There are two ways to go about this. You can choose to it yourself (which will involve coding) or you can do it the easy way.Let’s start with the steps involved in doing it yourself. There are 5 basic steps:The first step is to give your token a name, symbol, number of decimal places, and amount that will be supplied.For example,Token’s Name — JudeWorldCoinSymbol of Token — JWCDecimal Places — 0Number of Tokens in Circulation — 1,000Note: the number of decimal places you choose will be added as zeros to the total supply i.e. 100 coins with 4 decimal places becomes 1,000,000 coins. And then as little as 0.0001 coins can be sold or transferred.After you have defined your token, you need to code its contract.This is where you list the transactions that your token can be used for.You will also input all the information you listed in step one as well as the wallet the coins will be sent to.To code the contract, you can use any ‘editor’ like sublime.And if you are not great at coding, you can hire a developer to do it for you.This what it looks like:The next step after coding the contract for your token is to test the token.At this point, the MetaMask browser will be of great help because it features different test networks that you can use e.g. RopstenFor the testing, you only need to fund your wallet with dummy ethers.While you are on the test network, compile your contract code using the ‘Solidity Remix Compiler’ feature.After compiling and submitting your contract, you will then be redirected to the transactions page on Etherscan where you can load your coin on the MetaMask Tokens.If your tokens are added, it means you have succeeded. Congrats!You can skip this part but it is important…