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Author Topic: To select a good bounty, what specifications we should look into?  (Read 183 times)
RGLAKSHI9490 (OP)
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April 09, 2018, 09:44:10 PM
 #1

Looking for effective bounty hunting... Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
alvizujr
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April 09, 2018, 10:02:59 PM
 #2

What I look for is:

How much time will during the bounty

How much percentage of the bounty pool per campaign (Twitter campaign, LinkedIn campaign and signature campaign usually are what I look for)

How looks the website, if it looks very poor automatically is a not for me

Team and advisors, if they have LinkedIn I start to stalk them

White paper to understand the project and know if it has potential

Softcap and hardcap

I look for ranking websites like icobench to know the opinion of experts about the project

Roadmap to know the goals of the project and when they're planning to make things happen

Usually I look for the Telegram group and search the words "distribution" "price" "exchange" to know when I will receive my tokens, how much I could receive (money) and when I will be able to sell them ~if the project has potential I keep the tokens for a while~

I think that is all what I look for, and, if I'm very excited with one project in specific I look for YouTube videos of the team members in conferences talking about the project to see how they develop in public.

I hope that helps you. Greetings and happy bounty hunting Smiley.
Noobaru
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April 09, 2018, 10:53:35 PM
 #3

Looking for effective bounty hunting... Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes

The previous post pretty much summed it up, but I'm going to add some things that I look out for. I usually check the number of participants in social media channels. If it is somewhere between 5000 and 10000 on twitter and Facebook, then it looks alright to me. If that number is unusually high like 30k or more followers on twitter, I dig further to find out if that number has been achieved by referrals solely. If the project is looking good, then it must have organic and active community that is interested. If the company is posting tweets and Facebook posts regularly, that is usually a good thing, but only if quality is provided and that they do not spam out the channel too much. I always prefer quality over quantity. I recently started checking out LinkedIn profiles of the team, especially their previous working experience. If these are some high profile guys with heavy background, then my confidence in the project rises. Also, the whitepaper is important. Try to seek for explanation on what real life problems is the project solving. That is the most important thing for me. Token economics is also important, especially for us bounty hunters. I usually participate in campaigns that are about 1-2 months long. But I really like those short ones, 1-2 weeks long. To each his own. Smiley

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RGLAKSHI9490 (OP)
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April 10, 2018, 06:12:20 AM
 #4

What I look for is:

How much time will during the bounty

How much percentage of the bounty pool per campaign (Twitter campaign, LinkedIn campaign and signature campaign usually are what I look for)

How looks the website, if it looks very poor automatically is a not for me

Team and advisors, if they have LinkedIn I start to stalk them

White paper to understand the project and know if it has potential

Softcap and hardcap

I look for ranking websites like icobench to know the opinion of experts about the project

Roadmap to know the goals of the project and when they're planning to make things happen

Usually I look for the Telegram group and search the words "distribution" "price" "exchange" to know when I will receive my tokens, how much I could receive (money) and when I will be able to sell them ~if the project has potential I keep the tokens for a while~

I think that is all what I look for, and, if I'm very excited with one project in specific I look for YouTube videos of the team members in conferences talking about the project to see how they develop in public.

I hope that helps you. Greetings and happy bounty hunting Smiley.

That was very informative and helpful for a effective search.Highly appreciate the detailed answer. Smiley Smiley Smiley Smiley
Onur_luna
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April 10, 2018, 06:14:18 AM
 #5

many parameters are available. my attention is;
1- ad
2 - does it make sense
3-Can you take the investment
these parameters provide confidence.  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
VenturaBro
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April 10, 2018, 06:15:29 AM
 #6

Looking for effective bounty hunting... Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes

I try to look at the bigger picture - the idea behind the coin/project, see if I like it, their development team, so on.
Gabz999
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April 10, 2018, 06:19:29 AM
 #7

Personally when it comes to choose on what bounty would I'll be joining is I choose the most reliable campaign manager. For me it depends on who is the campaign manager who will manage the bounty. Sometimes I also see that it is worth to join in a campaign, I will see the pay rate after the campaign.
inooll00
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April 10, 2018, 06:40:57 AM
 #8

Personally when it comes to choose on what bounty would I'll be joining is I choose the most reliable campaign manager. For me it depends on who is the campaign manager who will manage the bounty. Sometimes I also see that it is worth to join in a campaign, I will see the pay rate after the campaign.
Indeed a manager is very influential in considering the bounty program that we will follow. Experienced managers will undertake some serious expeditions related to vision and mission, team, and so on for new projects before launch.
Afnan_faizah
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April 10, 2018, 06:44:09 AM
 #9

Looking for effective bounty hunting... Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
Look at the signature campaign, if there are many legendary members that join that campaign then it signs that the project is good. Legendary members are have many experience in this forum. Actually there are other signs such us how much the roi and how many team members

Sepertinya sudah waktunya, kalau menurut saya lebih baik lump sum sekarang. 30/01/2024.
cryptokingdom
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April 10, 2018, 06:55:43 AM
 #10

The key things I look at while choosing any bounty campaign are the project behind the campaign, the campaign manager, the backers of that project and the term members.

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April 10, 2018, 07:11:41 AM
 #11

I am more interested in signature campaign where it is very reliable in the future, most people prefer it to earn a clear income, in fact when bounty on hold with a great manager it will increase the hunt bounty large scale, if in the right, but now there are some good ones.

standards
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April 11, 2018, 02:30:52 AM
 #12

What I look for is:

How much time will during the bounty

How much percentage of the bounty pool per campaign (Twitter campaign, LinkedIn campaign and signature campaign usually are what I look for)

How looks the website, if it looks very poor automatically is a not for me

Team and advisors, if they have LinkedIn I start to stalk them

White paper to understand the project and know if it has potential

Softcap and hardcap

I look for ranking websites like icobench to know the opinion of experts about the project

Roadmap to know the goals of the project and when they're planning to make things happen

Usually I look for the Telegram group and search the words "distribution" "price" "exchange" to know when I will receive my tokens, how much I could receive (money) and when I will be able to sell them ~if the project has potential I keep the tokens for a while~

I think that is all what I look for, and, if I'm very excited with one project in specific I look for YouTube videos of the team members in conferences talking about the project to see how they develop in public.

I hope that helps you. Greetings and happy bounty hunting Smiley.
That is a pretty detailed list of factors we should take into account while evaluating bounties.
1- you should have a quick check of the project and team, exclude the obvious scam,
2- calculate the possible reward you will get, take the bounty duration into account,
3- join their Telegram group to further check if it is a legit one.
leland orser
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April 11, 2018, 02:55:22 AM
 #13

Most of the time you need to focus on whether the project is open source.
Generally speaking, open source projects are better.

jack107
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April 11, 2018, 02:58:58 AM
 #14

I always like to see how well the communication is an allocation for it. If you're looking for one, here's a good one I'm a part of: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=3173983.0

Also have an airdrop going on where you get 15,000 ALX tokens. https://algebraix.io/
Audistar
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April 11, 2018, 03:03:05 AM
 #15

Basically I just look at the dev team and advisers that manages it, roadmap, and lastly their visibility in various social media platforms.
If those three doesn't add up in a project that basically is no good for me.
Also, be wary of some other projects that have compelling whitepapers but not the dev team.
Classica35
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April 11, 2018, 03:05:54 AM
 #16

If you want go select a good bounty by yourself, you will have to do a serious work, because it might not that easy. For instance, you will have study the white paper, roadmap, the website, the team, also considering the duration of the project and many more.
The easiest way, will be to follow some bounty managers that have successfully managed some projects in the past.
tingcq9
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April 11, 2018, 03:09:17 AM
 #17

This is difficult. In the bull market of last year, any project could have a good return, but now it is a big bear city. There are fewer garbage items and fewer quality projects. Everyone has had a hard time. So look for technically supported projects instead of copying projects.
ishirut009
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April 11, 2018, 03:20:52 AM
 #18

what i look is, the percentage they put into bounty. The percentage they put into a campaign that you wish to participate. The spreadsheet that is updated. That's it. I hope i helped you man.

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April 11, 2018, 04:08:02 AM
 #19

So far that i know, the legal web and the whitepaper. Read the roadmap, i will do that if i have many free time, if i don't have i will just see the bounty manager and see the spreadsheet how much that intersting on that bounty.

With just seeing the spreadsheet is one of the sign you don't care of whether it's scam or not. Just see it later

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April 24, 2018, 09:41:03 PM
 #20

There are so many questions about in on this forum. I look at whitepaper, as the most important thing, then asking the community about it. Analyzing the graphs as well and some others that are stated above.
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