
Orchestrating DAOs: The Power of Composability
Sobol Labs Debuts with a Hats Protocol App TL;DR:Embracing onchain operations and composable code is key for DAOs to scale efficiently and adaptably. However, the complicated nature DAO protocol composition and accessibility to an easy to use composition experience poses challenges.Sobol Labs is a new sandbox for DAO leaders to experiment with smart contract compositions and DAO operations. Our first tool, the Hats Composer app, focuses on composability in DAO roles and authorities.We invite ...

The Pragmatists Guide to DAOing aka Reasonable ways to Govern a DAO
This article is by some people who have “been there, done that” in the self-management community. In DAOs, there is much talk about whale capture and token weighted voting. There is an assumption that if you haven't designed the system well, you will be attacked in the Dark Forest of open, permissionless, networks. But this debate seems to stem from a limited set of governance ideas. Less discussed is bottom up, consent-based governance with unique incentives and the ability to simply sa...

Diagramming DAOs #2: CityDAO
In this post, we’ll diagram the core operations and governance processes at CityDAO, based on the DAO’s available public documentation via their forums, Notion, blog posts, and so on. We chose CityDAO for the second installment of our Diagramming DAOs series because they are the first DAO to tackle the problem of on-chain real estate and find traction. On-chain real estate presents a host of unique problems. Not only must DAO members effectively coordinate within the DAO, they also must recko...
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Orchestrating DAOs: The Power of Composability
Sobol Labs Debuts with a Hats Protocol App TL;DR:Embracing onchain operations and composable code is key for DAOs to scale efficiently and adaptably. However, the complicated nature DAO protocol composition and accessibility to an easy to use composition experience poses challenges.Sobol Labs is a new sandbox for DAO leaders to experiment with smart contract compositions and DAO operations. Our first tool, the Hats Composer app, focuses on composability in DAO roles and authorities.We invite ...

The Pragmatists Guide to DAOing aka Reasonable ways to Govern a DAO
This article is by some people who have “been there, done that” in the self-management community. In DAOs, there is much talk about whale capture and token weighted voting. There is an assumption that if you haven't designed the system well, you will be attacked in the Dark Forest of open, permissionless, networks. But this debate seems to stem from a limited set of governance ideas. Less discussed is bottom up, consent-based governance with unique incentives and the ability to simply sa...

Diagramming DAOs #2: CityDAO
In this post, we’ll diagram the core operations and governance processes at CityDAO, based on the DAO’s available public documentation via their forums, Notion, blog posts, and so on. We chose CityDAO for the second installment of our Diagramming DAOs series because they are the first DAO to tackle the problem of on-chain real estate and find traction. On-chain real estate presents a host of unique problems. Not only must DAO members effectively coordinate within the DAO, they also must recko...
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Nearly 3,000 years ago, the first known cartographer sat down at his “desk” in ancient Babylon.
Wiping the sweat from his brow, he bent over a wet clay tablet with a chisel and hammer, and started to inscribe.
With meticulous detail, he created the cuneiform characters at the top of the document. Then, he started working on a map to diagram the complete mythological world of Babylon. He marked Babylon at the center, situated on the Euphrates river, which ran North-South. Numerous kingdoms, a canal, a swamp, and the sea (“region of bitter water”) are also marked on this map.
This unbaked clay tablet came to be known as the Babylonian Map of the World(or Imago Mundi). This object was created in 6th century BCE, and is the oldest existing map in the world.

We do not know exactly who created the tablet. Most likely he was a scribe(research shows most scribes in ancient Babylon were men). The tablet was likely a sacred object for the Akkadians who created it.
There is a high-level of craft present in the tablet–the symbols on the map are arranged in an aesthetically pleasing, symmetrical pattern. The Imago Mundi is a “cosmological map”, rather than a literal, geographically-accurate one.

From the map, we can see that ancient cartographer was more interested in showing the relationship between the symbols on the map, as opposed to providing an exact geographical map to scale, of Babylon and its surroundings.
While the Imago Mundi may seem crude, it actually contains a significant amount of information between its cuneiform-encoded myth, the map, and the symbols contained within the map.
Remarkably, the Imago Mundi gives a complete explanation of the Babylonian mythological world, which is why its significance is compared to the Rosetta Stone or the Code of Hammurabi, both created centuries later.
If you’re interested, this video is a fun examination of the Imago Mundi.
The Imago Mundi demonstrates a truth about maps, which is that, in its most basic form, a map is simply a type of chart that shows relationships between things.
We generally think of geographical maps when we think about maps, but maps can also depict relationships between people, places, things, and even ideas (mind maps and organizational charts being two examples).
People make maps to make sense of their environment. You could argue that mapmaking can be considered a kind of “sensemaking”.
It’s a topic that deserves a post of its own, but if you want a deeper dive on the “sensemaking = cartography” metaphor, this chapter on sensemaking from MIT’s Handbook for Teaching Leadership is great.
One snippet:
Maps can provide hope, confidence, and the means to move from anxiety to action. By mapping an unfamiliar situation, some of the fear of the unknown can be abated. By having all members of a team working from a common map of “what’s going on out there,” coordinated action is facilitated. In an age where people are often anxious about their circumstances, mapmaking becomes an essential element of sensemaking and leadership. In a world of action first, sensemaking provides a precursor to more effective action.
Deborah Ancona, from “The Handbook for Teaching Leadership”
For instance, in the pre-Google era(some 25 years ago), people used a “road atlas” to help them navigate from point A to point B. Road trippers and family vacationers used the maps in the road atlas to make sense of their journey, to guide and orient them along the way.

If you’ve ever gotten lost while driving during the pre-GPS era, you’ll remember what a boon it was to have a beat-up old road atlas stashed in your trunk.
An organizational chart is another kind of map. While org charts don’t map the physical coordinates of locations, they do provide a valuable utility in providing a source-of-truth for the hierarchies in traditional organizations, between both people and departments.
Flat or “networked” organizations, such as Teal organizations, or DAOs, often have org charts too. To use Teal’s philosophy as a guide here, flat organizations eschew traditional “command-and-control” organizational structures for a more decentralized, “sense and respond” approach to organizational dynamics, and facilitating work.
DAOs take that a step further, by embodying the spirit of Teal’s philosophy of self-governance and decentralized work–that whole sense-and-respond thing–and putting it into a more “scaled up” practice.
By using tokenomics, on-chain voting, and utilizing the DAO culture of “work on what you’re passionate about”, DAOs, like Teal organizations, give contributors the freedom to work on the things that they care about the most, while also giving members more direct control over governance and finances for the DAOs they’re apart of.
Since many DAOs have a significant permissionless component to them, contributors face unique challenges that they do not face in traditional organizations:
They must spend time orienting themselves to the DAO, to get acclimated and confidently make their first contribution to the DAO, generally in the form of labor.
They must continually build their own mental map of the DAO. In order to collaborate with other teams, manage projects effectively, and to understand what the full capabilities of the DAO are, DAO contributors must remember a lot.
They must hold team members and governance decision-makers accountable. A healthy DAO needs robust checks and balances, and a big part of that is making the power structures of the DAO visible, and allowing members various ways to participate.
Having an org map helps DAOs get new members up to speed faster, and helps DAO operators facilitate work within the DAO. This is even more true if the map is collaboratively maintained and edited, which as with any DAO project, it should be!
Obviously, you might expect to hear this argument from a company that builds a tool for creating a collaborative, context-rich org map for your DAO.
We’ll admit, at Sobol we’re devout believers in both the power of blockchain and the need for visually-driven tools to help DAOs operate more effectively.

In addition to having to coordinate hundreds or even thousands of remote contributors, DAOs are constantly in flux. Active DAOs grow linearly, often exponentially. This means that whatever map a DAO chooses to create, it must also be dynamic, robust, and context-rich.
Ideally, a DAO’s org map functions as a repository for the DAO, and contains a visually-navigable interface that contains all of the DAO’s relevant operational documentation. This might include project status updates, team agreements, current active roles in teams, active proposals, multi-sig addresses and so on.
Dm us at @teamSobol, or drop into our Discord server 🔵
Nearly 3,000 years ago, the first known cartographer sat down at his “desk” in ancient Babylon.
Wiping the sweat from his brow, he bent over a wet clay tablet with a chisel and hammer, and started to inscribe.
With meticulous detail, he created the cuneiform characters at the top of the document. Then, he started working on a map to diagram the complete mythological world of Babylon. He marked Babylon at the center, situated on the Euphrates river, which ran North-South. Numerous kingdoms, a canal, a swamp, and the sea (“region of bitter water”) are also marked on this map.
This unbaked clay tablet came to be known as the Babylonian Map of the World(or Imago Mundi). This object was created in 6th century BCE, and is the oldest existing map in the world.

We do not know exactly who created the tablet. Most likely he was a scribe(research shows most scribes in ancient Babylon were men). The tablet was likely a sacred object for the Akkadians who created it.
There is a high-level of craft present in the tablet–the symbols on the map are arranged in an aesthetically pleasing, symmetrical pattern. The Imago Mundi is a “cosmological map”, rather than a literal, geographically-accurate one.

From the map, we can see that ancient cartographer was more interested in showing the relationship between the symbols on the map, as opposed to providing an exact geographical map to scale, of Babylon and its surroundings.
While the Imago Mundi may seem crude, it actually contains a significant amount of information between its cuneiform-encoded myth, the map, and the symbols contained within the map.
Remarkably, the Imago Mundi gives a complete explanation of the Babylonian mythological world, which is why its significance is compared to the Rosetta Stone or the Code of Hammurabi, both created centuries later.
If you’re interested, this video is a fun examination of the Imago Mundi.
The Imago Mundi demonstrates a truth about maps, which is that, in its most basic form, a map is simply a type of chart that shows relationships between things.
We generally think of geographical maps when we think about maps, but maps can also depict relationships between people, places, things, and even ideas (mind maps and organizational charts being two examples).
People make maps to make sense of their environment. You could argue that mapmaking can be considered a kind of “sensemaking”.
It’s a topic that deserves a post of its own, but if you want a deeper dive on the “sensemaking = cartography” metaphor, this chapter on sensemaking from MIT’s Handbook for Teaching Leadership is great.
One snippet:
Maps can provide hope, confidence, and the means to move from anxiety to action. By mapping an unfamiliar situation, some of the fear of the unknown can be abated. By having all members of a team working from a common map of “what’s going on out there,” coordinated action is facilitated. In an age where people are often anxious about their circumstances, mapmaking becomes an essential element of sensemaking and leadership. In a world of action first, sensemaking provides a precursor to more effective action.
Deborah Ancona, from “The Handbook for Teaching Leadership”
For instance, in the pre-Google era(some 25 years ago), people used a “road atlas” to help them navigate from point A to point B. Road trippers and family vacationers used the maps in the road atlas to make sense of their journey, to guide and orient them along the way.

If you’ve ever gotten lost while driving during the pre-GPS era, you’ll remember what a boon it was to have a beat-up old road atlas stashed in your trunk.
An organizational chart is another kind of map. While org charts don’t map the physical coordinates of locations, they do provide a valuable utility in providing a source-of-truth for the hierarchies in traditional organizations, between both people and departments.
Flat or “networked” organizations, such as Teal organizations, or DAOs, often have org charts too. To use Teal’s philosophy as a guide here, flat organizations eschew traditional “command-and-control” organizational structures for a more decentralized, “sense and respond” approach to organizational dynamics, and facilitating work.
DAOs take that a step further, by embodying the spirit of Teal’s philosophy of self-governance and decentralized work–that whole sense-and-respond thing–and putting it into a more “scaled up” practice.
By using tokenomics, on-chain voting, and utilizing the DAO culture of “work on what you’re passionate about”, DAOs, like Teal organizations, give contributors the freedom to work on the things that they care about the most, while also giving members more direct control over governance and finances for the DAOs they’re apart of.
Since many DAOs have a significant permissionless component to them, contributors face unique challenges that they do not face in traditional organizations:
They must spend time orienting themselves to the DAO, to get acclimated and confidently make their first contribution to the DAO, generally in the form of labor.
They must continually build their own mental map of the DAO. In order to collaborate with other teams, manage projects effectively, and to understand what the full capabilities of the DAO are, DAO contributors must remember a lot.
They must hold team members and governance decision-makers accountable. A healthy DAO needs robust checks and balances, and a big part of that is making the power structures of the DAO visible, and allowing members various ways to participate.
Having an org map helps DAOs get new members up to speed faster, and helps DAO operators facilitate work within the DAO. This is even more true if the map is collaboratively maintained and edited, which as with any DAO project, it should be!
Obviously, you might expect to hear this argument from a company that builds a tool for creating a collaborative, context-rich org map for your DAO.
We’ll admit, at Sobol we’re devout believers in both the power of blockchain and the need for visually-driven tools to help DAOs operate more effectively.

In addition to having to coordinate hundreds or even thousands of remote contributors, DAOs are constantly in flux. Active DAOs grow linearly, often exponentially. This means that whatever map a DAO chooses to create, it must also be dynamic, robust, and context-rich.
Ideally, a DAO’s org map functions as a repository for the DAO, and contains a visually-navigable interface that contains all of the DAO’s relevant operational documentation. This might include project status updates, team agreements, current active roles in teams, active proposals, multi-sig addresses and so on.
Dm us at @teamSobol, or drop into our Discord server 🔵
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