Kronzy@Kronzysol
Most Web3 projects think community = opening a Telegram group.
Wrong.
The strongest communities understand one thing: growth and retention are different problems.
Here’s why Discord and Telegram were built for completely different jobs ↓
Telegram = distribution + speed
It’s a broadcast machine.
Fast announcements, hype cycles, raid coordination, and real-time energy.
But it breaks when you try to build structure inside it.
No real hierarchy
No deep onboarding flow
Conversations get buried instantly
Hard to manage long-term engagement
Telegram is where attention goes to spike, not stay.
Discord = structure + retention
This is where communities actually become ecosystems.
Built for:
onboarding pathways (new → active → core member), role systems (contributors, mods, OGs)
segmented discussions (dev, alpha, support, gaming, etc.)
long-term identity inside the community
Discord is not for noise.
It’s for belonging.
The mistake most projects make?
They use Telegram for everything, then wonder why:
engagement dies after launch hype doesn’t convert into holders and why the community feels like a chat room, not a movement
Because they optimized for speed, not structure.
The real strategy:
Use Telegram to pull attention.
Use Discord to build identity.
One brings people in.
The other keeps them there.
Gm CT!
Have a productive week ahead!!