After Collaborating with 35+ DeFi Projects, Pink Brains Discovers the New KOL Marketing Rule for 2026

foresightnews_apiPublicado a 2026-06-05Actualizado a 2026-06-05

Resumen

After collaborating with over 35 leading DeFi projects, marketing studio Pink Brains identifies key 2026 trends for effective KOL marketing, emphasizing a user-centric approach over traditional campaign tactics. The core insight is that discovery is social (driven by trusted voices on platforms like X), but conversion is data-driven, requiring verifiable on-chain metrics and robust protocol fundamentals. Major user interests in 2026 include new DeFi narratives like RWAs, perp DEXs, and crypto×AI (focused on agentic payments and aligned incentives), real yield from protocol fees, value-capturing tokenomics (e.g., buyback/burn mechanisms), and new trading venues like prediction markets and collectibles. User retention depends on real-world utility, sustainable tokenomics tied to product usage, and incentives rewarding genuine contribution over Sybil activity. Effective KOL strategies involve partnering with specific creator types—educators, analysts, vertical experts—at different user journey stages, avoiding generic content and audience mismatch. The most successful marketing mirrors actual user behavior: discovery via trusted KOLs, validation through data and research, and long-term retention through solid product design and economic alignment.


Author: Pink Brains

Compiled by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News


Over the past three years, we have collaborated with more than 35 leading DeFi projects on their marketing initiatives. We found that the most effective marketing campaigns are not designed from the project's perspective, but from the user's perspective: how users discover products, how they build trust, and how they genuinely engage.


Note: Pink Brains is a marketing studio focused on DeFi, providing services like KOL marketing and content creation (threads, analyses) for DeFi projects.


The logic of most crypto marketing guides goes like this: select KOLs, allocate budget, launch campaign, track exposure.


We've completely flipped this process. Instead of starting with tactics, we first study user behavior: How do DeFi users discover new protocols? What convinces them to try? What makes them stay?


How Do DeFi Users Discover New Protocols?


Crypto users typically spot opportunities on Twitter first, then go to platforms like DefiLlama, DeBank, Artemis, Token Terminal, Moni to verify data, check the protocol's official documentation, and finally consider depositing funds.


The discovery process is socially driven, but the decision-making process is data-driven.


The actual path usually looks like this:


A trusted account posts about a new perpetual DEX—this post rarely triggers an immediate deposit.


The user will first check the project's official account, browse posts and reviews from other KOLs, look at data like trading volume, TVL, incentive programs, skim the documentation and guides, and finally deposit a small test amount.


That X post merely introduces the protocol to the user, but what truly drives the decision is the KOL's content and verifiable data.


This is why X remains the core battleground for DeFi: it's where narratives form, vulnerabilities are exposed in real-time, and founders and researchers fiercely debate in the comments.


The practical takeaway for protocol teams is: The goal in the discovery phase is not virality, but to be mentioned by accounts already trusted by data-driven users, and for all data to hold up when users go to verify. A powerful X mention paired with thin TVL or a weak audit page cannot convert truly valuable users.



What Are DeFi Users Focusing on in 2026?


This year, DeFi users are primarily drawn to several clear themes:


  • New DeFi trends (tokenization, perpetual contracts, RWAs, pre-IPO perps, and the crypto×AI wave)
  • Airdrops that require real contribution but carry higher risks
  • Yields backed by real revenue
  • Value-capturing tokens directly linked to product usage
  • New types of trading venues


The common thread is: verifiable mechanisms, not marketing speak.


New Narratives: Perpetual Contracts, RWAs, Crypto×AI


What people are trading is changing.


Hyperliquid's HIP-3 upgrade enabled permissionless perpetual listings, leading to over 100 RWA markets (stocks, commodities, indices, forex, even pre-IPO assets) with a cumulative trading volume exceeding $130 billion. By the end of Q1 2026, RWA markets accounted for over 90% of HIP-3 open interest.


@Ostium (a dedicated RWA perpetual DEX on Arbitrum) proposed the 'perpification' theory: a perpetual contract only needs a price oracle and a liquidity pool, not a full tokenization stack. This brings traditional market exposure on-chain faster than tokenized spot markets.


@tradexyz and @ventuals focus on commodities and forex on Hyperliquid; Trade.xyz's Cerebras pre-IPO perpetual contract almost perfectly 'priced' the stock hours before its Nasdaq debut.


Another major narrative is crypto×AI. Users care not about the narrative, but about agentic payments and token incentive mechanisms aligned with AI.


  • @opentensor ($TAO) completed its first halving in late 2025, now runs 120+ active subnets, and generates real revenue demand.
  • @virtuals_io (VIRTUAL) reported over $400 million in agent GDP and $60 million in protocol revenue in Q1 2026, deployed 17,000+ agents, and co-authored a cross-chain agent commerce standard with the Ethereum Foundation.
  • @NEAR Protocol and @AskVenice occupy core positions in private inference and data sovereignty.


Additionally, early connections in crypto×robotics (like @xmaquina, Robotics Capital Markets) are emerging.


This sector is volatile with many low-quality projects, but what users truly care about is revenue and actual usage of the leading projects.


Airdrops, but the Bar is Much Higher Now


Airdrops remain a significant driver, with many airdrop hunters still seeking the next HYPE, but the easy days are over.


Projects increasingly demand real contributions: sustainable trading, genuine liquidity provision, community education content, etc. Sybil filtering is now standard, and tokens often face immediate selling pressure post-TGE.


Points programs value generated fees more than locked capital; testnet rewards emphasize sustained, qualitative participation over mere transaction count.


Real Yield


Users now clearly distinguish between 'yield generated from real revenue' and 'yield printed via inflation,' strongly preferring the former.


Real yield takes many forms, but only a few are meaningful: fees from economic activities like trading, lending, funding rates, liquidations; infrastructure usage fees; and yield backed by RWAs.


Yield trading platforms like @pendle_fi, vaults managed by risk managers like @veda_labs, @gauntlet_xyz, @MEVCapital, @SteakhouseFi, and on-chain capital allocators like @sparkdotfi have become main entry points for capital deployment, channeling liquidity into fixed-income strategies based on real yield sources.



For example, @ethena's sUSDe generates yield through delta-neutral basis trading, with a supply nearing $5.8 billion.


@SkyEcosystem's sUSDS pays ~4-4.5% yield, backed by RWA collateral and stability fees—S&P even issued its first credit rating to a DeFi protocol, Sky.


The overall trend is moving from a market that 'creates yield via inflation' to one that 'imports and allocates yield from real sources.'


Value-Capturing Tokenomics


Beyond yield, users increasingly favor tokens whose value is directly linked to product adoption—often through buybacks, buyback-and-burn, supply deflation, protocol revenue sharing, etc.


Hyperliquid's HYPE is a classic case: its Assistance Fund uses ~99% of trading fee revenue for open market buybacks, totaling over $1.16 billion. Since TGE, 4.45% of the total supply has been bought back and burned.


Venice's VVV ties demand to staked AI inference compute; part of the protocol revenue is used to buy back and burn VVV, with ~40% of the supply burned so far, and the price up 400% YTD.


Bittensor's TAO adopts a Bitcoin-like halving mechanism, shifting from inflation to scarcity.


The pattern users look for is the same: the token must be tightly coupled with the actual activity the product generates, where increased activity adds value, not dilutes it.



New Types of Trading Venues


Finally, attention is spreading to new types of trading venues:


  • Prediction markets (Polymarket and Kalshi had massive cumulative volume in 2025)
  • Physical card and collectible trading markets
  • Crypto-enabled gamification (Crypto iGaming)


These are more speculative but do bring real trading volume and revenue.


Logan Paul publicly stated his portfolio holds no stocks, only Pokémon cards. The Pokémon card market reached $75 billion in 2026 (compared to under $15 billion in 2016).


@Collector_Crypt (a card trading market on Solana) has become the second-largest revenue dApp on Solana, with $1.9M in daily revenue.



GameFi is passé, but GambleFi is quietly exploding. Crypto gambling revenue reached $81.4B in 2024, a 5x increase from 2022. In Q1 2025 alone, crypto betting volume hit $26B, almost double year-over-year. Non-KYC, global reach, and provably fair mechanisms are driving a new wave of on-chain gamification.


Centralized crypto iGaming like @Stake, @shufflecom, and provably fair on-chain iGaming like @nardotbet, though rarely mentioned by DeFi KOLs, see very strong real trading.


The commonality across these areas: users can independently verify their appeal. Interest stems from the mechanisms themselves, not marketing language.


What Makes DeFi Users Stay?


DeFi users stick with a protocol when it is genuinely useful in real life, generates profits, and creates value for token holders. Simultaneously, it must remain reliable through market ups and downs.


The key differentiator is: protocols that retain capital do so through trust, distribution, and reliability, not temporary APY or TVL.


Real-World Use Cases


The strongest reason for users to stay is simple: the protocol is genuinely useful in daily life. Products like crypto cards, neobanks, and vaults give users a reason beyond speculation to remain in the ecosystem.


Ether.fi Cash is a good example: users earn cashback on spending while also earning staking rewards. The specific rates matter less than the fact that 'daily financial activity itself becomes a reason to stay in the ecosystem.'


The same logic applies to crypto neobanks and capital allocators: they are embedded in users' regular financial habits, not just places users occasionally visit for yield.


Tokenomics Reflecting the Real Product


Users are more willing to stay when tokens genuinely capture the value generated by the product, rather than relying on narratives.


The 2026 textbook case is HYPE. Its Assistance Fund uses 99% of trading fee revenue for open market buybacks. The Bitwise CIO stated plainly: this token's design means that platform activity growth directly benefits holders. This is a value loop users can verify themselves, thus sustaining attention, not just short-term market attention at launch.


@AskVenice's VVV is another concrete model: staking VVV grants a proportional share of the platform's daily AI inference compute, which can be locked to mint DIEM (representing $1 of daily API credit). Venice has burned over 42% of the initial supply and drastically cut inflation. Demand is purely from real usage.


Airdrops and Incentives, but Not Empty Promises


Airdrops can still bring users back, but the easy days are largely over. Projects increasingly reward real usage and rigorously filter Sybils.


@monad skipped traditional points programs entirely, opting to reward real contributors. Its testnet airdrop was based on 5 contributor tracks with strong anti-Sybil measures, ultimately rewarding only 5,500 wallets for community building, support, content creation, and ecosystem growth.


Points programs remain difficult to get right. A recent example is MegaETH's Terminal program: launched with TGE in April 2026 as an 8-week rewards campaign, it was terminated early just 3 weeks later (May 21).


Even well-designed programs struggle to convert short-term activity into long-term retained users.


How Do DeFi Projects Retain Users?


DeFi retention relies on four elements working together:


  • A product experience good enough for daily use
  • Responsive customer support
  • Tokenomics aligned with community interests long-term
  • Community building beyond TG and Discord (product experience, support, tokenomics, strategic community building)


Types of KOLs DeFi Projects Should Collaborate With


DeFi KOLs roughly fall into four categories: Educators, Content Creators, Airdrop Practitioners, and Vertical Experts.


Each type suits different stages of the user journey. Treating them as interchangeable 'exposure tools' is a common and costly mistake.


What Kind of DeFi KOL Content Performs Best?


Top-performing DeFi content is typically specific and verifiable: on-chain proofs, step-by-step strategy threads, balanced protocol analyses, and timely breakdowns of exploits or new mechanisms.


Poor-performing content is often vague, undisclosed, or unverifiable.


Common Mistakes in DeFi KOL Marketing


  • Using creators who don't understand the product
  • Generic content (hollow terms like 'revolutionary,' 'game-changing')
  • Audience mismatch
  • Over-reliance on a few top KOLs (concentration risk)
  • Fake exposure metrics
  • One-off promotions instead of building long-term relationships
  • Ignoring product readiness


Conclusion


The most effective DeFi marketing plans are those that truly mirror actual user behavior: discovery comes from trusted voices, interest comes from verifiable mechanisms, retention comes from strong tokenomics and product design—not mere marketing talk.


The best-performing protocols don't rely solely on internal marketing. KOLs bring awareness, research validates the thesis, users share real results, and ultimately, enduring on-chain data proves the product's value far exceeds incentives.

Preguntas relacionadas

QAccording to Pink Brains' analysis, what is the key insight into DeFi user discovery of new protocols, and why is this important for marketing?

AThe key insight is that DeFi users discover new protocols socially (often on X/Twitter) but make decisions data-drivenly. The importance lies in the fact that marketing should not just aim for viral mentions but ensure that when users verify the protocol on data platforms like DefiLlama, the data (TVL, audits, etc.) is solid. Discovery starts a user's journey, but trust and conversion are built on verifiable data.

QBased on the article, what are the main themes attracting DeFi user attention in 2026? List at least three.

AThe main themes attracting DeFi user attention in 2026 are: 1) New DeFi trends (Perpetuals, RWA, Crypto x AI), 2) Airdrops with higher barriers requiring genuine contribution, 3) Real yield backed by actual protocol revenue, 4) Value-capturing tokenomics directly tied to product usage, and 5) New trading venues like prediction markets and collectibles trading.

QHow does Pink Brains define the difference between protocols that attract capital versus those that retain users?

AProtocols attract capital through high APYs, temporary incentives, or marketing narratives. However, protocols retain users by building trust through real-world utility (e.g., crypto cards, neobanks), having tokenomics that genuinely capture product value (like HYPE's buybacks), providing reliable support, and fostering a strong community that goes beyond Discord/TG. Retention relies on embedded usefulness and aligned long-term incentives.

QWhat are the four main categories of DeFi KOLs mentioned, and what is the common mistake projects make regarding them?

AThe four main categories of DeFi KOLs are: Educators, Content Creators, Airdrop Hunters, and Niche Experts. The common and costly mistake projects make is treating all KOLs as interchangeable 'exposure tools' for the same purpose, rather than strategically matching each KOL type to different stages of the user journey (e.g., awareness, education, deep-dive analysis).

QAccording to the article, what are key characteristics of high-performing DeFi KOL content versus low-performing content?

AHigh-performing DeFi KOL content is specific and verifiable, such as on-chain proofs, step-by-step strategy threads, balanced protocol analyses, and timely breakdowns of exploits or new mechanisms. Low-performing content is typically generic, uses unsubstantiated claims (e.g., 'game-changing,' 'revolutionary'), lacks disclosure, or cannot be independently verified by the audience.

Lecturas Relacionadas

Single-Day Plunge of 30%, Arthur Hayes Suddenly Liquidates: Why Did ZEC Get Exploded by Security Issues?

On June 5th, Zcash founder Zooko Wilcox disclosed a critical soundness vulnerability in the project's latest Orchard privacy pool. This flaw, found in the elliptic curve multiplication constraints, could allow an attacker to create unlimited counterfeit ZEC within the shielded pool, with transactions appearing valid. The vulnerability was discovered in late May by security researcher Taylor Hornby, who utilized Anthropic's new Opus 4.8 AI model for a targeted audit. The Zcash ecosystem had already performed an emergency network upgrade to patch the issue. However, the detailed disclosure triggered severe market panic, causing ZEC's price to plummet over 30% in a single day. Notably, prominent investor Arthur Hayes announced he had sold his entire ZEC position following the news. The incident starkly challenges the "technological trust" narrative central to privacy coins. Despite years of top-tier cryptographic audits, the bug persisted until uncovered with advanced AI-assisted research. This highlights the growing gap between theoretical perfection and practical implementation in privacy technology. The event serves as a industry-wide warning: in an AI-driven security landscape, the assumption that "undiscovered equals safe" is obsolete. It underscores the urgent need for continuous, proactive security practices combining AI audits, formal verification, and rapid response mechanisms.

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Single-Day Plunge of 30%, Arthur Hayes Suddenly Liquidates: Why Did ZEC Get Exploded by Security Issues?

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Breaking the Curse of DeFi Cascading Liquidations, Vitalik Proposes a New Solution

**Vitalik Buterin Proposes New DeFi Design to Eliminate Forced Liquidations** Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has published a proposal for a new decentralized finance (DeFi) architecture aimed at removing the automatic liquidation mechanisms prevalent in current lending protocols. The core idea involves creating synthetic assets using options as building blocks, fundamentally avoiding the抵押借贷结构 that triggers forced sell-offs. The proposal responds to a recurring flaw in DeFi: during sharp market downturns, mass自动清算 of under-collateralized positions can exacerbate price declines, creating systemic selling pressure and market instability, as evidenced by recent crypto market volatility. Buterin's model would split an asset like 1 ETH into two option-like derivatives, P and N, pegged to a price index with a set strike price and expiration. At expiry, an oracle determines the settlement price to allocate the underlying ETH between P and N holders. This design eliminates the "cliff" of instant liquidation. Instead, a position's value would gradually drift from its target peg if not actively rebalanced by the user, transferring the rebalancing decision from the protocol to the user or automated tools. A key advantage is the reduced reliance on high-frequency, real-time oracle price feeds, which are vulnerable to manipulation and errors in current systems. The delayed settlement in the options model allows for more robust, fault-tolerant oracle designs. However, significant challenges remain for practical adoption. High transaction costs (slippage) from frequent rebalancing on automated market makers (AMMs) could erode user funds. The model may not be suitable for stablecoins requiring a strict 1:1 dollar peg, as it inherently allows for value drift. Success would depend on developing new liquidity provisioning models and deep markets for these synthetic assets. The proposal represents a fundamental rethinking of DeFi risk management, challenging the industry to explore alternatives to被动集中平仓 rather than merely optimizing existing liquidation processes. It remains a theoretical framework awaiting implementation and testing by development teams.

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Breaking the Curse of DeFi Cascading Liquidations, Vitalik Proposes a New Solution

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Bitcoin's Decline Marks the Transformation of Crypto

Title: The Decline of Bitcoin Marks the Transformation of Crypto While Bitcoin's price recently fell below $70,000, down approximately 45% from its peak, the broader crypto industry is not following it into decline. Instead, crypto is maturing and evolving beyond its dependence on Bitcoin's price movements. Two of Bitcoin's core functions are being usurped. First, AI has captured its role as the primary speculative asset. AI, with its tangible revenue, explosive demand, and massive capital inflows ($700-830 billion in 2024), is siphoning off the speculative "hot money" that once drove Bitcoin. It also contributes to a sustained high-interest-rate environment, further tightening liquidity for assets like Bitcoin. Second, dollar-pegged stablecoins like USDC and USDT have replaced Bitcoin as the crypto market's foundational currency and primary on/off-ramp. Most trading pairs and on-chain transactions are now settled in stablecoins, severing the historical link where all capital inflows had to pass through Bitcoin first. This decoupling allows projects to thrive based on their own fundamentals rather than Bitcoin's price. Examples include Hyperliquid, an on-chain derivatives exchange with annual revenues of $8-13 billion, and prediction market platform Polymarket, valued at $200 billion with $3.65 billion in annual fees. These projects are evaluated on traditional metrics like revenue and user growth. New opportunities are emerging, particularly around privacy. Privacy coins like Zcash (ZEC) are seeing surging demand, while infrastructure like NEAR enables private, cross-chain asset transfers without requiring users to hold a specific token—privacy becomes a universal service layer. In this new paradigm, stablecoins are the universal cash, various project tokens represent equity, and privacy-enabled cross-chain coordination layers (like NEAR) act as the critical infrastructure connecting a fragmented, multi-chain ecosystem. Bitcoin is now just one asset among many. The era where the entire crypto market moved in lockstep with Bitcoin is over. The industry's health should now be judged by project fundamentals—real revenue, active users, and tokenomics that capture value—and the development of the underlying infrastructure enabling a mature, dollar-denominated crypto economy.

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Bitcoin's Decline Marks the Transformation of Crypto

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Lightspark CEO: In Ten Years, Bitcoin Will Be as Invisible as TCP/IP, Yet Power Trillions in Daily Transactions

A decade from now, Bitcoin will function like TCP/IP — invisible yet foundational, supporting trillions in daily transactions globally, according to Lightspark CEO David Marcus. In this future, a coffee shop in Lagos receives instant payment, a manufacturer in São Paulo settles an invoice with a supplier in Ho Chi Minh City, and a freelancer in Bangalore gets paid weekly from an Austin startup — all via Bitcoin's settlement layer, with none of the parties consciously interacting with it. This vision parallels the adoption of open protocols: first driven by necessity where existing systems fail, then scaling rapidly as tools mature and economic benefits become clear. The structural shift begins with wallets. Modern non-custodial wallets, like Spark, allow users to hold dollars, local currency, and Bitcoin in a single address, seamlessly switching between them. This eliminates friction and revolutionizes global custody, moving significant deposits to user-controlled keys not by ideology, but by superior utility. As a result, Bitcoin becomes the default savings layer for billions, as its fixed supply and appreciating value make it a rational choice for savers holding it alongside stablecoins in their everyday wallets. Businesses follow a similar path, from small companies in emerging markets to multinational corporations, holding Bitcoin alongside operational stablecoins. The latest trend is direct Bitcoin transactions for commerce. When both parties hold Bitcoin, transacting in it becomes the simplest option — no conversions, no intermediary currency. This starts in niche areas like high-value B2B settlements but grows as infrastructure makes sending Bitcoin as easy as stablecoins. An accelerating force is AI agents. By 2036, AI agents conducting commerce on behalf of individuals and firms will increasingly choose Bitcoin for settlement. Optimizing for speed, finality, and minimal counterparty risk across jurisdictions, they find Bitcoin's global, neutral, and programmable network ideal for netting and settling obligations. Thus, Bitcoin is becoming the native currency for machine commerce, just as it has become a native savings asset for humans. The global monetary system is being rebuilt from the protocol layer: open infrastructure, default self-custody, Bitcoin settling everything underneath, with stablecoins as the interface. Most users won't think about Bitcoin when they transact — and they won't need to.

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Lightspark CEO: In Ten Years, Bitcoin Will Be as Invisible as TCP/IP, Yet Power Trillions in Daily Transactions

foresightnews_apiHace 1 hora(s)

Trading

Spot
Futuros
活动图片