How to find the next golden dog? Look for the targets that can evoke your emotions

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In Meme coin, emotional intelligence (EQ) is far more important than intelligence quotient (IQ). This article is derived from an article written by OnlyApes, and has been compiled, compiled and written by Deep Tide. (Synopsis: Vatican "mascot Luce" set off a religious meme coin craze, the eponymous Meme Market Cap soared over $60 million) (Background supplement: Meme coin investment 4 strategy: DEX buy/sell signals are the key to winning, big pump is usually only once.. Welcome, Fren! The on-chain meme market has been very active lately, which is part of the reason for the release of this latency. I will try to release future articles as soon as possible. When you first start following Meme coins, you'll be bombarded with a steady stream of coins. Thousands of coins are launched every day, but only a few are worth your time and money. Today, I will share the framework of my personal choice of Meme coin. I noticed that all people who have been successful in trading Meme coin have similar philosophies, but differ depending on their personal life experiences. A key aspect of choosing Memecoin is knowing which ones you should buy, and the process is personal and authentic. Of course, there are universal, widely recognized winners. But in some cases, with your unique perspective, you may find coins that others don't fully understand. You can think of each Meme coin as targeting a specific target market. Every good coin should resonate with a specific group. These groups all have unique values, beliefs, cultures, and emotional responses to events. The more you understand the target market of a coin and its ability to gain recognition within that group, the more likely you are to find successful coins. That's why a concept as simple as "cute puppy" gets so much follow. Almost everyone can relate to cute puppies. This is why subcoin existing memes can have a powerful effect. However, it's too hard to know which cute puppy to buy now. There are too many coins and cute puppies. I would simplify the process of choosing puppies and kittens to: buy only those coins that have already succeeded. You're unlikely to come across a new Dog Coin or Cat Coin that can reach billions of Market Caps. If you're looking for dog coins, I recommend following special cases like Doge's owner has a new dog named Neiro. Follow only those new animal coins that are already famous, or borrow the fame of other famous coins. However, this part of the market has become so "PvP" that I personally choose to ignore all the newly launched famous animal memes. If you must participate, either buy all the coins that are being PvP, or wait until the winner is selected to participate and be aware that your coins may be at risk of "bloodsucking attacks". I personally can completely avoid boundless gambling, so I usually choose not to participate. I have a key belief that you don't need to make money on any particular meme. Other than getting a few likes online, buying the kind of coin that everyone talks about for a few days doesn't matter at all. You just want to collect those coins that significantly outperform Mainstream Tokens (BTC, ETH, SOL) in your Meme portfolio and keep the yield. Today's focus is on providing a framework for Meme coin options. This also means being good at ignoring Meme coins, especially in the early stages when you should be collecting data points. Why do people buy Meme coin? This is a profound question, and everyone has their own answer. Some people buy them because of the possibility of huge financial gains, while others buy them because they find them interesting. In the context of Crypto Twitter, people mainly buy Meme coin because they think others will buy it. Current mainstream trends include: Ordinary encryption investors buy coins (mass market) that they believe non-ordinary encryption investors will buy at some point in the future. Ordinary Encryption investors buy coins that they find interesting (Encryption Market) Both mass-market and encryption coins can perform well. Until a real Bull Market emerges and there are a large number of regular participants, you need to follow those coins that are at least performing well in the encryption market. Framework If you want to make quick money in the Meme coin space, you need to follow the flow speed of attention. In other words, when you're making short- to medium-term investments, the main goal is to look for potential viral spreads. "But who knows what's going to be popular!" Any qualified content creator will tell you that this is simply not the case. Anyone with a certain fan base has had at least a few viral spreads. Remember when I said that everyone has a unique experience to guide them in choosing Meme coin? For me, it's about understanding how people react when they create written content. Meme coin is really just a form of content that you can speculate on. When I create content for the Encryption protocol, I want to improve my copywriting skills. I stumbled upon a very useful framework built by YouTube/Twitter content creator Shaan Puri. As I sat down to analyze my Meme coin framework, I realized that many viral content principles are applied to Meme coin selection, and this really works. Just like viral content, every good Meme coin resonates emotionally. I tweaked this framework to make it more suitable for Meme coin. You need to follow meme coins that evoke the following emotions — "wow" which is usually your typical dog, cat, hippopotamus coin. By the way: I think Moo Deng is ugly and not cute at all. But ordinary people like it, so let it rise to $1 billion. Funny — "Haha" Everyone has a unique sense of humor, but ideally, what you want to make you laugh will also make a lot of other people laugh. If no one understands your sense of humor, you're probably out of luck. Shock and amazement — "Incredible!" Stunts like villains fighting, someone setting themselves on fire, or anything that evokes a sense of surprise. Ridiculous — "What the hell?" Similar to shock and amazement, but more focused on stupidity. "Brain-dead" coins like Skibidi Toilet fall into this category. Anger — "This is too offensive / can't" anything controversial. The racist Meme coin counts here. (Note: The actual purchaser is not the one who is outraged by the concept of coin.) The real goal is that other people get angry, which sparks discussion and attracts attention. Disgust — "This is disgusting" I don't have a good example of Meme coin here, but I mention it because it applies to content. I think this is the weakest emotional trigger for me because I don't want to see something I find disgusting repeatedly in my Meme collection. We live in a world of endless content. You need emotional triggers to grab people's attention. Meme coin is just tokenized attention. Note: Emotional triggering is not the only reason for Meme coin's success. A better way to understand the framework is to have a higher probability of success when an emotional trigger is present. There are many other factors at play in the Meme coin space (e.g. holder base, distribution, mainstream meta). Emotional triggers help Meme be noticed. Often, coins extended from existing brands, followers, or recognizable movements can bypass emotionally triggered needs. Because people have established emotional connections, note...

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