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Powered by 4 hops
Better decisions come from the right 50 people, not the internet.
Small, trusted rooms where experienced operators help you think through real decisions and the curators who run them get paid for it.
Built for founders & operators at companies like
Stripe · Google · Revolut · Roche · Novartis
The problem
Trust50 is the country club model for the digital age, except members can replace leadership when the room stops serving them.
Broadcasting doesn't work
You post on LinkedIn. 500 people see it. 3 generic replies. No one who actually knows your context.
One-on-one doesn't scale
You DM 10 people individually. Half don't reply. The ones who do are doing you a favor, not building something sustainable.
The right room doesn't exist
You're in 12 Slack groups. 8 are dead. 3 are too broad. 1 is good, but the person running it just got busy and stopped responding.
Most rooms stay free, and that is by design
80% of rooms are free. They build the network, seed discovery, and create conversion paths. The 20% that go paid fund the infrastructure for everyone.
What Trust50 actually is
For members: join up to 4 small, trusted rooms
Choose carefully. You can only join 4 groups, so pick rooms where people actually know your context.
Each room is capped at 50 members. You pay €0-300/month depending on the room, and you can leave anytime.
You're never more than 4 hops from the person you need. The people in your rooms sit in other rooms too. Ask in one room, get connected to another.
Four rooms means roughly 200 relationships across the network. That is enough reach to be powerful, but still small enough to remember who people are and why they matter.
For curators: run a small group, get paid for it
If you already answer questions, make intros, and help people make better decisions, structure it, charge for it, and keep 80%.
Curate a room of 10-50 people, set your price, and run up to 4 rooms if that's your skill.
Most rooms stay free. That's fine. Free rooms build your reputation and create paths to paid ones. The platform makes nothing from free rooms and is designed that way.
How it's different from everything else
The constraints are the product
50-member cap per room
At 51+ people, you're not running a trusted room. You're managing a crowd. Crowds broadcast. Rooms make decisions.
4-room limit per member
Enough to move across the network for support. Not so many that you're spread thin and context turns into noise.
Curator governance
Curators don't own the room forever. They earn the right to run it. If quality slips, members can vote to replace them.
Two paths in
Join a room
Browse groups, request access, get voted in by members. You can join up to 4 rooms total.
Explore groupsStart a room
Anyone can create a group and invite people. You set the price, the rules, and who gets in. You keep 80%.
Start a groupThe honest bottom line
80% of rooms stay free. They build the network, seed discovery, and create conversion paths. The 20% of rooms that go paid fund the infrastructure for everyone.
Curators don't own rooms forever. They earn the right to run them. If they stop serving the room, the room replaces them.
The 50-person cap is not a limitation. It's the feature that keeps quality legible. The 4-room limit forces intentional choices over hoarding access you'll never use.
If you can fill and maintain two or three paid rooms, Trust50 can replace a salary. And for members: you're never more than 4 hops from the connection you actually need.