Free Telegram around a personal brand.
Friday Product Roast — speed round picking apart a launch from this week. Members reply, the fastest take wins.
Quizzes, polls, mini-games. Short events your community can play inside Telegram, with real scoring and a winner announced at the end. You launch, they join in, everyone sees who showed up.
Quiz, poll or mini-game: pick the format, set it up in 30 seconds, publish. The loop runs inside Telegram, your community joins in, the bot posts the winner to the chat. The whole flow, end to end.
People don't leave channels. They stop returning. And after a while you have hundreds of members and no idea who's actually still there.
The first few posts get likes and replies. A few weeks in, the same posts get a fraction of the response. Members are still there — they're just no longer paying attention.
A member count is a vanity metric. Without something that invites people to take part, there's no way to tell who's actively in the channel and who muted it three months ago.
More content raises the bar for what counts as “active” and burns you out. The channel needs a reason to participate, not more announcements.
A loop is a mini-event you launch when you want to activate the channel: a trivia to see who knows, a poll to decide something, a skill or luck mini-game where people compete for the best score. It runs for a few minutes, everything happens inside Telegram, the bot announces the winner in the chat — and you get a clear picture of who took part. Launch now, or schedule for later. Each loop is a single event, not a recurring post.
Pick the loop type, launch when you want to, see who took part.
Channels go quiet for the same reason — nothing pulls people back. Here's what a loop tends to look like in different kinds of communities.
Friday Product Roast — speed round picking apart a launch from this week. Members reply, the fastest take wins.
Weekly Build Check-in — choice loop, vote which member's update gets featured next week.
Monthly Drop Vote — poll between three SKUs. Whichever wins ships next.
Daily Pick — industry trivia. The name of whoever answered first lands in the chat, with their response time.
Speed Recap — speed round on what was covered this week. The bot posts the ranking of who got it right and how fast.
9 PM Tap 'n Cash — every night, a 7x7 grid with bombs. The name of whoever pulls the highest score gets posted to the chat. Your community waits for it.
Automate real-time engagement with recurring social loops. Start small, scale when the loops earn it.
We're early. Rather than promise outcomes we can't guarantee, here's the short version.
Connect a Telegram channel, launch a loop, see who shows up. Do it again whenever you want — or don't. Each loop is yours to fire when you need it.