The Daily Zoom Call: What Actually Happens And Why You Should Show Up
Every day at 5 PM UTC, the global Turbo Loop community meets on Zoom. Here's what a typical call looks like and why it's the best education available.
The Daily Zoom Call: What Actually Happens And Why You Should Show Up
Most DeFi communities live in Telegram and Discord. Turbo Loop adds a third channel: a live Zoom call every single day at 5:00 PM UTC. No exceptions. No off-days. Just the community showing up, sharing updates, answering questions, and building together.
What happens on the call
A typical 45-60 minute call has three parts:
1. Updates (5-10 min): Protocol updates, new promotions, milestones, upcoming events. Short, dense, current.
2. Community spotlight (10-15 min): Someone from the community — a country lead, a top referrer, a content creator — shares what they're doing, lessons learned, what's working. This is where the real strategies come out.
3. Q&A (20-30 min): Anyone can ask anything. New users ask "how do I compound?" Veterans ask about new features. The team or a senior community member answers every question. No filtering, no PR spin.
Why you should show up
For new users: The 30 minutes you spend on one daily Zoom are worth more than 10 hours of reading guides. You get current answers from current users, not docs written months ago.
For experienced users: You stay ahead of what's happening — new tools, new strategies, new promotions. You also get direct access to leadership for your own questions.
For community builders: You get visibility. Regular attendees get noticed. Some of the biggest country leads started as Zoom regulars who started asking good questions.
Join details
Time: 5:00 PM UTC daily (check your local time zone).
Language: English (main call). Regional calls in other languages run separately — ask in Telegram.
Zoom link: Pinned in Telegram Official Community.
Passcode: Always 541427.
A tip
Even if you can't attend live, join once to see what the vibe is. Most people who try it once keep showing up — the information density is that high.