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Listen, let me be frank. Most DAO governance processes right now are like a "democratic fashion show"—the voting phase feels like a real event, but the execution is painfully slow, with a few core members making all the decisions, and ordinary token holders are just tools for voting.
I've participated in over a dozen DAO projects, and most of the experience is like this: heated discussions in community groups, then after voting, nothing happens. The supposed collective decision-making turns out to be just a few big players making the call. After voting, you wait and wait, until the opportunity with a time limit has long passed, and the chance is gone.
It wasn't until I encountered an example—an execution of a proposal by a leading liquidity protocol DAO—that my understanding was completely changed.
**The 48-Hour Miracle**
Last month, this DAO had a proposal: "Allocate 50,000 USDC to sponsor liquidity mining activities for three emerging DeFi protocols on BSC."
The timeline was as follows:
Monday 10:00 AM → Proposal officially on-chain
Monday 3:00 PM → Community begins voting and discussion
All day Tuesday → Voting and feedback phase
Wednesday 11:00 AM → Proposal approved
Wednesday 2:00 PM → 50,000 USDC transferred to the three protocols' fund addresses
From proposal to funds arriving, the entire process took no more than 48 hours.
Compare that to how other projects handle it:
Project A: Similar liquidity sponsorship proposal, but the discussion phase alone dragged for 3 weeks. By the time the vote passed, DeFi hot spots had already shifted.
Project B: The vote was approved, but the finance team "went through the process" and waited another month. By the time the money arrived, the market had already changed.
Project C: The most absurd case—after the proposal was approved, due to market volatility, they decided to cancel the plan altogether—after two months of messing around, nothing was accomplished.
What’s the difference between 48 hours and a month in the DeFi world? It’s the ability to seize liquidity windows and completely miss out on profit waves. This is no small matter.
**Why is the execution efficiency so different?**
Many think that a high-efficiency DAO just means "fast voting," but it’s much more than that. The real differences are:
First, a clear decision-making process. It’s not just about passing a vote; the proposal is designed with execution details in mind—who is responsible for transfers, how funds are allocated, failure contingency plans—all written into the proposal. Passing the vote means the execution is essentially approved too.
Second, clear team permissions. It’s not waiting for a financial officer to "find time" to execute, but rather automatic execution via smart contracts or explicitly authorized personnel who can act immediately. Clear permissions mean clear responsibilities.
Third, sensitivity to market rhythm. For time-sensitive proposals like liquidity mining, if discussions last more than 48 hours, market conditions will change, and the opportunity might be missed or the proposal becomes invalid. An efficient DAO can precisely hit the market timing.
**How can ordinary token holders benefit from this?**
If you’re involved in DAO governance, pay attention to these signals:
Check if the proposal design is complete—good proposals not only specify what to do but also how, who, and when to execute.
Review historical execution records—how long between proposal approval and actual implementation reflects a DAO’s execution capability.
Look at the success rate of time-sensitive proposals—related to liquidity and market conditions—and whether the actual results match expectations.
Honestly, most DAOs are still in the inefficient "democratic performance" stage. But some projects are exploring truly efficient on-chain governance. Next time you participate in a vote, consider these details—good governance isn’t about fast voting, but about creating real value for token holders across the ecosystem.