Introducing Token Terminal Teams: Collaborate on Onchain Data

Token TerminalPublished on 2024-11-13Last updated on 2024-11-21

With Token Terminal Studio, analysts gained the power to create custom charts, data tables, and dashboards. Now, with Teams, entire investment and data analytics teams can collaborate on custom dashboards in real-time.

Get Going in Minutes

As a team admin, you can invite new team members via email, edit individual user permissions, and organize the details of your team’s workspace. The Teams product makes it fast and easy for you and your colleagues to start collaborating on data-driven investment research and analysis.

Collaborate on Onchain Analytics

Generate custom dashboards in Studio, and share them with the rest of the team. Ensure that everyone on the team has access to the latest version of the dashboard and is able to build on each others’ work.

Manage Your Project Listing

With Teams, the core contributors of a project have more control over their listing on Token Terminal. Admins can invite other team members to edit and maintain the project’s metadata and smart contract information, ensuring that all information is kept accurate and up-to-date.

Pricing for Teams

  • Available for all Pro and API subscribers.
  • Additional team members: €75/month each.
  • Access to unlimited collaborative features for all team members.

Get Started with Teams Today

Ready to bring your team onto Token Terminal? Here's how to get started:

  1. Log into your Token Terminal account.
  2. Click on your profile in the upper right corner.
  3. Select "Manage Account".
  4. Navigate to the "Teams" tab.
  5. Click "Invite" to add team members.

For detailed information about Token Terminal Teams, visit our documentation. We’re excited to see how Teams enhances your data organization’s workflow—don’t hesitate to reach out with any questions or feedback!


The authors of this content, or members, affiliates, or stakeholders of Token Terminal may be participating or are invested in protocols or tokens mentioned herein. The foregoing statement acts as a disclosure of potential conflicts of interest and is not a recommendation to purchase or invest in any token or participate in any protocol. Token Terminal does not recommend any particular course of action in relation to any token or protocol. The content herein is meant purely for educational and informational purposes only, and should not be relied upon as financial, investment, legal, tax or any other professional or other advice. None of the content and information herein is presented to induce or to attempt to induce any reader or other person to buy, sell or hold any token or participate in any protocol or enter into, or offer to enter into, any agreement for or with a view to buying or selling any token or participating in any protocol. Statements made herein (including statements of opinion, if any) are wholly generic and not tailored to take into account the personal needs and unique circumstances of any reader or any other person. Readers are strongly urged to exercise caution and have regard to their own personal needs and circumstances before making any decision to buy or sell any token or participate in any protocol. Observations and views expressed herein may be changed by Token Terminal at any time without notice. Token Terminal accepts no liability whatsoever for any losses or liabilities arising from the use of or reliance on any of this content.

Related Reads

When Hyperliquid Steals Solana's 'Internet Capital Market' Script

The article "When Hyperliquid Steals Solana's 'Internet Capital Markets' Playbook" discusses Solana's struggles to maintain its "internet capital markets" narrative by 2026. Despite its initial success as a high-performance "Ethereum killer," SOL's price has underperformed, dropping significantly compared to other major cryptocurrencies. Solana's vision of a global, on-chain trading network for all assets is being challenged not primarily by Ethereum, but by Hyperliquid. Hyperliquid, evolving from a perpetual contracts platform into a dedicated financial infrastructure Layer 1, has become a major beneficiary of the shift of derivatives trading from centralized exchanges to on-chain. The article argues that for high-frequency financial trading, a specialized, performance-focused chain like Hyperliquid may be more suitable than a general-purpose ecosystem like Solana. Further compounding Solana's issues was a major $200+ million exploit on its key perpetual protocol, Drift, in April, which damaged market confidence. In response, Solana founder Anatoly Yakovenko heavily promoted the protocol Phoenix as a replacement, boosting its visibility but not its trading volume, which remains far behind leading platforms. Solana supporters have launched a public critique of Hyperliquid's decentralization, pointing to its limited validators and closed-source code. Critics, however, note Solana's own declining validator count and centralization metrics. This strategy has also caused internal friction, with developers of other Solana protocols expressing discontent over the foundation's perceived favoritism towards Phoenix. The conclusion is that Hyperliquid's rise represents a challenge to the "general-purpose blockchain" narrative, proving that the core of a capital market might be a specialized trading engine rather than a broad ecosystem. If Solana cannot regain dominance in derivatives, it risks remaining a "meme coin paradise" while its grand "internet capital markets" ambition slips away.

marsbit1h ago

When Hyperliquid Steals Solana's 'Internet Capital Market' Script

marsbit1h ago

When Hyperliquid Steals Solana's 'Internet Capital Markets' Playbook

The article discusses how Solana's grand vision of becoming an "Internet Capital Markets" platform is facing significant challenges in 2026, primarily from the unexpected rise of Hyperliquid. Solana's performance has weakened, with its token SOL experiencing the largest price decline among major cryptocurrencies. Its core narrative of building a global, chain-based marketplace for all assets is under pressure both internally and externally. Hyperliquid, originally a perpetual futures exchange, has evolved into a dedicated Layer 1 financial infrastructure network. Its focused, trading-centric approach is attracting capital and challenging the assumption that a "general-purpose" ecosystem like Solana is necessary for a capital market. Hyperliquid's success suggests that for high-frequency trading, superior performance, liquidity, and user experience may be more critical than a broad application ecosystem. Internally, Solana's strategy suffered a blow from a major hack on the Drift Protocol in April, resulting in over $200 million in losses. In response, Solana founder Anatoly Yakovenko has heavily promoted Phoenix as a new decentralized perpetual futures platform on Solana. While this boosted Phoenix's visibility, its trading volume remains far behind leading platforms. Solana's community has launched a rhetorical attack against Hyperliquid, questioning its decentralization due to its limited validator set and closed-source code. Critics, however, point out Solana's own decreasing validator count and increasing centralization of stake. This focus on "decentralization metrics" has also caused internal friction, with other Solana ecosystem developers expressing discontent over the foundation's perceived favoritism towards Phoenix. The article concludes that the rise of Hyperliquid represents a challenge to the "general-purpose blockchain" narrative, proving that an efficient trading engine might be more central to a capital market than a vast ecosystem. If Solana cannot regain dominance in the derivatives space, it risks remaining a "meme coin paradise" rather than achieving its ambition of hosting global assets.

链捕手1h ago

When Hyperliquid Steals Solana's 'Internet Capital Markets' Playbook

链捕手1h ago

Samsung Bets on Mobile HBM: AI Moves from Cloud to Palm, a New Frontier in Semiconductor Investment?

Samsung is betting on bringing high-bandwidth memory (HBM) technology from servers to mobile devices, aiming to enable powerful on-device AI features in smartphones and tablets. This move is driven by the booming AI market, where HBM demand from data centers has fueled Samsung's record profits, with HBM4 already in mass production. By integrating mobile HBM, Samsung seeks to transform user AI experiences—making tasks like image generation and real-time translation faster, seamless, and more private by processing data locally. Strategically, this allows Samsung to leverage its vertical integration in memory, advanced packaging, and Exynos processors to differentiate its Galaxy devices against competitors like Apple and Qualcomm. It also opens a new consumer growth avenue, reducing reliance on volatile server HBM demand alone. The initiative is expected to benefit the broader supply chain, boosting demand for advanced packaging materials, thermal solutions, and other components. While promising, risks include potential delays in mobile HBM mass production beyond 2027, high initial costs, and the cyclical nature of the memory market. Nonetheless, Samsung's push signals a broader industry shift toward hybrid cloud-edge AI computing, positioning it as a key player in defining the future of AI-powered devices and presenting a potential long-term investment theme in semiconductors.

marsbit1h ago

Samsung Bets on Mobile HBM: AI Moves from Cloud to Palm, a New Frontier in Semiconductor Investment?

marsbit1h ago

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片