Nine out of ten crypto projects collapse within two years. The technology is rarely the culprit. The marketing strategy almost always is. Here’s the uncomfortableNine out of ten crypto projects collapse within two years. The technology is rarely the culprit. The marketing strategy almost always is. Here’s the uncomfortable

Web3 Marketing Isn’t Broken -Most Projects Are Using It Wrong

2026/06/24 23:12
6 min read
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Nine out of ten crypto projects collapse within two years. The technology is rarely the culprit. The marketing strategy almost always is. Here’s the uncomfortable truth about what the surviving ten percent do differently.

There’s a story Web3 founders tell themselves when a project stalls. The market wasn’t ready. The chain was too expensive. The bull run didn’t come. These narratives are comforting because they place the blame somewhere outside the team. But the data tells a different story and it has been telling it for years.

A 2025 analysis found that 90% of crypto projects fail within their first two years, not because of weak technology, but because of weak marketing and absent community adoption. Over $112 billion has poured into the Web3 space, yet the failure rate has barely budged. Money hasn’t fixed it. Another roadmap won’t either.

The problem isn’t Web3 marketing as a discipline. The problem is that most projects approach it with a Web2 mindset grafted onto a Web3 wrapper and then wonder why the numbers don’t move.

The Launch-and-Pray Mentality That’s Killing Projects

Walk through any recent token launch cycle and you’ll see the same playbook repeated with almost mechanical consistency: spend the pre-launch window buying coverage on Crypto Twitter, spin up a Discord server with a bot-inflated member count, pay a Tier-1 KOL for a single promotional post, and hope that the airdrop generates enough wallet activity to create social proof. Then watch the community go quiet three weeks post-TGE.

This is not a marketing strategy. It’s a launch event masquerading as one. And by 2025, the market has become ruthlessly efficient at exposing it. As one industry analysis of crypto marketing in 2026 noted bluntly: projects that fail today optimised for launch instead of longevity, invested in exposure instead of infrastructure, and treated marketing as a campaign function, not as a growth system.

Five Mistakes That Account for Most of the Wreckage

These are not new problems. They are the same structural errors recycled across bull and bear markets alike, dressed up in whatever narrative the cycle is currently running. Understanding them isn’t just diagnostic it’s the prerequisite for building something that lasts.

01. Treating follower counts as community

A 50,000-member Discord server where the last message was posted four days ago is not a community it’s a number. Real community is defined by active participation, not headcount. The shift that separates successful projects from stalled ones is understanding that a 5,000-member group of genuinely engaged holders is worth more than 50,000 airdrop hunters who will sell and vanish at the first sign of price pressure.

02. Chasing top-tier KOLs for the wrong reasons

Ninety percent of top-tier KOLs now reject standard paid promotions outright, demanding token allocations or post rates above $10,000. More importantly, follower counts score a mere 2.93 out of 5 in agency effectiveness ratings far below content quality, research depth, and proven track record, which together score 4.7 out of 5. That structure achieves eleven times the conversion rate of traditional advertising.

03. Measuring vanity metrics instead of on-chain outcomes

Impressions, likes, and follower growth are proxy metrics at best. In Web3, the only metrics that tell the truth are on-chain: wallet connections, TVL changes, token purchase conversions, dApp usage, and governance participation rates. Projects that track their marketing through social dashboards will always be optimising for the wrong signal. The tools to link KOL campaigns to wallet-level conversions exist today. Most teams simply aren’t using them.

04. Running campaigns instead of building growth systems

A campaign has a start date and an end date. A growth system runs continuously, compounding with each iteration. The projects that built durable communities treated marketing as infrastructure a set of interconnected channels, content loops, and referral mechanics that fed each other. Those that ran campaigns saw spikes followed by silence. When you stop paying for attention, you should still have a community that talks about you. If you don’t, you never had one.

05. Skipping education and going straight to promotion

Web3 users are, by definition, operating in a space that rewards skepticism. The post-FTX environment pushed audiences toward demanding audits, proof-of-reserves, and verification before any claim is accepted at face value. Projects that spend their entire content budget on promotional messaging and nothing on education, transparency, or thought leadership are building on a credibility deficit from day one. Long-form tutorials, whitepaper explainers, and transparent AMA sessions consistently outperform hype-driven content for both acquisition and retention.

What the 10% Do Differently

The projects that survive and scale aren’t necessarily better-funded or technically superior. They do have one thing in common: they treat their community as the product, not as the distribution channel. Marketing becomes infrastructure rather than an expense line.

A DeFi lending platform that collaborated with three KOLs each of whom created tutorials explaining platform mechanics rather than hype content attracted over 10,000 new users and increased TVL by $50 million in two months. An NFT marketplace that combined educational content with exclusive KOL-hosted giveaways saw a 120% increase in traffic and a 45% boost in sales within six months. A DAO that gave KOLs one percent of governance tokens turning influencers into genuine stakeholders achieved a 5x increase in DAO membership. The pattern across each case is the same: depth over reach, education over promotion, alignment over transaction.

The Market Has Moved On. Your Strategy Needs To.

By now, global daily active crypto users surpassed 18 million up more than 200% year-over-year. The on-chain RWA market reached approximately $23 billion in 2025. DeFi TVL has climbed toward $135 billion. The market is not shrinking. The audience is not disengaging. What it is doing is becoming more sophisticated, more skeptical, and more selective about which projects it trusts.

The projects that will capture that attention won’t be the ones with the biggest marketing budgets or the longest KOL lists. They’ll be the ones with a coherent narrative, a genuinely active community, transparent communication, and marketing infrastructure designed to compound over time rather than spike and fade. That’s not a complicated formula. It’s just one that requires actually building it, rather than buying it.

Web3 marketing isn’t broken. The thinking most teams bring to it is.


Web3 Marketing Isn’t Broken -Most Projects Are Using It Wrong was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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