Are you a crypto developer or founder looking to hire content writers to promote your Web3 project while it is in the private seed sale or public presale?
Writing promotional content in the Web3 niche requires a specialized skill.
My recommendation is to hire blockchain, crypto, or Web3 content writers who specialize in blockchain technologies.
Skip the generalists.
The Web3 content writer you’ll hire must have a first-hand understanding of the blockchain, how cryptocurrency trading works, and why there is Web3, to name a few.
I am writing this article based on my experience accommodating applications from generalist writers and working with them for a Web3 writing project.
Sure, generalist content writers are good in other niches.
But I’m not just talking about random niches.
I’m SPECIFICALLY talking about the highly technical world of Web3.
1. Generalist Crypto Content Writers Write Grammatically Correct but Contextually Wrong Sentences About Web3
I have already tried accepting applications from generalist crypto content writers for a Web3 writing project in the past.
I noticed that all of them wrongly paraphrased the content of their references.
The result was grammatically correct but contextually wrong paragraphs.
Because generalist crypto writers do not have a real-world understanding of the Web3 space, most of their paragraphs have off-sounding sentences that do not make sense to the eyes and ears of an experienced crypto investor.
As a crypto and stock trader, I know what generalist crypto writers wanted to say, but they couldn’t say it using the right words.
The problem is not all readers are Web3 experts and savvy crypto investors.
It is not the job of the Web3 or crypto enthusiast to decipher what the writer meant.
I’ll give you an example. I asked some applicants to rewrite this text:
“The bears control Bitcoin (BTC) as they have registered a negative day change for four consecutive trading days since August 15, 2023. BTC’s price has plummeted by 10.95% month-to-date, dropping from its closing price of $29,231 on July 31 to its prevailing price of $26,029 on August 19. Experts expect BTC to drop further to the support level at $25,000 before the end of the third trading week in August 2023.”
One of the generalist crypto writers came back to me with this:
“Bitcoin is not out of the woods as a wild animal has attacked it for four days….”
Syntactically correct? Yes!
Semantically right? No!
I did not know whether I should laugh or cry.
I would reconsider if this were creative writing.
Can you get someone to invest in the private seed sale or public presale of your Web3 project if you have such sentences in almost every paragraph of your promotional or guest post articles?
Generalist crypto writers are prone to extreme paraphrasing, so they could pass plagiarism checkers and AI content detectors.
As a crypto trader myself, I can read between the lines. I know what that “certain wild animal” might mean.
But are all readers as experienced as I am in crypto trading?
Your potential investors shouldn’t “fill in the blanks” for the writer.
As the developer or founder of your Web3 project, you want to convince potential investors that your Web3 project outclasses the other tokens in the cryptoverse even if your project is still in the private seed sale or public presale.
You don’t want your potential investors to read something wrongly defined or poorly explained in your promotional or guest post articles.
Writing Web3-based topics requires a nuanced form of writing.
2. Generalist Web3 Content Writers Don’t Know How to Correlate Events and News
Don’t you wonder why most crypto articles on Google News start with statistics about the token’s 24-hour, week-to-date, month-to-date, or year-to-date price action?
Only a few start with a narrative of what could have influenced past and present sentiments.
The answer’s simple: If you keep rewriting the majority of what’s available, you’ll have more of that majority.
The problem is that a generalist Web3 content writer doesn’t understand the interrelatedness of indirect news toward the specific Web3 project he writes about.
If the generalist Web3 writer specifically writes about XRP, I’m sure he’ll search for only news articles about Ripple (XRP).
The generalist Web3 content writer has no idea how to correlate Elon Musk’s tweet about Dogecoin (DOGE) and Bitcoin (BTC) to what’s happening on Polygon (MATIC), for example.
In this context, generalist Web3 writers are good for causations but not correlations on Web3 writing.
The problem is it’s not every day that you get news directly and exclusively about your subject.
What if the Web3 writer needs to submit five daily guest post articles promoting your Web3 project?
Is he going to recycle the 2-week-old news every day just because he doesn’t know how to correlate and synthesize the other events in the blockchain community?
How can you establish your Web3 project as an authority in the blockchain industry if your narrative is fixated on one angle only?
The Solution: Hire a crypto writer, a blockchain writer, or a Web3 writer (however you’d like to call it) with a real-world understanding of blockchain technology.
3. Generalist Blockchain Content Writers Don’t Have the Train of Thought Required for Web3 Writing
What would your impression be if your generalist blockchain content writer wrote his price forecast for next week in the first paragraph, some news in the second paragraph, and my analysis in the last paragraph?
Because generalist blockchain writers don’t have applied knowledge of Web3, they tend to regurgitate whatever is available and seemingly relevant on the internet to meet the word count requirement.
How can you make your potential investors believe that your Web3 project can fix real-world problems if your guest post or promotional articles lack the proper flow of reasoning?
I recommend starting with the narrative first. Talk about relevant news, regardless of whether it’s a matter of causation or correlation.
Then, proceed with the analysis. Separate your bearish and bullish interpretations. You cannot be 100% bearish or 100% bullish. There’s no such thing.
You may begin with your price forecast once you’re done with the relevant news and your analysis.
By putting your price forecast in the end, you have made your readers understand how you arrived at that forecast.
This writing pattern is my psychological training for my audience on how to be a process-oriented trader or investor.
Where to Hire a Specialist Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, or Web3 Content Writer?
I have been a consultant for crypto and stock traders and investors for over a decade.
I am an investor and a writer, too.
I walk the talk.
You can use my content writing services at iPresence Digital Marketing.
The writers I’ve personally trained will write your guest posts or promotional articles for your Web3 project in the private seed sale or public presale.
I charge per 1,000 words, and the rate depends on the technicality of your requirements.
We need a video call meeting to discuss your requirements and some non-negotiable.
By the end of that call, I can tell you the rate per 1,000 words.
Before you say, “Meh! Why should I hire you if it only costs me $20 per month with ChatGPT4?” I highly recommend that read my two articles below.
ALERT! Google AdSense Rejects Websites with AI-Generated Content
How We Ensure Content Originality in the Age of AI
Should you wish to engage my services directly for the writing task, I would be open to do the writing myself, provided the compensation is suitable.
- 3 Reasons Why I Get Hired as a Blockchain, Crypto, or Web3 Content Writer - August 19, 2023
- Is Multiskilling Key to Freelancer Success? - August 1, 2023
- ALERT! Google AdSense Rejects Websites with AI-Generated Content - July 30, 2023