Although most people perceive CoinMarketCap (CMC) as just a website with token prices, I saw something more in it — an infrastructure for decision-making. People visit CMC not only for content or to “follow authors.” They visit it when they have doubts: whether to buy, sell, hold, or exit a position.
As a business analyst and Web3 expert, I realized quite early on that if you know how to be useful at that very moment, the platform starts working for you. Not as a social network, but as a distribution layer on top of trading intentions.
This article is not about personal branding in the classic sense. It is an analysis of how attention works on CoinMarketCap, why millions of views are possible there without millions of subscribers, and how this logic of presence led to my materials being quoted in global crypto media.
My start on CoinMarketCap was, to put it mildly, far from ideal. I posted my thoughts in the same way as on X (Twitter): analytical tweets, general market observations, long-term narratives. I backed it all up with non-trending hashtags and didn’t even always add coin tickers.
The result was unstable audience reach and a feeling that the platform was not paying off. Many KOLs are familiar with this feeling.
The turning point came when I asked myself a simple question: why do people open CoinMarketCap in the first place? The answer is obvious — not because of the author’s personality. But because of the context of a specific asset. CMC doesn’t promote people. It promotes usefulness at a specific moment in the market.
1. Verification — the point at which the scale changes
If we put aside all the romance, verification on CoinMarketCap is not about status, but about access to distribution. After receiving verified status, the difference became noticeable almost immediately:
My practical conclusion is simple: without verification, you are playing a different game. With it, the platform begins to perceive you as a source, not just a user.
2. Distribution model: not “who you are,” but “where you appeared”
One of the biggest illusions is the belief that reach on CMC depends on the number of subscribers. In practice, this almost never works.
The main sources of views here are different:
People see your post not because they follow you, but because they are researching a specific asset at that moment. This is a fundamental change in thinking. In short: CoinMarketCap is a platform driven by intent, not followers.
3. Content that really attracts millions
Working with the platform, I noticed a clear pattern: CoinMarketCap is very good at “reading” the usefulness of content for decision-making.
The most stable indicators are:
Abstract reflections and stories detached from the current market show the worst results.
This is logical. The CoinMarketCap audience is in decision-making mode. If your content reduces uncertainty, the algorithm rewards it.
4. Time is more important than perfect text
On CoinMarketCap, speed often trumps depth. Being first with a clear, understandable opinion is almost always more effective than being second with perfectly polished analytics. So-called “hot hours” — periods when activity in token feeds peaks — play a key role. Getting into this window can lead to a multiple increase in views. My working principle is simple: the market will not wait for you to edit your text.
5. When impressions drop, it’s not the end
Impressions drop happen to everyone. And most often, it’s not a “punishment” from the algorithm, but a signal from the audience. The most common mistake is to stop or start blaming the platform.
My approach is the opposite:
CoinMarketCap values those who attract attention, not those who passively wait for it.
For a long time, I worked with CoinMarketCap, gradually experimenting with different formats and approaches to content, analyzing audience behavior and algorithm responses. Over time, millions of views ceased to be just numbers — they became a reputational asset that brought tangible results. At the first stage, leading crypto exchanges began to approach me with offers of cooperation, which ultimately led to me becoming a listing and institutional services partner at WhiteBIT, as well as an affiliate and listing partner at MEXC, BingX, and Bitunix.
But that was just the first step: my comments and analytics gradually began to be quoted by the world media, confirming the value of my expert content. It was thanks to CoinMarketCap that my materials began to appear in such publications as:
CoinMarketCap taught me one thing: influence isn’t built on followers, it’s built on usefulness. Show up when the market is deciding, make your insights actionable, and the platform — and the audience — will amplify you. Millions of views become more than numbers; they become credibility, opportunities, and a seat at the table in global crypto conversations.
In crypto, timing and relevance often outweigh fame. CMC isn’t just a site with prices — it’s a stage for those who know how to be truly useful when it matters most.
From Zero Followers to Millions of CoinMarketCap Views: My Crypto Journey was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

