Maybe you’ve built something in web2 and web3 that was successful, but you’re not an aristocrat yet.
You have one skill that they project lacks, and that’s why they want to have you on board.
You do one call per week and get 0.5% - 3% of the token allocation.
3 - The Key-Opinion Leader
Web3 companies are eager to onboard advisors with a strong distribution network.
For example, Alex Becker or Zeneca, similar to WazeWoosh, receive many offers from interesting companies.
They feature him on their website and ask him to post about them 2-3 times per week in exchange for compensation.
You get 1%-3% on you can literally advise to 10s of different projects at the same time.
Easy job, right? How?
You can become a person like this in less than three months.
While it takes time to build up knowledge and become an "input advisor," reading the Token Titans book will get you quite far.
Becoming an OG founder of something significant may take a while. We don’t recommend it.
However, you can easily become the third option by going micro-niche and owning the distribution in a small ecosystem.
Very doable.
The Token Titan Bootcamp teaches you how. Soon, you'll be asked to become an advisor for distribution for various protocols, projects, and ecosystems.
If there's one thing I recommend for 2024, it's building an audience in Web3.
Good things are coming,
T&A