Author

Topic: How do you decide investing in an Altcoin, esp. ICO? (Read 267 times)

newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 18
While making a decision on investing in a project for the long term,I try to do research on -
1. The team - their track record with previous ventures, github, linkedin profiles
2. The whitepaper
3. If the project actually needs a seperate token.
4. How the team engages the community on telegram, twitter, reddit.

full member
Activity: 322
Merit: 179
I will first look at the Whitepaper to understand about what is the project trying to solve and whether the idea is disruptive. If the idea is good IMO. I will look other aspects like

1) how to solve the problem
2)roadmap
3) funds needed
hero member
Activity: 1876
Merit: 512
I think what I look for in a project is that is this idea solving and gap in the space, there are some projects that when you see you just jump on them because they are sound idea, but idea is not enough, now you need to ask yourself if the team have the technical know-how to develop the concept
full member
Activity: 364
Merit: 123
There is this famous sentence "do your own research" everywhere. But, do you have any methodology to research a project (its idea, team, website etc.) and finally make a decision?

One of the biggest things i look for is projects that are actually going to have a real world use, if they can be adopted by billions instead of a niche then they have far more potential for growth. I of course then look at the team and the ICO structure as well as other things. I also like to invest in projects that are already established and have a working product wherever possible.
sr. member
Activity: 1526
Merit: 282
tBTC - https://dapp.tbtc.network/
it's very easy actually to do 'our own' research,
and my method is not really that complicated like others people,which are :
1.Looking their Announcement Thread,usually if it's a good one they will try to arrange it as good as they can.
because they want to attract the investor.

2.Their Website,
if they have a good website and in there you can find a full details about their project,
usually most of them were a good projects.

3.Moderated or not,
if they moderated it and open up an ICOs,it would be better for you to stay away from it.
because 99% people who did this were scammer.
member
Activity: 60
Merit: 10
This was a very concrete answer with very good examples. Thanks a lot!
member
Activity: 126
Merit: 10
Ice Rock Mining - Lifetime Profit
Look for an altcoin that serves a purpose - something that fills a need. You don't want just another "I-can-do-it-too" coin. You want a platform with great potential, and where participation on the platform requires possession of their specific altcoin.

For example:
1. Golem is a platform where you rent out your unused computer processing power (at night) to people who need it. But in order to participate, you must pay or get paid in Golem. Therfore, there is a strong demand for the coin, and therefore it does really well.
3. Spectre.ai is a platform that facilitates brokerless trading. They actually sell two tokes. Dividend tokens are used to populate the trading pool against which traders will trade, and it pays token-holders 2% of each trade made on the platform. The utility token gives holders advantages and tools, and increases their chances of placing a winning trade. The utility tokens are highly desirable by traders - the people who will use the platform every day - and will therefore gain in value.
2. Electroneum is the first coin that can be with from a smartphone. In addition, they plan to start penetrating gaming markets, where you will need ETN tokens to pay for certain features in a game.

All these coins will become more valuable because people need them to participate on those platforms.

Also look for altcoins that have buyback campaigns, which will also ensure the coin gets scarcer and more valuable.

Once you find a project that passes the criteria above, you can start doing due diligence. Review the team, make sure they know what they're doing, look up their physical offices and investigate, make sure the timescales are realistic, etc...
member
Activity: 60
Merit: 10
There is this famous sentence "do your own research" everywhere. But, do you have any methodology to research a project (its idea, team, website etc.) and finally make a decision?
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