The phrase “Seek Information” isn’t wrong — it’s actually quite strong — but here are the issues that might make it feel off in your context:
Too Generic
“Information” is a very broad, academic-sounding word. It doesn’t carry the nuance of knowledge, insight, or community updates. It can feel dry compared to “Publish” or “Curate.”
Lacks Connection to the Feed
A feed is usually about updates, activity, discussions, knowledge in motion. “Information” sounds static — like looking something up in a database — not navigating living community activity.
Old-fashioned Tone
“Seek Information” can sound bureaucratic, like something from a library science manual, instead of something you want to do every day in Seed.
Missing Agency on Meaning
Seeking information is about finding raw data. In Seed, the deeper goal is making sense, surfacing insights, or connecting ideas. “Information” doesn’t capture that higher-level activity.
👉 So the main problem isn’t the verb Seek (which is active and strong) — it’s the noun Information. That’s what weakens it.
If you love the verb, you could sharpen the object:
Seek Knowledge
Seek Insights
Seek What Matters
Seek Ideas
Do you want me to rework Seek Information into 3–4 sharper alternatives that keep the spirit of “seeking” but align better with Seed’s voice?