𝐇𝐀𝐒𝐇@honoredhash
ʜᴏᴛ ᴛᴀᴋᴇ: ᴍᴏꜱᴛ ᴘᴇᴏᴘʟᴇ ᴀʀᴇ ᴜꜱᴇʟᴇꜱꜱ ᴏɴ ꜱᴘᴀᴄᴇꜱ (ᴀɴᴅ ᴛʜᴇʏ ᴅᴏɴ'ᴛ ᴇᴠᴇɴ ᴋɴᴏᴡ)
Speaking on spaces is one of the fastest ways to get known. Most top chads that followed me didn’t find me quietly in listeners. They followed me because I spoke. That’s the difference.
And yes, I request mic early. Not because I’m begging for attention, but because I understand timing. I listen, I prepare, and if there’s nothing to say yet, I still position myself with a quick intro and what I do on Spaces. That alone separates you from background noise.
Now let’s be honest…
Some of you enter Spaces and immediately start embarrassing yourselves.
You request a mic with nothing to say. You finally get it and start rambling like the mic is your last chance in life. You talk and talk and say nothing. Then you wonder why nobody follows you.
And the “they don’t accept my mic” excuse? 😂
No be magic.
You enter a room with 300–400 listeners, you’ve never built presence in smaller rooms, you’ve never been consistent, but you expect instant mic approval like you’re owed airtime?
That’s not how it works.
Start from small spaces with 20–30 listeners. That’s where mic rotates fast, that’s where you learn how to speak without shaking, that’s where people actually start noticing you.
Then scale.
Now, if you ever get the mic, don’t mess it up:
● Don’t request just to request; stop treating a mic like a trophy, and speak only when you have value or contribution
● Don’t talk too much; nobody is scoring you for airtime. If your point is done, stop forcing it
● Watch your screen: if reactions are low, you’re not landing, adjust immediately
● Mute when you’re not talking; background noise is amateur behavior
● Listen first; jumping in blind makes you sound lost and unserious
● Respect the host; stop trying to hijack rooms you didn’t build
● Be straight to the point; long talk doesn’t equal smart talk
● Don’t repeat others; if you’re just echoing people, stay quiet
● Timing matters; wrong entry kills even a good point
● Exit clean; stop dragging your voice until people mentally mute you
Let’s be clear: some of you don’t have a visibility problem. You have a discipline problem.
And it shows every time you open your mic.
Fix it.