
Dopamyn.fun
270 posts

Dopamyn.fun
@Dopamyn_fun
Your AI Copilot for Marketing | Slow Growth ain't Dope Join us: https://t.co/KBoQQRrVJd NOT ASSOCIATED WITH ANY TOKEN





Early access is now available for the OGs. Game is on.






🎁 CoinEasy Airdrop Campaign – 보상 지급 완료 안내 CoinEasy 에어드롭 캠페인에 참여해주신 모든 분들께 보상 USDC 지급이 전부 완료되었습니다 ✅ ✔️ 총 $200 USDC ✔️ 40명 추첨 (각 $5) ✔️ 조건 충족 참여자 전원 정상 처리 완료 참여해주신 모든 분들 감사합니다 🧡 앞으로도 CoinEasy를 통해 쉽고 확실한 온체인 이벤트 & 리워드 계속 진행할 예정이에요.


The hot new job at tech companies is leading "storytelling." The term doubled on LinkedIn job posts in the U.S since last year. The WSJ writes: "Compliance technology firm Vanta this month began hiring for a head of storytelling, offering a salary of up to $274,000." "Productivity app Notion recently merged its communications, social media and influencer functions into one 10-person, so-called storytelling team." "Financial technology brand Chime last month began hiring for a director of corporate editorial and storytelling—its first storyteller opening." As a former reporter and career-long content/brand leader, I have some thoughts! These examples point to a shift in internal marketing orgs that reflect a shrinking earned media landscape and an endless, growing number of distribution channels to share and own your narrative, i.e. "going direct." It's not entirely editorial, or events, or PR, or marketing. It's how all these pieces work together and how they contribute to the bigger picture - your story! I joke with my reporter friends that they are infinitely hireable if they ever left journalism. Why? Because we are trained to ask: "So what? Why should readers care? What does it mean for them?" To me, that's a big nuance in this conversation. Because... *Storytelling is a human act and it's a service.* Super interested to watch what happens here. Are you long/short on this role?















