Many people hear others recommending investment targets, and their first reaction is to ask: "What price did you enter at?" The underlying implication is a suspicion that the other person is looking for someone to take over.
This mindset is common in the cryptocurrency space, as everyone has experienced being cut down before. But a smarter approach is to assess whether the target has upward potential based on its current market value, rather than judging solely by the entry cost of the recommender. In this market, unless you are the issuer of the coin, there will always be someone who has a lower cost than you.
Just like someone entering at a market value of 200 million and exiting at 2 billion; if you enter at 2 billion and reach 20 billion, the returns could far exceed the former. If the coin gets listed on a major exchange, even if you enter at 20 billion and exit at 100 billion, the returns might still lead.
When looking at these matters, if you constantly worry about whether others are cutting you, then just ignore that person. If the other party has no intention of harvesting, then their recommendation is just a reference, and you still have to make your own decision.