Signature Campaigns Explained — Realistic Earnings by Rank
Honest numbers on what each rank actually earns, and the campaigns to avoid.
Signature Campaigns Explained — Realistic Earnings by Rank
Signature campaigns are the most common way people earn on Bitcointalk. They're also the most misunderstood. Here are the actual numbers, the realistic expectations, and the campaigns you should walk away from.
How they work
A campaign manager pays you to wear a specific signature (and sometimes avatar) on your forum posts. Each qualifying post earns a small amount. You're paid weekly or bi-weekly in BTC.
The pay scales with your rank:
| Rank | Typical $/post | Posts/week cap | Realistic monthly | |---------------|----------------|----------------|-------------------| | Newbie | Usually ineligible | — | $0 | | Jr. Member | $0.05 - $0.10 | 30-50 | $5 - $20 | | Member | $0.20 - $0.40 | 50-100 | $40 - $160 | | Full Member | $0.50 - $1.00 | 80-140 | $160 - $560 | | Sr. Member | $1.00 - $2.00 | 100-150 | $400 - $1200 | | Hero Member | $2.00 - $4.00 | 100-180 | $800 - $2800 | | Legendary | $3.00 - $7.00 | 100-200 | $1200 - $5500 |
These are ballpark. Actual rates vary by campaign, by season, and by the project's marketing budget.
What counts as a qualifying post
Most campaigns require:
- Minimum word count (often 75-120 characters)
- Posted in approved boards (usually no shitposting in Off-Topic)
- Not duplicated/bumped
- Substantive — not "agreed" or "+1"
Most managers manually review your posts weekly. Spam-pattern posting gets you removed from the campaign and sometimes negatively rated.
Finding legitimate campaigns
Look in the Bounties (Altcoins) and Services boards. Real campaigns have:
- A pinned thread with rules, terms, and a public payment ledger
- A manager account with multi-year history and positive trust
- Other long-time forum members already participating publicly
- Clear withdrawal rules (e.g. weekly auto-payments)
Red flags
Do
- +Read the campaign thread fully before applying
- +Check the manager's trust profile
- +Verify a public payment history (managers post weekly screenshots)
- +Start with one campaign for a month before joining others
Don't
- −Pay any 'registration fee' or 'verification deposit'
- −Join a campaign for a project flagged in the Reputation board
- −Run multiple campaigns simultaneously across alt accounts
- −Promote scams just because the campaign pays well
The reputation cost
This is the part most newcomers miss: your signature is your endorsement.
If you wear a signature for a scam project, your forum reputation takes the hit, not the project's. Real members will negative-trust you, your existing trust feedback gets diluted, and your future earning capacity tanks.
The math:
- A scam campaign paying $300/month for 3 months → $900 earned
- A red trust feedback from a DT member → may permanently cap your future campaign earnings at $0
The asymmetry isn't even close.
What good campaign discipline looks like
- Maintain one campaign at a time
- Always wear the campaign signature for the full agreed period — don't switch mid-week
- Post quality content in the boards you'd post in anyway
- Drop campaigns whose project quality declines (don't burn your trust for a falling star)
- Save 20-40% of earnings to BTC cold storage — that's the real long-term value
When to stop
When the campaign starts asking you to make claims you don't believe, do things you'd be embarrassed by, or post outside your area of competence — leave. There's always another campaign. There's only one of your forum reputation.
Related
- Guides8 min read
The 5 Most Common Scams on Bitcointalk (And How to Spot Them)
Impersonation, fake escrow, signature campaign frauds, account selling, fake bounty pages — the patterns that catch newcomers.
May 15, 2026
- Guides7 min read
How Merit Actually Works (And How to Earn It Honestly)
Merit isn't karma. It's a quality filter built to break account farms. Here's the system in plain English.
May 12, 2026
- Guides6 min read
Reading a Bitcointalk Profile — A Newbie's Guide
Every signal on a forum profile that tells you whether to trust, ignore, or run from someone.
May 9, 2026