Good groups show real activity
Member counts line up with visible posting volume and activity from different users.
Telegram shilling groups are one of the highest-intent discovery environments in crypto. This guide covers how to find them, score them, avoid low-quality lists, and manage group operations with SendGecko.
Move from basic definitions to list-building, posting cadence, and operational control.
Telegram shilling groups are communities built specifically for crypto promotion. People join them with a basic shared expectation: projects will be promoted, traders will scan the feed for opportunities, and community members will surface new launches, listings, and narratives.
That makes them very different from general Telegram communities, where promotion is usually treated as disruption. In a shilling group, promotion is the point. The group exists to create a stream of project visibility and discovery.
These groups range from huge, noisy general rooms to much tighter communities centered on a specific chain, region, or token category. Some allow open posting. Others require basic verification, approval, or compliance with posting rules. A few operate more like premium media placements with admin oversight.
Shilling groups sit at an unusual intersection of reach and intent. The people inside them are not random viewers. They actively chose an environment where new projects are constantly surfaced. That makes the audience much closer to a discovery market than to passive social traffic.
A well-built group list can place a project in front of very large numbers of crypto-native readers every campaign cycle. That matters not just for clicks but for pattern recognition. Traders notice projects that appear repeatedly across several different communities. That repeated presence creates perceived momentum.
For launch campaigns, these groups create fast early visibility. For ongoing promotion, they create persistent awareness that compounds over time. That is why group quality is one of the biggest structural advantages a Telegram operator can build.
Member counts line up with visible posting volume and activity from different users.
Admins enforce some standards, remove obvious scams, and keep the room usable.
Inflated member counts with almost no daily activity usually mean worthless reach.
If every post follows the same rigid format from the same few accounts, quality is likely fake.
Low-quality groups do not just waste time. They waste account health. Every posting slot spent in a dead or fake room is a slot not spent where real readers exist. That is why list quality matters at least as much as message quality.
Use Telegram search with terms like crypto shill, promote project, and shilling allowed.
Start from curated community lists, but verify every candidate manually before trusting it.
Watch which groups your competitors or adjacent projects use repeatedly.
Use high-quality groups to discover other high-quality groups through mentions and overlap.
Research niche groups aligned to the chain, region, or category your project actually fits.
Building a list takes time at the beginning because real quality only becomes obvious after manual review. The payoff is that a vetted list becomes a durable operating asset. Once it exists, you can reuse it, score it, expand it, and deploy against it through a structured workflow instead of starting from scratch.
Before adding any group, spend a few minutes checking six things:
A simple scoring model works well. Rate each group on activity, diversity, moderation, and usability. Keep only the stronger groups in the primary campaign list and park the borderline ones in a secondary list for review later.
A master group list is one of the few compounding assets in Telegram marketing. The better it gets, the stronger every future campaign becomes. Unlike paid ads, where you rent attention repeatedly, a curated list becomes part of your operating advantage.
Start with a few hundred verified groups if possible. That gives you enough surface area for meaningful campaign testing without forcing any single group to carry too much frequency. Then maintain the list as an ongoing process, not a one-time task.
Review it monthly. Remove inactive rooms, remove groups that have turned into pure noise, note where accounts have been removed, and keep expanding with new verified groups every month. Add categorization by quality tier, niche, and geography so future campaigns can target the right subset quickly.
Best for broad visibility, launch reach, and making the project appear everywhere quickly.
Best for relevance, tighter audience fit, and higher-quality engagement from people who care.
The strongest strategy usually uses both. General groups help create reach and momentum. Niche groups help create efficient engagement with people more likely to care about the specific project. A Solana meme launch, for example, should not rely on the same group mix as an Ethereum DeFi protocol.
This is where list categorization becomes operationally important. If you keep general and niche groups separate, you can run launch blitz campaigns one way and longer-term growth campaigns another way without rebuilding the list every time.
High-volume rooms can usually tolerate more daily appearances because posts disappear quickly.
A slower cadence is safer because visibility lasts longer and repetition becomes more obvious.
Conservative frequency usually works best because relationship quality matters more than raw volume.
If the group states a frequency limit, treat it as a hard ceiling rather than a suggestion.
Sustainable cadence should match group size, speed, and rule enforcement. A good schedule is not the same across every group.
Group rules matter because admins control access to the environments that perform best. The first step is simple: always read pinned rules before the group enters the active list. Many high-value groups require basic verification, restrict repost frequency, or ban duplicate project promotion within short windows.
Respecting rules does not weaken the campaign. It protects the campaign. Repeated removals in valuable groups are usually an operational failure, not bad luck. The better approach is to understand the limits, rotate accounts responsibly, and keep backup coverage for the rooms that consistently produce value.
And if an admin removes an account, move on. Trying to force the issue rarely helps and can escalate the ban across more accounts than necessary.
SendGecko brings group operations into the same system as accounts, scheduling, and message variation. Instead of maintaining separate spreadsheets, chat windows, and manual logs, operators can keep group lists, categories, campaign assignments, and posting history together in one interface.
That matters because group management is not separate from campaign execution. Which groups are active, which groups are high quality, which accounts can still post, and how often those rooms should be covered are all part of the same operational decision set.
If you want the broader workflow view, this guide pairs naturally with the Telegram shill bot guide, the Telegram scheduler guide, and the product page for Telegram group marketing.
Manual: hours of repetitive work every day. SendGecko: scheduled, repeatable execution.
Manual: rewrite constantly or repeat yourself. SendGecko: AI-assisted rotation built in.
Manual: multiple windows and notes. SendGecko: one dashboard and structured assignments.
Manual: inconsistent timing. SendGecko: recurring schedules and per-group cadence control.
Manual: external spreadsheets and scattered notes. SendGecko: group organization inside the workflow.
Manual: hard to see what actually ran. SendGecko: clearer campaign state and issue tracking.
Practical questions about building and operating a real Telegram shilling group list.
Keep exploring the SendGecko pages that connect group research with campaign execution.