3 Investment Criteria to Qualify a Blockchain Project
Inflated expectations ?

3 Investment Criteria to Qualify a Blockchain Project

When there’s a major tech innovation like the internet or blockchain, the question of when to invest and in what companies is always a challenge. For example, search is fundamental to the internet. But how could you have identified the right timing and the right entrepreneurs to invest in a Google instead of an Alta Vista?

Let’s step back in time and consider a non-technical example from the California Gold Rush, and introduce John Sutter and Levi Strauss. John owned the land where the first Californian gold was found. He must have made a fortune, right? Wrong! Meanwhile, Levi made far more than many miners by selling denim — the durable fabric which the workers wore as blue jeans. Over 150 years later, Levi Strauss is still making billions of dollars as an enduring business.

These two experiences illustrate the potential of critical choices for infrastructural investment, and beg the question: what will be the equivalent of Levi’s denim that is investable in the boom, bust, and buildout of the Blockchain era?

Historically, not all web infrastructure was investable. For example, every email you send utilizes SMTP (Simple Mail Transport Protocol), yet it was standardized and freely leveraged, and was not investable.

In Blockchain’s case, the infrastructure includes some fundamental innovations around new protocols, decentralization, and consensus. Blockchains may make deeper levels of technology investable for the first time. One part of this was well illustrated by Joel Monegro in Fat Protocols, who argued for blockchain that the market cap of underlying protocols such as IPFS will always remain higher than the applications built on top, unlike the previous generation such as SMTP.

But, fat or thin, there has always been a challenge in determining what to invest in and when. As investors, the way we think of it is simplified for illustration in the framework below. We hope sharing it will be helpful to you as entrepreneurs for qualifying your potential business.

Community and Network effects:

Blockchains and distributed applications typically require communities and networks to support the project, including miners in many cases.

  • Is the community self-served by this project’s utility and value proposition?
  • Is there a clear connection between increased adoption and protocol utility?
  • Does this result in greater value for users of the blockchain service and, eventually, a defensible market position?
  • What needs to happen, other than a token sale, to kickstart the creation of network effects and stimulate its use?
  • Is there a path to achieving network effects, and how does the value to users increase as the number of users increases?
  • How is your team uniquely advantaged to build this blockchain project?

Wide foundational applicability:

The most valuable infrastructure will enable broad use cases, offering a foundational element and even in time a platform that will enable the development of many decentralized applications as a horizontal layer. But in the early days end to end solutions will be hard to build.

  • Is the value proposition uniquely suited for blockchain-based applications?
  • Is the application immediately valuable, standalone? If not, what is it dependent on?
  • Is the business focused on a particular domain, or enabling platform like functionality for decentralized applications?

Disruptive business value:

One of the biggest challenges facing any new technology is the status quo, and this is no different for blockchain today. We must ask:

  • Is this new technology substantively different from how things work today?
  • Why would someone switch, and is the pain of switching really worth the risk to achieve the gain? [See gain/pain models here]
  • Does it unlock a new way to achieve a business outcome or consumer benefit?
  • In blockchain’s case, could you really just get away with a well-managed shared database versus a distributed ledger?
  • Is a blockchain-based approach the BEST and/or ONLY way you can solve this problem?

(See below — one of Underscore.VC’s investment frameworks to help review this)

We are already invested in Blockchain and are working with transformative founders using these criteria to make further investments. These founders are innovating around new protocols, decentralization, and consensus, to build fundamentally new infrastructure for future applications and services.

Why infrastructure? Because in the long run just like Levis and blue jeans, infrastructure will endure best. Blockchain is exhibiting the same cycles as the web. Beyond this initial boom, there will be a bust. But the opportunity to invest in infrastructure that extends beyond the bust to a buildout phase will ultimately bring the digital trust to the web.

We’ve laid out our criteria. What are yours?

[ This is the 4th in our series of articles on Blockchain. Follow us @underscorevc for updates or, to start from the first article - click here ]

Richard Osmann

Director and CEO driving business growth and transformation

7 年

I’d love to learn where you first heard of this Michael? Very interesting point of view.

回复
Dana Dietz-Fuhr

Former Sr. Marketing Rep at John Deere Merchandise

7 年

Thoughtful teardown of blockchain investment.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Michael Skok的更多文章

  • Are you able to travel? Do it!

    Are you able to travel? Do it!

    Travel is the best education imho. It broadens our perspectives, helps us become more accepting of other cultures and…

    24 条评论
  • Startup Founders: What can you learn from Uber's Q1 results?

    Startup Founders: What can you learn from Uber's Q1 results?

    As an investor, it's my job to look beneath the surface when a company reports results. Following their Q1 23 results…

    13 条评论
  • Succession... The King of Sustainability

    Succession... The King of Sustainability

    Last week I shared this post on the passing of Queen Elizabeth: Many of us are feeling great sadness for the loss of…

    6 条评论
  • Would you take a billion-dollar buyout?

    Would you take a billion-dollar buyout?

    Would you take a billion-dollar buyout? My answer was “no”! Yet, as an Acquia board member, I was happy to vote “yes”…

    17 条评论
  • How do you Create a Win-Win-Win Acquisition?

    How do you Create a Win-Win-Win Acquisition?

    It starts with customers and ends with customers. Let’s share an example: Acquia, the open source digital experience…

    5 条评论
  • As you go back to work, don't...

    As you go back to work, don't...

    As you go back to work today, don't forget to take a moment to enjoy the journey. If you're like me you're all too…

    33 条评论
  • Why we're investing millions in an awkward teenager...

    Why we're investing millions in an awkward teenager...

    With Underscore VC's newest fund just closed oversubscribed at $140M, we’re doubling down on our investment thesis and…

    9 条评论
  • What can a startup learn from a $24B business that reinvented our industry?

    What can a startup learn from a $24B business that reinvented our industry?

    As a startup, what would you like to learn from a a twenty four billion dollar business built in 12 short years while…

    41 条评论
  • Health is wealth! Share it!

    Health is wealth! Share it!

    I've cracked my skull, broken 3 legs, fractured my wrist and elbow, nearly lost a finger, been operated on multiple…

    5 条评论
  • What do Tech CEOs Want to Talk About?

    What do Tech CEOs Want to Talk About?

    3 insights from startup to multi-hundred million dollar business leaders. The Underscore Core Community is a curated…

    28 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了