An AMA can help a Korean audience meet the people behind a global project, but the format is often wasted. The host reads a long introduction, the guest gives answers built from a press release, and community questions are squeezed into the final minutes. Attendance may be reported, yet little new understanding is created.
A useful session begins with a narrow purpose. It might explain a product release, introduce an ecosystem program, answer concerns around a migration, or help potential partners understand the foundation. The topic should determine the guest, host, platform, briefing, and follow-up. โAwarenessโ alone is not a sufficient production plan.
Choose one audience and one promise
Describe who should attend and what they should understand by the end. New community members need a different session from developers or experienced token holders. Limit the title to a clear subject. A focused conversation is easier to promote and gives the host permission to skip unrelated questions without appearing evasive.
Select a guest who can answer the likely questions. A founder may tell the broad story, while a product lead can explain a release and an ecosystem lead can discuss grants. Seniority does not replace subject knowledge. Confirm the guest's availability for rehearsal and fact review.
- Audience and prior knowledge
- One subject and three learning outcomes
- Guest with direct subject ownership
- Platform chosen for audience behavior
- Public replay and recap plan
Brief the host with context, not scripts
Give the host a concise project overview, terminology, recent developments, sensitive topics, approved sources, and the reason the update matters in Korea. Prepare a question arc that moves from context to specifics and then to audience concerns. The host should understand what a useful answer sounds like without being forced to read advertising copy.
Share difficult but fair questions before the session so the guest can prepare accurate answers. Do not use rehearsal to remove every challenge. If a topic cannot be discussed, decide on a clear boundary and explain it honestly rather than filling time with vague language.
Plan interpretation and pacing
Live interpretation changes the rhythm. Shorter answers are easier to translate accurately and give the audience time to absorb technical points. Decide whether interpretation is consecutive, whether written summaries will appear in chat, and how token names, abbreviations, numbers, and dates will be handled. Give the interpreter source materials early.
Rehearse the opening, handoffs, audience question process, and closing. Test microphones, permissions, recording, links, and backup communication. For Telegram, plan slow mode and moderator roles. For X Spaces, assign a co-host who can manage speakers while the primary host stays in the conversation.
Collect and moderate audience questions
Open a question form or community thread before the event. Group submissions by theme and include representative questions rather than selecting only praise. During the session, moderators should remove scams and abuse but preserve reasonable criticism. Tell participants how questions are chosen and what will happen to unanswered ones.
Never ask users to share seed phrases, private keys, or sensitive account information. Repeat official links and scam warnings in the event post. Impersonators often exploit moments of increased attention, so monitor replies and community channels before and after the session.
Turn the session into durable content
Publish a recap with the main answers, official resources, and corrections if anything was unclear. Edit short clips or quote cards only when the excerpt preserves the original meaning. A Medium article can hold the complete explanation, X can share key moments, and Telegram can host follow-up discussion. Answer important questions that did not fit live.
This follow-up often produces more long-term value than the live audience total. It gives future community members a reference and reduces repeated support work. Add relevant answers to the moderator knowledge base.
Measure the conversation, not only attendance
Track registrations or listeners, but also question quality, completion, replay use, recap visits, official-link clicks, new relevant followers, community discussion, and next actions such as documentation visits. Note which explanation caused confusion and which topic created sustained interest. Use those findings in the next content cycle.
BlockPlanet can support Korean community operations, X content, Telegram management, community marketing, and campaign coordination around an AMA. Define platform, production, guest preparation, translation, promotion, moderation, recap, and reporting separately. The session should fit into the broader Korea plan instead of becoming a disconnected event.
Talk to BlockPlanet
Planning your next move in Korea?
Tell us where your project stands. We will help you turn local marketing, community, PR, and operations into a practical plan.
Frequently asked questions
Is Telegram or X Spaces better for a Korean crypto AMA?
Choose based on where the target audience already participates and whether the format needs open audio, chat, recording, or tighter moderation. Both can work with proper preparation.
Should AMA questions be shared with the guest in advance?
Share the themes and difficult factual questions so answers can be accurate. Keep room for genuine follow-up so the event does not sound entirely scripted.
How should an AMA be measured?
Combine attendance with question quality, replay and recap use, useful clicks, community response, and the content or product decisions that follow.