
No business grows without people — without a network effect.
And in Web3, other projects are people too, right? That’s why no product, protocol, or ecosystem can scale without partnerships.
To make those partnerships happen, there are people whose entire job is to connect teams, ideas, and opportunities like links in a chain. These are Business Development Managers — the ones who keep the engine moving forward.
Most users never think about this role, because it usually stays behind the scenes. But if you’ve ever wondered how projects collaborate, grow, secure integrations, or get exposure — there is always a BD somewhere in the background, doing the quiet but essential work.
And here’s the interesting part: any motivated person can learn how to do it.
A Business Developer (BD) is essentially the “connector-in-chief.” They find opportunities, start conversations, and bring two projects together when there’s mutual value.
It’s not about code, desifn, or a VC role — it’s just someone who understands people, opportunities, and timing.
In Web3, a BD is the person who:
In the simplest terms: BDs create doors where others see walls.
A BD’s work is straightforward — and surprisingly similar to what many airdrop hunters already do:
Research: checking new launches, monitoring ecosystems, finding promising projects.
Outreach: messaging founders, community leads, or product managers.
Connection: setting up Telegram group chats between projects.
Alignment: explaining how each side can benefit from collaboration.
Follow-up: ensuring everything moves forward.
Curiosity, persistence, and communication — that’s the secret formula.
Good BDs usually share a few traits:
Soft skills
Hard skills
If you’ve ever researched an ecosystem, hunted for airdrops, or discovered a new protocol before everyone else — congratulations, you already have BD instincts.
Big projects need BDs to maintain strong relationships with existing partners. Without that, integrations fall apart, data stops flowing, and opportunities get lost.
Growing projects need BDs even more. They rely on new partnerships to expand to new ecosystems, get listed on new platforms, secure co-marketing campaigns, and build trust through association.
No partnerships → no network effect → no growth. It’s that simple.
Let’s be honest: Airdrops can pay well — sometimes. But it’s unpredictable. You spend months interacting, bridging, swapping, and signing transactions… and the project might still give nothing or give very little. Or give a token that drops 70% in a week.
Not very comforting.
Meanwhile, the average BD in Web3 earns $1,500–$6,000/month, depending on seniority, $100–$300 per lead in freelance-style contribution models + bonuses for closed integrations or long-term deals
And most importantly:BD earnings are stable. You get paid for the work you actually do — not for a lottery ticket.
Here’s the ironic part: Every project wants an “experienced BD”… but where do people get experience if no one is willing to train them?
This is the main barrier for thousands of talented community members who could become great BDs — but don’t know where to start.
That’s exactly why we built Nomis Community Hub.
Explore simple opportunities like Nomis Community Hub. It gives anyone the chance to start building real BD experience.
You help Nomis grow its network, bring potential partners, and open conversations with cool projects. In return, you receive:
You help us build Nomis — and we help you build your career.
We also support you further with performance reviews and recommendations on LinkedIn!
If you want to grow in Web3, we’ll help you move forward.
Airdrops are unpredictable. They may pay once, twice — or never. You live in constant uncertainty, waiting for someone else to decide your future.
BD work is different: real tasks, real skills, real partnerships, real money, real growth (the counter of the word real has broken here)
So what’s your move? Keep grinding airdrops, or start building your career with Nomis? Your choice. But one of these paths leads to stability, skills, and long-term success :)