You only ask how to receive airdrops, while veterans have already laid out the project itself.
When they see a new project's airdrop, many newcomers' first reaction is: 'How to receive it? How much is it worth?' Then they frantically retweet, boost the numbers, and hang around bots to make quick gains.
But veterans are not like this. They are more concerned about: Who are the project parties? What is the financing background? Is there a lockup for the airdrop? Is it subject to reverse airdrops? Is there liquidity support after going live?
An airdrop for a project is not 'free money', but rather a trial of a token economic model. The real big opportunity is not picking up candies, but rather laying the groundwork in advance, then riding the wave of a surge after the airdrop pressure ends.
Newcomers care about how much the airdrop is worth, while veterans care more about how far this project can go in the future. The difference is: one makes quick money, while the other makes big money.