
From Creators to Leaders
We're seeing a shift in the way creators can monetize their content using Web3 tools. This article describes my view and examples of how Web3 could be a better solution for creators to monetize their work and move away from the current Web2 model. Web3 can be a better model for creators to capture the value they create. It allows creators to truly own their content and their audience without the interference of a centralized authority like we see in Web2.So what does Web3 entail and what...

Pros and Cons of Working For a DAO
The centralized approach to organizing people advanced our civilization and paved the way for the Industrial Revolution, which allowed great development and created many new employment opportunities. As our society and the tools available to us have evolved, we need to pave the way to new ways of working, and DAOs can provide a way to lead us down that path. DAOs have the power to facilitate the way we make decisions and the way we work together as communities. This is also what Qvrse is abou...

Enabling Collective Decision Making
The idea of a decentralized autonomous organization has vast implications for the future of business and society. With the advent of blockchain technology, a new type of organization has emerged called decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs). These organizations are governed by a set of rules and principles rather than by a person or entity. One of the most important parts of the DAO is governance. Before we explain the governance processes, let us dive back into the basics of what a DA...
Platform for project development using the benefits of #qvrse smart tools for business development taking place inside #dao Slovenia, Europe



From Creators to Leaders
We're seeing a shift in the way creators can monetize their content using Web3 tools. This article describes my view and examples of how Web3 could be a better solution for creators to monetize their work and move away from the current Web2 model. Web3 can be a better model for creators to capture the value they create. It allows creators to truly own their content and their audience without the interference of a centralized authority like we see in Web2.So what does Web3 entail and what...

Pros and Cons of Working For a DAO
The centralized approach to organizing people advanced our civilization and paved the way for the Industrial Revolution, which allowed great development and created many new employment opportunities. As our society and the tools available to us have evolved, we need to pave the way to new ways of working, and DAOs can provide a way to lead us down that path. DAOs have the power to facilitate the way we make decisions and the way we work together as communities. This is also what Qvrse is abou...

Enabling Collective Decision Making
The idea of a decentralized autonomous organization has vast implications for the future of business and society. With the advent of blockchain technology, a new type of organization has emerged called decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs). These organizations are governed by a set of rules and principles rather than by a person or entity. One of the most important parts of the DAO is governance. Before we explain the governance processes, let us dive back into the basics of what a DA...
Platform for project development using the benefits of #qvrse smart tools for business development taking place inside #dao Slovenia, Europe
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It seems that the non-technical word we hear most often in Web3 is ‘’community.’’ Unlike other words, it is not a buzzword that is just thrown around. We could argue that we do not talk about it enough. A Web3 project basically cannot survive without a strong community. It is the heart of your project, and it will make or break it.(R)evolution of communities
Communities have been around since we were hunter-gatherers, and they are the reason we as humans have been able to achieve some extraordinary things (bad and good). It’s the ability to organize groups of people around an idea, a higher thing that should exceed every member. It’s in our nature to belong.
The way communities are formed has changed many times throughout history, but some elements that all successful communities have in common have remained the same, regardless of the type of community or medium: shared purpose, feeling of belonging, and a personal connection.
As communities emerged on the Internet rather than IRL, these elements remained the same and are maintained by the most successful online communities. As people evolve, the way communities are organized and how participation in communities is managed must also evolve. Participation in communities changed enormously with the advent of the Internet, as one could suddenly be part of a community that wasn’t limited to local (physical) space.
Online communities first emerged on forums and chat rooms (like AOL and MSN). This was the so-called Web1 era (read only) of the Internet, where users were limited with their abilities to create meaningful interactions. Later, we came to the next stage of the Internet, Web2 (read + create), where platforms like Google and Facebook emerged. This era essentially gave people the ability to not only read content online, but also create it themselves.
People could create their own content and their own communities, but only on the terms of the platform (centralized company). The content, and more importantly the community you built by creating content and launching your products, didn’t belong to you. They belonged to the platform. This is where Web3 comes in.
The decentralized internet
The term Web3 was coined in 2014 by Gavin Wood, and the first definition was “decentralized online ecosystem based on blockchain.” Driven by blockchain technology and smart contracts, we are entering the era of read + create + own.
On the product side, the change is happening because suddenly you are not building a product (MVP) alone in a garage and hidden from its potential users. In Web3, you build in public, with the users, for the users. This is where the shift from “product first, community later’’, to ‘’community first, product later’’ comes in.
This way, we can gather the community first, identify their challenges, and then build a product with them and for them. The community will actually use your product and give you constant feedback on it. This is a revolution in the way we bring people together and develop products that essentially serve the community.
Community participation
So how can we step forward and allow the community to build together? By organizing ourselves as a DAO. This puts community participation on-chain and allows community members to submit and vote on proposals to move the project forward. This is accomplished through the use of a DAO governance token. DAOs also allow for financial compensation for contributors who invest their time in the project.
Ownership + financial compensation is something we’ve not been able to effectively implement in communities in web2, but the right tools are now available to us to start organizing communities in a better way.
It has everything to do with people
This is essentially not about the technology and the tools that we use. The tools are, well, just tools. Web3 community managers should focus primarily on WHO and WHAT. Once you understand that, the technology and tools come into play (and we at Qvrse can help you with that). Like Seth Godin wrote in Tribes: ‘’The real power of tribes has nothing to do with internet and everything to do with people.’’
It’s all about giving your community members more of what they deserve. And if they invest their time in and for your community, they should be rewarded for it. They should have the opportunity to help steer the ship of the community and not just be a regular passenger. This is the point where we as Web3 community managers can fundamentally make the world a better place, community by community.
It seems that the non-technical word we hear most often in Web3 is ‘’community.’’ Unlike other words, it is not a buzzword that is just thrown around. We could argue that we do not talk about it enough. A Web3 project basically cannot survive without a strong community. It is the heart of your project, and it will make or break it.(R)evolution of communities
Communities have been around since we were hunter-gatherers, and they are the reason we as humans have been able to achieve some extraordinary things (bad and good). It’s the ability to organize groups of people around an idea, a higher thing that should exceed every member. It’s in our nature to belong.
The way communities are formed has changed many times throughout history, but some elements that all successful communities have in common have remained the same, regardless of the type of community or medium: shared purpose, feeling of belonging, and a personal connection.
As communities emerged on the Internet rather than IRL, these elements remained the same and are maintained by the most successful online communities. As people evolve, the way communities are organized and how participation in communities is managed must also evolve. Participation in communities changed enormously with the advent of the Internet, as one could suddenly be part of a community that wasn’t limited to local (physical) space.
Online communities first emerged on forums and chat rooms (like AOL and MSN). This was the so-called Web1 era (read only) of the Internet, where users were limited with their abilities to create meaningful interactions. Later, we came to the next stage of the Internet, Web2 (read + create), where platforms like Google and Facebook emerged. This era essentially gave people the ability to not only read content online, but also create it themselves.
People could create their own content and their own communities, but only on the terms of the platform (centralized company). The content, and more importantly the community you built by creating content and launching your products, didn’t belong to you. They belonged to the platform. This is where Web3 comes in.
The decentralized internet
The term Web3 was coined in 2014 by Gavin Wood, and the first definition was “decentralized online ecosystem based on blockchain.” Driven by blockchain technology and smart contracts, we are entering the era of read + create + own.
On the product side, the change is happening because suddenly you are not building a product (MVP) alone in a garage and hidden from its potential users. In Web3, you build in public, with the users, for the users. This is where the shift from “product first, community later’’, to ‘’community first, product later’’ comes in.
This way, we can gather the community first, identify their challenges, and then build a product with them and for them. The community will actually use your product and give you constant feedback on it. This is a revolution in the way we bring people together and develop products that essentially serve the community.
Community participation
So how can we step forward and allow the community to build together? By organizing ourselves as a DAO. This puts community participation on-chain and allows community members to submit and vote on proposals to move the project forward. This is accomplished through the use of a DAO governance token. DAOs also allow for financial compensation for contributors who invest their time in the project.
Ownership + financial compensation is something we’ve not been able to effectively implement in communities in web2, but the right tools are now available to us to start organizing communities in a better way.
It has everything to do with people
This is essentially not about the technology and the tools that we use. The tools are, well, just tools. Web3 community managers should focus primarily on WHO and WHAT. Once you understand that, the technology and tools come into play (and we at Qvrse can help you with that). Like Seth Godin wrote in Tribes: ‘’The real power of tribes has nothing to do with internet and everything to do with people.’’
It’s all about giving your community members more of what they deserve. And if they invest their time in and for your community, they should be rewarded for it. They should have the opportunity to help steer the ship of the community and not just be a regular passenger. This is the point where we as Web3 community managers can fundamentally make the world a better place, community by community.
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