The Builders and the Tourists Why Some People Create Communities While Others Only Visit Them
Image Source: AI-generated based on the themes discussed in this article.
Introduction — Two Types of People
Every community, whether online or offline, is shaped by two very different kinds of people.
The difference is not intelligence.
It is not wealth.
It is not status.
It is not influence.
The difference is mindset.
Throughout history, every civilization, every movement, every company, every tribe, every city, every church, every nation, and every community has been shaped by the relationship between two groups:
Builders and Tourists.
Both groups are important.
Both groups serve a purpose.
Neither should be hated or dismissed.
But understanding the difference between them reveals why some communities thrive for generations while others disappear almost as quickly as they appeared.
The internet is no exception.
In fact, the digital age may have made this distinction more important than ever.
The Tourists
Tourists are not bad people.
Everyone is a tourist somewhere.
A tourist arrives.
A tourist enjoys.
A tourist consumes.
A tourist leaves.
There is nothing inherently wrong with that.
Tourists bring energy.
They bring attention.
They bring visibility.
They bring activity.
Without tourists, communities often struggle to grow.
But tourists do not build foundations.
They enjoy what others have already built.
Think about tourism in the physical world.
Millions of people visit famous cities every year.
They enjoy the restaurants.
They enjoy the culture.
They enjoy the architecture.
They enjoy the experience.
But they did not build the roads.
They did not build the buildings.
They did not create the culture.
They arrived after the difficult work was already completed.
The same thing happens online.
Many people arrive when something becomes popular.
They participate while excitement is high.
They engage while attention is flowing.
But when the excitement fades, they move on to the next destination.
They are not attached to the community itself.
They are attached to the experience.
And experiences eventually change.
The Builders
Builders operate differently.
Builders arrive before anyone else wants to be there.
Builders create before there is an audience.
Builders contribute before there is recognition.
Builders continue working when nobody is watching.
This is what makes them builders.
They are not motivated solely by immediate rewards.
They are motivated by creation itself.
A builder sees an empty field and imagines a city.
A builder sees an abandoned project and imagines a future.
A builder sees possibility where others see nothing.
History has always depended upon builders.
Every civilization was built by people who invested effort before results were visible.
Every library.
Every city.
Every invention.
Every institution.
Every culture.
Every tradition.
Every successful community.
Someone had to begin.
Someone had to believe before the evidence existed.
Someone had to build.
Why Most Communities Fail
Most communities do not fail because they lack visitors.
Most communities fail because they lack builders.
Many projects become obsessed with attracting attention.
They focus entirely on visibility.
Marketing.
Promotion.
Growth.
Exposure.
Engagement.
But attention alone is not enough.
Attention is temporary.
Builders create permanence.
A community full of tourists may appear successful for a while.
The numbers may look impressive.
The activity may look impressive.
The excitement may look impressive.
But if very few people are actually building, the foundation remains weak.
When the excitement fades, there is nothing left supporting the structure.
The crowd moves on.
The community collapses.
This pattern repeats constantly across the internet.
Projects explode.
Projects trend.
Projects go viral.
Then they disappear.
Not because they lacked attention.
Because they lacked builders.
The Internet Rewards Tourists
One reason this problem has become so common is that modern platforms are often designed to reward tourist behavior.
Most social media systems encourage consumption rather than construction.
Users scroll.
Users react.
Users move on.
The design encourages speed.
The design encourages novelty.
The design encourages endless movement.
Very little encourages long-term stewardship.
Very little encourages ownership.
Very little encourages community responsibility.
This creates an environment where people become spectators rather than participants.
Consumers rather than creators.
Visitors rather than builders.
The result is an internet filled with temporary trends and increasingly fragile communities.
Communities become dependent on algorithms they do not control.
Platforms they do not own.
Rules they do not write.
Infrastructure they cannot protect.
And when the platform changes, the community often suffers.
The Difference Between Hype and Culture
This distinction becomes especially important in crypto.
Many people confuse hype with culture.
The two are not the same thing.
Hype attracts attention.
Culture creates belonging.
Hype can appear overnight.
Culture often takes years.
Hype depends on excitement.
Culture depends on identity.
Hype can be purchased.
Culture must be earned.
A community built entirely on hype remains vulnerable because hype is temporary.
Eventually something newer appears.
Something louder appears.
Something shinier appears.
The crowd follows.
Culture behaves differently.
People protect culture.
People preserve culture.
People defend culture.
People build upon culture.
Culture survives because people become emotionally invested in its existence.
That investment creates resilience.
And resilience creates longevity.
Why Builders Matter More Than Numbers
One dedicated builder can contribute more to a community than thousands of passive visitors.
This truth often surprises people.
Large numbers can create the illusion of strength.
But numbers alone rarely determine survival.
Commitment determines survival.
Throughout history, relatively small groups of dedicated individuals have repeatedly outperformed much larger groups lacking shared purpose.
The same principle applies online.
A community with a few committed builders often accomplishes more than a community with thousands of spectators.
Builders create content.
Builders organize events.
Builders welcome newcomers.
Builders solve problems.
Builders develop infrastructure.
Builders preserve culture.
Builders create continuity.
Without builders, communities become temporary gatherings.
With builders, communities become institutions.
The Story of Baby Lady
This principle is one reason Baby Lady continues to interest me.
More then two years ago, the original team abandoned the project shortly after launch.
Most people assumed the story had ended.
The market cap collapsed.
The excitement disappeared.
The crowd moved on.
From the perspective of tourists, the project was finished.
But builders see things differently.
Builders do not ask:
"What is popular today?"
Builders ask:
"What could this become tomorrow?"
Instead of disappearing, the community continued building.
Supply was locked.
Infrastructure was improved.
Verification was secured.
Content continued being created.
Relationships continued being formed.
The project survived.
Not because of hype.
Because people kept building.
That distinction matters.
Many projects receive attention.
Far fewer receive stewardship.
Hive and the Builder Mindset
This is one reason Hive interests me.
Hive naturally attracts builders.
Not because builders are forced to be there.
Because the architecture rewards long-term participation.
Hive is not designed primarily around consumption.
It is designed around contribution.
Publishing.
Curation.
Community formation.
Ownership.
Creation.
People who remain on Hive for years are usually not tourists.
They are builders.
They are creating something.
They are investing effort.
They are contributing to an ecosystem larger than themselves.
This creates a very different culture than what exists on many mainstream platforms.
The result is not merely content.
The result is infrastructure.
The result is civilization.
MemeHive and Community Ownership
The same reason I find Hive interesting is why I find MemeHive interesting.
At first glance, some people see a token.
I see something deeper.
I see communities beginning to recognize that culture itself has value.
Memes are not simply entertainment.
Memes are identity.
Memes are communication.
Memes are shared stories.
Memes are shared memory.
MemeHive provides an environment where those cultural artifacts can be created, shared, preserved, and rewarded.
That is a builder-oriented concept.
It encourages participation rather than passive observation.
It encourages contribution rather than endless consumption.
And communities built around contribution tend to endure longer.
The Future Belongs to Builders
The future of the internet will not be determined primarily by tourists.
Tourists will always exist.
Tourists will always matter.
Tourists bring visibility.
Tourists bring growth.
Tourists bring new perspectives.
But builders create the environments tourists eventually visit.
Builders write the code.
Builders create the content.
Builders establish the communities.
Builders preserve the culture.
Builders create the foundations.
Every digital civilization ultimately rests upon the efforts of people willing to build before rewards are guaranteed.
People willing to contribute before recognition arrives.
People willing to create rather than simply consume.
Those individuals quietly shape the future.
Conclusion — Which One Are You?
Perhaps the most important question is not whether builders or tourists are more important.
The more important question is:
Which one are you becoming?
Every community needs visitors.
Every community needs newcomers.
Every community needs fresh perspectives.
But communities survive because some people eventually decide to stop visiting and start building.
The internet desperately needs more builders.
More creators.
More stewards.
More people willing to invest in communities they believe deserve to exist.
Because in the end, civilizations are not built by spectators.
They are built by participants.
They are built by contributors.
They are built by people who choose creation over consumption.
The future belongs to those who build it.
And every great community begins when someone decides to stop being a tourist and become a builder.