Cyber Monday Plot Twist: Nextdoor Deleted a Shareholder’s Comments… So I Bought More Shares 😂📉➡️📈

On Cyber Monday of all days, someone at Nextdoor — under the leadership of Nirav — decided their big holiday move would be…

👉 Delete comments from their own Thanksgiving post
👉 Disable all engagement
👉 And yes… do it to an actual shareholder (me).

Bold strategy, Cotton. Let’s see if it pays off for ’em.

Most companies try to attract investors. Nextdoor seems committed to annoying them into buying more stock.

Because what did I do? I bought more shares. If you’re going to silence me, at least let me increase my ownership while you do it. 😎

But here’s the serious part — the part leadership teams, boards, and investors should care about:

When a company deletes a shareholder’s comments, disables engagement, and hides behind silence rather than accountability… that behavior reflects the organization’s internal culture.

And culture is a leading indicator of:

  • How a company treats its users

  • How it treats its advertisers

  • How it makes decisions

  • How it handles risk

  • And ultimately… how successful (or unsuccessful) it will be long-term

If transparency terrifies leadership, imagine what real challenges will do.

As a shareholder, I’m watching closely. As a neighbor, I’m demanding better. As someone who just keeps buying shares, I’m clearly not going anywhere.

#Nextdoor #NXDR #Shareholder #CyberMonday #LeadershipMatters #CorporateCulture #DigitalIntegrity #CommunityTrust #Accountability

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When the CEO Blocks You and Deletes His LinkedIn: My Experience Raising Concerns with Nextdoor’s Nirav Tolia — and Why His Documented Past Suddenly Matters Again

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It finally happened — Nirav Tolia has blocked me on LinkedIn from tagging or engaging with him. A shareholder