There’s a strange pattern in crypto that most people sense is real… but very few people actually track it consistently enough to benefit from it.
When CZ (Changpeng Zhao) (@cz_binance) follows a new account on X, the market usually reacts in some way, sometimes instantly, sometimes slowly, but almost always with curiosity.
It doesn’t matter if it’s a big project, a small builder, or a fresh ecosystem account.
That single follow often becomes a signal that makes people look closer, start asking questions, and shift their attention.
And in crypto, attention is everything.
I noticed this pattern randomly at first.
It wasn’t something I planned to study. It just kept happening right in front of me.
Then it happened again.
And again.
After a while, I realized this wasn’t just “one lucky moment.”
It genuinely started to feel like finding gold… because it was a signal most people weren’t watching early enough.
The only problem?
Manually tracking it is basically impossible if you have a life.
So I turned it into a simple system I could follow every day.
The Pattern I Noticed: CZ Follows → Attention → Momentum
Crypto doesn’t move only with charts, indicators, and technical analysis.
A huge part of it moves with signals, especially social signals.
And one of the strongest “early signals” I kept seeing was this:
When CZ follows someone or some project, it often leads to momentum.
Because in many cases, a new follow can mean one of these things is coming:
- The project is about to make a major announcement
- A listing or launch is approaching soon
- A Binance-related milestone might be close
- The ecosystem is about to gain visibility and attention
- Something is happening behind the scenes that isn’t public yet
And even if you don’t trade based on it immediately…
Just seeing that follow early gives you an informational advantage.
You can start watching the project.
You can research it properly instead of reacting emotionally.
And you can be prepared before the timeline turns it into the next hype cycle.
Why Tracking CZ Manually Doesn’t Work
At first, I tried doing this the “simple” way.
I’d open CZ’s profile.
Check his following list.
Scroll down.
Try to remember which accounts were new.
And honestly, it got frustrating fast.
Because even if you check once a day, you’ll still miss things.
Here’s why manual tracking fails:
- You can’t easily compare yesterday’s list vs today’s list
- X doesn’t provide a clean “change log” or tracking history
- Following lists are huge and limited

- One small follow can get buried inside the noise immediately
- You end up refreshing constantly and still missing the real signal
And the worst part is…
Even if you catch a new follow, you still don’t have a system to organize it.
You just have “a feeling.”
That’s when I realized the truth:
If I want to use this pattern seriously, I need a tool that tracks the changes automatically and shows me exactly what happened.
The Tool I Used: Circleboom Twitter
That’s when I started using Circleboom Twitter.

It’s an official developer partner of X, which is extremely important because you don’t want to connect your account to random tools that feel risky or unofficial.
Circleboom Twitter is a complete Twitter/X management platform that covers things like:
- Follower and following management
- Content creation and publishing workflows
- Account and post analytics
- Smart search and discovery tools
- Audience cleanup features for quality growth
But the feature I cared about most for this strategy was simple:
✅ Tracking someone’s follower and following activity automatically

Because that’s the feature that turns this “CZ signal” idea from a theory into something you can actually use daily.
The Most Useful Feature: Tracking Someone’s Followings & Followers
Circleboom allows you to set alerts for public accounts, and then it gives you a clean daily list showing exactly what changed.
That means you can see:
- Who CZ followed today
- Who followed CZ today
- Which accounts are new compared to yesterday
- What changed without you needing to compare lists manually
This sounds small, but it completely changes the workflow.
Because it turns the whole thing from:
“Maybe something happened…”
into:
“Here is the exact list of what happened today.”
And once you have that list, everything becomes easier:
- You scan it quickly
- Research anything interesting
- Follow the accounts if you want
- Export them for your own watchlist and tracking system
That’s exactly how I used it.
Step-by-Step: HowYou Can Track Any Accounts New Followings Using Circleboom Twitter
Here’s the exact process I followed, and it only takes a few minutes to set up.
Step #1: Select any username you want to track on X.
You will track their recently followed audience.

Step #2: Next, you will choose "Followings" or "Followers".
You should select one of the tracking options.

Step #3: Regarding the followings, you can track new, recent followings and unfollowings.
You can track both at the same time!

Step #4: For your tracking operations, you can receive email updates for each check.
You can still track new followings or followers without email notifications. You can monitor the following or followers with dashboard-only reports.

Step #5: Now, you should set the frequency.
You can get "Daily Tracking" or "Weekly Tracking".

Step #6: The next step is subscription.
After checking the rules, you can start tracking.

Tracking is now active. That's it! Now you can monitor newly followings and followers of anyone on X with Circleboom!

That’s it.
From that point on, Circleboom sends you clean, structured lists, no noise, no manual checking.
The Proof Moment: When It Actually Worked
This is the part that made me stick with the strategy.
After tracking CZ’s followings daily for a while, I started seeing certain accounts that felt different.
Some looked like “small” follows at first.
Some didn’t even have hype around them yet.
But I saved them, watched them, and kept tracking the narrative.
Then a few weeks later…
Some of those projects made major announcements, and a few of them ended up appearing in Binance-related updates (like Launchpool announcements, ecosystem highlights, or bigger official exposure).
That was the moment I realized:
This isn’t a one-time coincidence.
It’s a repeatable strategy, as long as you track it consistently and stay patient.
Not because every follow predicts the future…
But because it gives you a head start before everyone else notices.
Why This Strategy Is Totally Worth It
Let’s be real: most “alpha” in crypto is fake.
People post charts after the move already happened.
They tweet “called it” when they were late.
They act like geniuses using pure hindsight.
But tracking follow activity is different.
Because it’s not a prediction.
It’s an observation.
You’re watching a real signal in real time, and that gives you a fair advantage without needing inside information.
Even if you don’t buy anything immediately, you still win because:
- You become early to new narratives
- You have time to research properly
- You catch trends before they become mainstream
- You stop chasing pumps and start tracking signals
You Can Apply the Same Method to Other Accounts
This strategy isn’t only useful for CZ.
Once you understand the system, you can apply it to anyone who moves attention in the market.
For example:
- Elon Musk (memes, tech narratives, AI hype cycles)

- Donald Trump (mass attention waves + meme-driven trends)
- Michael Saylor (Bitcoin sentiment, institutional direction)
Pick a high-impact account.
Track their followings daily.
And you’ll start seeing how stories form before they explode.
Final Thoughts: Turning Social Signals Into a Real System
The reason this works is simple:
Crypto moves fast, but attention moves even faster.
If you can track where attention starts…
You don’t need to chase where it ends.
That’s what tracking CZ’s followers and followings gave me.
And Circleboom Twitter made it possible to do it daily without wasting hours.
Instead of guessing, I get daily lists.
Instead of missing signals, I catch them early.
Instead of randomness, I have a system.
If you want an edge that doesn’t rely on luck…
Start tracking who the biggest accounts follow next.
You’ll be surprised how often the story starts there.


