How to view DAO project data? Is governance active? Look at the number of proposals, voting, execution rates, and whether there is "true autonomy." Is power centralized? Check the distribution of voting rights, the proportion of large holders, and participation rates to prevent "oligarchic governance." What about the treasury usage? Examine asset distribution, usage direction, and governance records to measure "economic vitality." Is there co-construction? See if developers, proposers, and content creators come from the community rather than the operations team. DAO is the form closest to a "social experiment" in Web3. To understand it, you must focus on governance data, financial flows, and community activity. This is the on-chain portrait of a DAO, not just "having tokens makes it a DAO."
A DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization) is not just a community with slogans but a form of organization where community members make decisions together, govern collectively, and share benefits. Therefore, when looking at a DAO project, it’s not enough to see if there are tokens or if the forum is active; you need to check if its "governance data" is healthy. Next, let’s take a look at how to view the core data of a DAO.
1. Is the "governance activity" of the DAO high?#
A DAO that does not govern is no better than a Discord group. Active proposals and continuous voting are needed to prove that this DAO is "truly operational."
What to look at?
Number and frequency of proposals: How many new proposals are there weekly/monthly? Are they community-driven or initiated by the core team?
Number and frequency of votes: How many proposals have been voted on? How often do they occur?
Number of active proposers: Are there multiple proposers, or are topics always controlled by a few familiar faces?
Execution Rate (Proposal Execution Rate): How many approved proposals have actually been executed on-chain?
How to view?
Find its governance platform (Snapshot, Tally, Agora, Charmverse, etc.)
Check the number of proposals, voting data, and execution records from the past 30-90 days.
Determine if it is "high frequency but ineffective," or "low frequency but precise."
Recommended tools:
Tally.xyz (suitable for Ethereum governance DAOs)
Snapshot.org (the most used platform for DAOs, can view voting records)
DeepDAO.io (comprehensive DAO data analysis platform)
Tip: Active governance does not equal noise; proposals need to be actionable to be meaningful. Don’t be fooled by "lots of discussion but little execution."
2. Who is voting? Is governance power controlled by a few?#
The ideal of a DAO is "everyone has a share," but in reality, it is often "large holders call the shots" or "very low voting rates." You need to clearly see the power structure.
What to look at?
Number of voters: How many addresses participate in each proposal?
Concentration of governance tokens: How much voting power do the top 10 addresses hold?
Voting weight distribution: Are most proposals decided by one or two large holders?
Average participation rate: How many governance tokens are "asleep"? What is the actual participation ratio?
How to view?
Analyze the voting page of specific proposals to see the voting power distribution chart.
Check the distribution of governance token holders in the DAO (whales vs. retail).
Compare the number of voters with the total number of token holders to calculate the participation rate.
Recommended tools:
DeepDAO: Detailed voting power distribution and participation rankings.
Dune: Can check DAO voting participation rates and create custom analysis dashboards.
Etherscan: View the concentration of governance token holders.
Tip: Decentralization is not just written in the white paper; you need to see if it has been truly realized on-chain. Be wary of large holder hegemony and "governance fatigue."
3. How is the DAO's treasury operating? Is the money being utilized?#
The resources of a DAO are mainly concentrated in the "treasury." To assess the vitality of a DAO, you need to see if the treasury is active, with spending, investments, and returns.
What to look at?
Treasury balance and asset distribution: How much money is there? In what form is it held? Stablecoins or native tokens?
Asset utilization rate: How much has the DAO spent in the past 3-6 months? Where has it been directed?
Investment returns/expenditure direction: Has the money spent generated returns? What proportion is for project investments, incentives, subsidies for development, etc.?
Are there treasury management proposals: Have large transfers or investments gone through governance processes?
How to view?
Check the official treasury address and multi-signature wallet transaction history.
Compare the growth of the treasury with expenditure curves to see if funds are being utilized reasonably.
Look for mechanisms for regular audits and disclosure of treasury usage.
Recommended tools:
OpenOrg: View the composition of the treasury and the financial status of the DAO.
Treasury page on DeepDAO.io.
Safe (Gnosis): The multi-signature management entry for most DAOs.
Dune: DAO treasury trend charts (can be self-built).
Tip: Transparency of the treasury does not equal usability; you need to see if it truly creates value for the community rather than "holding millions without action."
4. Is the community healthy? Are developers and users participating?#
A DAO is not just about voting; it is also a model of co-construction. Without developer participation, content output, or offline governance experiments, a DAO can easily become "governance without substance."
What to look at?
Developer activity: Is there continuous contribution on GitHub? Are there any BUIDL groups?
Community content output: Are members writing proposal interpretations and analyses on forums, Mirror, or X?
Number and distribution of contributors: Is it driven by a core group, or are there multiple groups involved?
How to view?
Check the frequency of content updates on governance forums, Notion, Discord, etc.
Look at proposals to see if contributor addresses are diverse.
Observe if there are mechanisms for contributor incentives, timesheets, retro funding, etc.
Recommended tools:
Charmverse: DAO contributor management platform.
GitHub Pulse: View the activity level of DAO engineering projects.
Discord / X community activity, forum interactions, number of posts on Mirror.
[Builder DAO Toolkits]: Such as Dework, Wonderverse, etc., for collaboration systems.
Tip: The governance of a DAO should not just be a "voting machine" but should also be about "co-creators." Whether there is community participation from development, proposals, execution to content promotion is an important indicator of whether a DAO is alive.
Summary: How to view DAO project data?#
Is governance active?
Look at the number of proposals, voting, execution rates, and whether there is "true autonomy."
Is power centralized?
Check the distribution of voting rights, the proportion of large holders, and participation rates to prevent "oligarchic governance."
What about treasury usage?
Examine asset distribution, usage direction, and governance records to measure "economic vitality."
Is there co-construction?
See if developers, proposers, and content creators come from the community rather than the operations team.
DAO is the form closest to a "social experiment" in Web3. To understand it, you must focus on governance data, financial flows, and community activity. This is the on-chain portrait of a DAO, not just "having tokens makes it a DAO."
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