Audio interview transcriptionāāāWBD063
Note: the following is a transcription of my interview with Mike Dudas, Founder and CEO of The Block. I use Rev.com from translations and they remove ums, errs and half sentences. I have reviewed the transcription but if you find any mistakes, please feel free to email me. You can listen to the original recording here.
You can subscribe to the podcast and listen to all episodes here.
In this episode, I talk with Mike Dudas, founder and CEO of The Block. We discuss crypto journalism, the hard-hitting approach of The Block, conflicts of interest with crypto media, the Ripplecoin community and dealing with mental health issues.
Connect with What Bitcoin Did:Listen: iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | SoundCloud | YouTube | **TuneIn**Follow: Website | Email | Blog | Twitter | Medium | Instagram | YouTube
Interview Transcription
Interview Date: Tuesday 18th Dec, 2018
āThese types of markets attract the worst types of people.ā
ā Mike Dudas
Peter McCormack: Listen, Iāve been following The Block for a while. Following your work, absolutely loving it, but fully recognize that you are very different from every other crypto publication throwing hand grenades out there, but stories, big coverage. Tell me about it, whatās the strategy, what are you trying to do her with The Block?
Mike Dudas: With The Block, weāre really trying to bring clean, clear, objective, fact-based analysis, journalism and research to an ecosystem in which 95%+ of the projects are basically poof. If not, in the next couple of months, in the next couple of years. Itās pretty clear to anyone, everyone was saying, six to eight months ago when this idea for The Block first came about, that look, this entire āasset classā is overvalued. Nobody was covering it that way.
You had Coin Desk and others literally running Bit Connect ads. Itās crazy. Mainstream media did not at the time understand the technology well enough. The governance well-enough. Pretty much anything well enough to report on this accurately. They were just reporting on price. Including CNBC, including Bloomberg, and doing it in really short segments.
We feel that I certainly feel having worked in FinTech at Braintree, at Google Wallet, at Venmo for years, at PayPal, that blockchain and crypto assets are a major significant evolution, in how we think about money, how we think about technology and value, and digital assets.
I donāt think itās like traditional FinTech, that tends to get co-opted by the big banks and the existing system. I think of it as something that can exist outside of both systems. That really got me excited. At the same time, was disappointed with the lack of professional coverage in the space, and felt like we could play a part as a media and information source, of great credibility, at helping to highlight the good things and highlight the bad things, and then really separate the wheat from the chaff.
Peter McCormack: Right. Okay. You spotted the opportunity. What did you go through to make it a reality?
Mike Dudas: Basically, itās a people business. So much, by the way, of this entire ecosystem is a people ecosystem. Weāre creating software, weāre creating protocols. Weāre not creating, in our business, which was a media information research and analysis business, or in these technology businesses that are being created, itās primarily software driven. Itās a lot about people. The biggest thing at The Block was being able to recruit those people who were best in the world, and best in the world in this ecosystem isnāt somebody with 20 years of experience, because nobody has it outside of a handful of folks who were crypto-anarchists in the ā90s.
What it means is, bringing on people who are curious, people who have the depth of knowledge, and tremendous amounts of energy, and are so passionate about this. Our team, we have an internal Slack group that we use for a variety of reasons, but we spend, youāll see a message, 22 out of 24 hours of the day on there, from somebody on the team. The energy is palpable.
Recruiting the best people is key, the best researchers, the best analysts, and the best technologists. Weāre really excited about where we are. We have a really good team. The output has been tremendous since we actually launched the product in September, and the readership has followed, and the attention has followed.
Peter McCormack: You said you think 95% is going to go buff. Why is it you think that?
Mike Dudas: Probably more. Thatās if we go to token 5000 on Coin Market Cap. Thereās just, thereās a whole variety of reasons. Thereāre people who literally scammed others, you have a variety of scams. You have a variety of people who raise money because it was easy to sell tokens to the public. Oftentimes, in ways that are unregulated. Then, simply donāt have the capability to build what they said they would. Thatās probably, letās just, Iām making up numbers here, but thatās a big, big, big chunk of projects.
Then thereāre people who believed they could do things, and havenāt been able to and have had to shut down. Then you get to the cream of the crop. You have, when entities like Consensys that employed 1000 or so people at the peak, are laying off hundreds and hundreds of people with many more to come, you know that the funding got far, far, far ahead of what the technology is capable of. I think a lot of things that got funded will, it has so many analogies to the first internet bubble but will be things that in 10 years, an idea might make sense.
Today, it doesnāt. A lot of it has to do with cool, you can do this technology thing, but the trade-offs to do it on a blockchain are that it becomes absolutely unusable, by consumers or businesses, because the interface is just abysmal. Thatās a whole ānother segment of products. Then, the products are actually good and interesting, just a lot of them arenāt getting used. You look at consumer-facing DAPs, which was a big use case for Ethereum outside of ICO funding and ERC 20 tokens. The DAP, either business or consumer usage, simply isnāt there yet. Eos has been launched to try to reduce friction and enhance scalability, but again, weāre talkingĀ ā¦
The big question right now for some of these projects is a blockchain necessary. For many, itās not.
Peter McCormack: Right. Okay. You also, you mentioned Coindesk. It seems like a number of the other crypto publications and websites, they are reporting in a different way. Do you think some of them, maybe this is ⦠I identify probably two reasons. One, thereās a conflict of interest in the bigger group they may be part of. Secondly, is the model theyāve built, in that I think many of these companies are relying on these crypto projects as a source of income. Weāve seen that some actually will accept payment for positive stories. Do you think thatās why they've not covered it and you obviously have a different model?
Mike Dudas: Yeah. This is very easy to break into groups. Letās start with the mainstream media. The mainstream media covers this because it gets a disproportionate amount of clicks and attention, and itās interesting, and itās a class of money, as well as a class of technology. They focus on a general purpose audience and typically donāt give the specific thing theyāre looking at, the depth of treatment thatās necessary. The Economist is the guiltiest of this. Bloomberg is occasionally guilty when they put their general purpose reporters on it.
When they put their crypto reporters on it, they actually do a pretty darn good job. Fortune has some good folks like Jeff Roberts. There are some good mainstream media reporting. I would say in aggregate, it just doesnāt go to depth.
Then you get, I think the area that you were most interested in and focusing on is the Coin Desks, the CCNs and the Coin Telegraphs. Letās just use those as the three largest pure-play crypto media entities. CNN and Coin Telegraph are the absolute early business insider, just write every single thing up, aggregate, donāt worry too much about whether itās perfectly factually accurate, or has depth, or things are spelt right. Then letās monetize that through, like you just said earlier, ICO ads, and you name any product. You go onto their homepages or article pages any time, and youāre going to see some really low-quality ads.
Thatās the model. Very low-cost content, very low-quality advertising, and itās just volume, volume, volume, and then they do as you said, accept sponsored posts, that they do denote, in sometimes not the most transparent way.
Then, you have actual high-quality media, which is an interesting new category, and Iāll go back to Coin Desk, but you have a high-quality media that some of the new folks like Decrypt Media, who I have great respect for, and Breaker, who I have great respect for. Both of those are funded by, Decrypt is directly funded by Consensys. While thereās a Chinese wall there and that team has great editorial integrity, itās just hard to operate with that relationship, without some doubt creeping in on the readerās mind. Again, what Iāve seen to date is high-quality reporting. Who knows if stories get killed or other things happen, and who knows what their long-term revenue model is, or if itās just to be patron funded by Consensys, in a manner similar to how the Washington Post could lose money for Bezos.
Breaker is another one. I donāt know what the long-term revenue model is there. Itās hard to really comment on what their plans are in the future, but today, you would look at them and say hey, itās going to be a really difficult challenge, to establish businesses with either of those models, unless they are funded by the projects. Breaker is funded by a project, Singular DTV, that ICO has Iām sure a treasury, and can continue to put money into that. They have connections to New York Magazine, as advisors.
Those are the only two that I see doing quality work similar to us, but the funding model and business model is in question. Lastly, weāll get to Coin Desk. Coin Desk is a wholly owned subsidiary of Digital Currency Group. Barry Silbert, one of the most powerful, most connected folks in the entire ecosystem, who has his tentacles in so many different businesses, so many different projects, his entity is a 100% owner.
Now, Coin Desk has some fantastic editorial talent, both on the pure editor side, as well as their journalists. They also, and they have great analysts and researchers. Itās a mix. They put out some really good work, and they put out some lower quality work, but on balance, they are doing good work. The thing is, their model isnāt the journalism, the analysis and the research, itās the conference. To your original question, they make, any profit that they make on basically these series of conferences by which itās pay to speak.
Itās pay to attend, and itās pay to speak. Weāre talking tens of millions of dollars in cumulative gross revenue annually, for these sponsorships, for these speaking spots, and for participation in the conferences. The journalism is meant to drum up interest.
We looked at that landscape, and then we looked at ourselves and we say look, there has to be someone who comes into this market, like the information has in general technology, like CB Insights has in terms of analysis and broader technology, and who does this independent journalism, plus independent research that people will pay for. Thatās what weāre doing at The Block. While all of our work is shared for free today, we will be introducing a paid product in Q1.
Peter McCormack: Do you want to talk about that product, how much can you tell me?
Mike Dudas: Yeah. Iāll give you the broad outline of it. It will be heavy on a few different things. Number one, we will go much deeper in our research. If some of the Lumascape-style charts that youāve seen about enterprise blockchain or stable coins, weāll dive deeper into research in those areas. That will be actionable for people who want to invest, who want to work in those areas, who want to understand the technology. Our analysis will go much deeper into looking at specific exchanges, looking at trade volumes and potential irregularities. These are a variety of topics.
Again, things that will influence how perhaps people might trade. Looking at products much more in depth and looking at people much more in-depth. Doing the things that the information does, where they highlight deeply, who are all the important people at organization X Y or Z or protocol or foundation X Y or Z. Things like Crunchbase. John Biggs is working with us as editor currently, and heās incredible. Heās the founder of Crunchbase. To have John giving us that guidance as we launch this premium paid product, and heās somebody who is working in crypto for over a year, prior to joining us in the last few weeks, is just such a massive shot in the arm, for our efforts.
We have one of the people who serve foremost in the world, that launching one of this information, research and people services, helping to guide our editorial team to do that.
Peter McCormack: Right. It all comes down to the team. Youāve identified, youāve got to get the best people.
Mike Dudas: Yeah. Itās the team. I left out the journalism. We will continue to break news and we view investigative journalism such as the great piece that Frank Chaparro did, wrote on blockchain terminal last week, as really important, because we want to share things that the general public, and even potential investors in the project are aware of. We know for a fact, that we have shown light in certain cases on certain things, that folks have then, authorities have then said hey, this is something that we need to investigate, and we think this is really important for the ecosystem, because we have resources and we believe that when we introduce our paid product, we will create such value for folks that weāll also have a business model.
Support, something that I said earlier, will separate the wheat from the chaff in this industry.
Peter McCormack: With those quite controversial stories, the investigative journalism side, how much consideration do you have to give to the risk of publishing an article and then, how it might reflect when you, or do you just stand up and say look, weāre journalists, weāre reporting the facts, freedom of the press, et cetera. Where are you positioned with that?
Mike Dudas: We ensure that the things that we put to print, that we publish on theblockcrypto.com, have been fact-checked, have been run by legal, are exceptionally well-sourced, either on the record or with multiple sources off the record, that we have been privy to evidence, that supports any factual claim that we make in those articles.
What we put into those articles, we stand behind 100%. The thing that is clear, always, in investigative journalism, and youāve seen this with higher, higher profile cases, things like The Wall Street Journal covered, is it's always deny, deny, deny. Then, the onion gets peeled back. Itās always a cost-benefit analysis.
When youāre saying hey, should we peel off all eight layers of this, or should we just leave it with the two layers weāve peeled off, and get back to focusing on what the customer is looking for? In the cases where weāve done some investigative journalism and we have some additional pieces coming, over the next month, weāre going to basically write the piece and share the reasonable amount of information that we believe is essential to tell the story that the public needs to know and that weāre able to prove. That doesnāt compromise our ability to do all the other things that we do.
We canāt be pouring 100% of our resources into investigative journalism, even if we literally get, Iām not kidding, across our whole team, we get more than a dozen tips that are worth looking into about pretty significant potential frauds and scams on a daily basis. Itās really wild, Iāve literally never seen an ecosystem like this, and having spoken with journalists in other verticals, and telling them some of the tips that weāre getting, not all of which are confidential, meaning people do share them freely, they say, wow, thatās bonkers. Thereās a lot of crazy stuff going on in the ecosystem.
Peter McCormack: How do you think weāve got to this point then? Where there is so much.
Mike Dudas: Yeah. It was just a wild, wild period of excess. The tens and tens of billions of dollars of capital that poured in, and was contributed by a number of unaccredited investors globally, in a relatively unregulated way. It just, it opened up a crazy Pandoraās box. Not to mention, the actual companies that are still operating, and Iām not going to name any specifically because again, we have some investigations going on.
You look, we had a piece just yesterday, that 1% of volume, this was just a small piece that we wrote, and we were basically repeating what a more detailed study had said, but 1% of volume payers of BPC on the top 25 payers was legitimate volume, and more than 90% was wash trading or illegitimate volume. Itās just bonkers.
I think itās too much money, not enough regulation, too many jurisdictions, whether it be state, federal, multiple countries. These types of markets attract, clearly, the worst kind of people. Thereās the ability for money laundering, thereās the ability to exit scam. I think people still, a lot of the crooks that youāll see, and Iām not talking about anybody that weāve covered or anything that weāve covered, because Iām not implying anything about anybody weāve covered being crooks.
Just in the ecosystem, the things that people do often that I read about and I see other folks covering, or that the SEC is actually settling with people over, itās just dumb stuff. Itās stuff that youāre obviously going to get caught for doing it. What the hell are you doing, people?
Peter McCormack: It feels like therefore; your business is going to transition quite a bit with the market. Thereās obviously so much to report about right now. Weāre going to have a complete wide part of the market, a complete shakeout of the projects that canāt ship, wonāt ship, ship but too low quality among users. All these projects will get wiped out, but at the same time, if we compare to the dot com era, there will be another round of investment of sensible ideas that follow the regulatory framework.
I guess over time, youāre going to, the type of things youāre going to report on are gradually going to be less of the scams and the bad things happening, and then youāre going to start following all the good things that are happening?
Mike Dudas: Exactly. That is literally our dream. I didnāt know that the market was going to drop 85% from the day I made the decision and wrote my day one Medium post in January when we were up 17,400 Bitcoin, and now where are we, 3500? My wife definitely lets me know repeatedly that I shouldāve sold more at the peak. You cover what there is to be covered. We donāt write about price very often, but we do write about projects that are having trouble, and thereās more of those than there are projects that are shining. That being said, weāre going to have a great piece come out written by Arjun Balaji, our technical advisor this week on the Lightning Network.
We are waiting for Miles Snider to write a piece, a positive one on Eos. There are so many good developments in this ecosystem, that we want to cover. I expect to see the pendulum swing back in 2019, but not entirely. In other words, thereās going to be projects that run out of capital, projects that are folded into others.
Then there are the ones that will continue. The best example of that and the one that fascinates me the most is obviously Ripple and XRP. That is, Ripple the company and XRP is a protocol, that is unquestionably connected. Thereās no question, no doubt on earth. Weāve spent time, Larry Cermak, our head analyst, has written about this. I had a tweet storm over Thanksgiving about this that was backed up by public facts. That story is going to remain. Weāre not going toĀ ā¦
Our coverage, the way our coverage will change is, weāre not going to keep stating the Ripple security thing over and over again. Weāre not out here to beat dead horses. Weāre not out here to chase specific people or projects or prove points that we already feel weāve proven are covered. If thereās new news, I want to see Ripple actually ⦠Iād love to see them get product adoption. Iāve worked at companies similar to them with Google Wallet, that launched from zero and now is Google Pay and is globally accepted.
Iāve worked on Venmo when it had 30,000 monthly active users. It was amazing to see that product launch and scale, to help Braintree grow, to found a company in Button that went from zero revenue to more than halfway to 100 million gross revenue.
Itās something, Iām an entrepreneur, I want to see these folks succeed. The thing with Ripple, to get back to that example, is just some of the mealy-mouthing and change narrative about the ties to the actual cryptocurrency protocol. If the company just existed itself without trying to force the token into the business model, to prop up the treasury, which has become their actual business model, meaning selling XRP, I would be supportive. Iām supportive as Ripple if they can improve upon Swift.
As the transfer-wide CEO said, I really havenāt seen that to date, he said.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. Also, Swift isnāt just going to let their business model be taken from underneath them.
Mike Dudas: Of course not. I look at them as more like FinTech than I do Bitcoin, which could potentially be a store of value, censorship-resistant, programmable money. We can save that conversation for another day.
Peter McCormack: What do you make of the community around XRP? In that, one of the things Iāve noticed is, Iām very suspicious of the bot activity. I donāt know if thatās centrally controlled or if thatās something thatās just some very eager fans of XRP. One thing I notice is, the volume of XRP people who have XRP in their name, XRP logos on Twitter, they hammer Coin Base every time they make an announcement, they donāt discuss any crypto outside of XRP, and if you actually dive into their little communities on their message boards, theyāre all just sharing each otherās content in this weird community.
Mike Dudas: Yeah. Look, it strikes me again, Iām not a journalist, and I am not an editorial person at The Block. I feel like I can say that, it strikes me as suspicious. That being said, and Iāve noticed, and many folks like Jeff Goldberg, who almost obsessively talks about this publicly on Twitter, and as somebody who I have known for years, pre-crypto, pre-him doing any of this, but seems to ⦠The evidence heās presented is at least eyebrow-raising on the coordination of some of these things.
I personally donāt have any evidence that this is connected to Ripple or Ripple Core, or that Ripple is paying any of these folks, and I would never make that insinuation, or accusation. But, it makes you wonder if someone is. I donāt know whatās going on there is all I have to say. You donāt see behaviour like this from any other crypto ācommunity.ā You see people talking about technology.
The general level of sophistication of the arguments of that particular army and community versus literally any other one is, I canāt put a number on it. Itās significantly lower and less sophisticated. Itās not even worth engaging at this point anymore. I just made a policy on my personal account, to just block them.
Peter McCormack: Yeah, and do you know what, do you separate what is The Block and what is personal views, Twitter accounts tend to be personal?
Mike Dudas: Itās really difficult. Iām never going to get it to a point where 100% of people will agree with 100% of where I draw the line. By the way, I think thatās true of The Blockās coverage. We even internally debate how much should we say on our personal accounts, how much should we say on the Block account. Then, what should we cover? We have lots of internal debate on what we should cover and how we should cover it, and have different viewpoints.
Basically, I think the rule, and Iām learning as I go, because Iāve historically been in more enterprise technology, which by the way is why it was so fun to raise $2 million for this business over the summer, business that Iād never done before, but our investors believed in this mission, knew Iād been in crypto since 2013 and was passionate about it, and that Iām a great recruiter and could recruit this world-class team to do this. My personality and who I am and my passion is a big part of what makes this tick. Thatās true of the rest of our team as well. Larry, Frank, Steven, John Biggs.
I took at one of the highest praise or most, literally one of the kindest things anybody has said to me in a long time, is John Biggs again, early tech crunch, who came up with Crunchbase, and worked closely with Michael Errington, said hey, Dudas, man, you remind me of Michael Errington in the early days. The fire. And said a few other things. I was excited by that. I think Michael was able to, and heās still in the game in a big way, in crypto, but he was able to I think, move the industry in a number of ways, and in a positive light, in a positive direction, give it more visibility, make it ready for mainstream coverage. Iād like to do that as well for crypto.
Iād like to be the mainstream publication. I think Tech Crunch, they ultimately were purchased and didnāt necessarily realize their true financial potential. I think we can learn from some of the things that happened there, to do even better.
Peter McCormack: Tell me about the team then. That is one of the most impressive things. Youāve recruited this all-star team. Every time someone new comes on, youāre like, yeah, Iāve been reading your content already. Tell me about the team, who the key people are, what their roles are within The Block, but also, tell me about where the gaps are, who youāre looking to get in the future, what kind of people.
Mike Dudas: The key folks, my co-founder and CTO, Jake McGraw, is incredible. He and I worked together 10 years ago at the first start-up that both he and I worked at in ā08, ā09, which was an ad tech start-up.
My key rule here is, the absolute best signal that somebody is going to be great to work with is that you know them and have worked with them before. Or, you know their work. Jake McGraw is my co-founder and heās incredible. John Biggs, coming on as our editor, we parted ways with our founding editor, and John is incredible. He has a tremendous amount of experience, skill, relationships, can keep it calm and cool when itās just, Iām a very emotional and fiery person as you know. He brings measure.
Candidly, our strongest asset is the people doing the work. Itās Larry Cermak, our head analyst. Itās Steven Jiang, our head researcher. Itās Frank Chaparro, whoās our senior correspondent and came to us from Business Insider. I had seen, and then Isabel Woodford, who just joined us, whoād worked at Reuters and is based in London.
Those four are doing the work that is really making this company special. Whatās so fascinating is that each one of them is under the age of 25, but knows more about this space, whether it be the technology, whether it be the people, whether it be the companies that I ⦠My job is to get to a slightly below topical level knowledge about a lot of things, and then help orchestrate what we cover, go out, sales and marketing, raise money, and lead the team. These folks are world class experts. Theyāve been so amazing, that they helped attract Arjun Balaji, who is I think one of the top five people. Weāve been friends. I was, leapt for joy when he agreed to join as a technical advisor. Heās giving us a decent amount of his time and will be publishing some work.
The whole point is, great talent attracts great talent. Weāre now getting more contributor pieces, ideas, tips. Then, last but definitely not least, I hired a guy named Mike McCaffrey, who had spent 18 months working at Citibank as an investment banker, he was recommended to us by two investors, Bloomberg Beta. I love that Bloombergās an investor in our business. And, Blockchange Ventures, Ken Seiff, whoās an incredible investor. Multiple funds, and just a wonderful man, former CEO, and a great advisor to us.
They both recommended Mike as chief of staff, and we subsequently promoted him to director of operations and finance, as well as chief of staff. The guyās 24 going on 40. The maturity that he brings.
You need these heroes. The biggest thing Iāve learned, I donāt recruit on Twitter. Iām sorry, I donāt recruit on LinkedIn, we donāt even have to post jobs because our network, the people we see, the talent, basically, comes to you if youāre doing great stuff. Thatās whatās been so, so exciting. These best people just rise to the challenge, in an incredible way.
Weāre just looking for more of that. Frankly, it gives us what you would call a āarbitrage opportunityā versus others. We compensate every single full-time person on the time, in equity, as well as fair value cash. Itās basically like, you have upside above and beyond. Thatās something that, we donāt have to over, over, overpay like I bet some of the other publications out there have to. We can pay these folks and give them upsides. Itās an unfair advantage.
Lastly, we have Stephen Palley, whoās one of the best lawyers in the space, working on our behalf. That really, I developed a friendship with him, and heās really been an incredible asset to the team, because so much of what we know, do, does require a legal review prior to publication.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. Itās a great team. Iām a fan of every single one of them, every person you just named. I think theyāre all amazing. One thing it seems to me, as an outsider, and I could be wrong, but it feels like you donāt really have any kind of huge hierarchy of structure. If it was, you probably have quite a flat structure, and you give your team a lot of freedom.
Mike Dudas: Exactly. That, I didnāt actually answer the last part of your question, which is, what are the gaps. We are launching as I mentioned a paid product. The biggest thing, and I just posted this actually yesterday, publicly, that we will hire between now and February, when we launch, is additional researchers and analysts. There are some really, really exciting world-class people who weāre talking to. Weāre going to hire more full-time folks, and would love anybody interested in listening to apply on our site, as well as contributor pieces.
Itās just the exposure that folks will get, they love it, they can get it on our site where weāre seeing now hundreds of thousands of monthly visits, as well as through our newsletter, which is read by just an insane whoās who of them individually. Obviously, canāt reveal names. These are CEOs of Fortune five ⦠C level folks of Fortune 500 companies, these are leaders of protocols, household names, investors, et cetera.
Peter McCormack: Another thing Iāve noticed, and I really am a big fan of, is the design of the website. Itās very simple, itās very clean, itās very easy to use. Itās a real job, actually. Somebody whoās coming from a web design background, I donāt like publisher websites normally. Usually, theyāre either ugly or something like Mashable, which try to do something different, which I donāt get along with.
Your site is just really easy to use. Itās a really nice chronological, hierarchy of stories, which you can filter by Bitcoin, Ethereum. Itās very, very simple. Iām guessing that was a key decision, right?
Mike Dudas: Absolutely. The original idea was crypto simplified. Crypto simplified, thatās the tagline, that applies whether youāre presenting exceptionally complex ideas, or whether youāre doing blockchain 101. We were really lucky, so much, and this comes down to relationships. You put yourself in a position to get lucky, but my cofounder, Chris Mattern, of my former company Button, who I also worked with at Venmo, recommended an incredible firm called Charming Robot, who are world, world-class designers. Theyāve worked with the Skim, they helped launch Skift, which is Rafat Aliās travel publication. Theyāve worked with a number of other great folks who all endorse them to us.
I knew Dan Macaron, the CEO, and Eric Bowie, the COO for a while, and they did just a bang up job. This is pre-Jake coming on as our CTO. We wanted to build up the site, get it launched on WordPress. Youāre going to see a lot of updates, but in terms of that clean crypto simplified design, they did such a great job. We wanted to be distinct and look different, in that snippet based, or block-based design. They helped with the name as well. It was certainly something that I thought about in the shower and kept thinking about at 3:00 AM.
Now we have to figure out how to get the domain name.
Peter McCormack: Somebody else has got it?
Mike Dudas: Block.co. Block.com is Chevy, I think. I donāt think theyāll be selling.
Peter McCormack: Right. Okay. Look, itās all going well. Readershipās up. I saw you put the stats out. Theyāre pretty impressive. Youāve got a great team. Your productās coming. Everything seems to be going well. What are your main challenges, Mike? Whatās the stuff thatās keeping you up at night?
Mike Dudas: Yeah. As a CEO, you always have to mix a healthy dose of optimism and paranoia. Iām most optimistic about the team as weāve talked about, and about the reception to what weāre doing. At the same time, there are risks. Weāre largely pre-revenue. We do have revenue coming in. We will start, by the way, running sponsorships. From key partners, and thoseāll be sponsored posts, clearly delineated, from brands that we have great respect. High-quality brands, not like ICOs that we wouldnāt believe in or things like that, in January.
Hew, how is our audience going to respond to that? Would be a concern. Hopefully well. We think well. Then, are we going to get that right mix? We have some more hiring to do over the next couple of months, as I mentioned, on the research analysis side. We believe we have the product, people are going to like when we launch the paid product. The last thing I forgot is, weāre going to have a Matt Levine from Bloomberg-style, or a Ryan Selkis-style column on daily, or every couple day basis. Thatāll be behind the paywall.
Will that product resonate? We think it will. My basic thing is, Iām not going to name the price point now, but basically, at the price point, weāre going at, if we help you make one good decision per year, youāve more than paid for your subscription. Thatās the bar that we want to hit. We want everybody to make 10x from what they read from us.
Then, the next thing is, does the market recover. The market doesnāt have to recover per se, but you need some volatility for folks to remain interested. I donāt fear that because Iām a true crypto believer. I think thereās a reasonable, logical question. I think weāre past that point, just based on the developer activity Iām seeing through the downturn. The market changing next year. We will go to the market to raise one more round of capital, and Iād like to turn profitable on that rate. I plan to raise a series A, I plan to do that in the late Q1 or Q2 timeframe. Based on, a really strong management team and a really strong editorial team and a product that will be starting to generate some really good revenue. Led by me, by Jake, our CTO, and by John Biggs, our editor and chief.
I think thatās going to be a really compelling vertical, median information, the value proposition for investors. But, always a risk, as to whether you can raise. Iāve done it before. I think weāll do it.
Then, the last thing is just, can we maintain, can we keep our people. Can we keep them engaged, as their star grows? I think it will be advantageous to everybody, that we stick together. This is a people business. I think we all make each other better, and as a leader, itās my job to put them all in a position to keep doing that.
Scalingās hard, man. You know, youāve seen it. Iāve sure been through it. I did at Button, at my last company, over 100 people now, and itās like every, when you go from where we are, 10 to 25 is a huge jump. 25 to 40, and after that, once youāre above 40, itās just constant evolution, people are coming and going.
I think weāre a different kind of business, where we donāt necessarily need to get that large. Keeping the core intact is really critical, and always the biggest risk.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. The most I ever got to was a full-time team of 35, and a transient team of five. Say, 40. What I noticed is, and Iāve had this twice actually, about 15 people, above that, it starts to change, because you canāt be there holding hands and everyone making decisions together, that united front changes. The biggest change I had was when we went over 30, it was always like, I had to let go. My job became to manage the people, who manage the company. Also, you have cliques form and groups form within the company. Politics has become something thatās very hard to fight. It just naturally happens though.
Iām sure youāre prepared for it, Mike?
Mike Dudas: Yeah. We are. That will be a challenge. Weāre already in five time zones with 10 people. Itāll be interesting as we hire in Asia, for example, we have a reporter role that we have open there, and we have contributors from there, Joseph Young right now, whoās a phenomenal contributor, whoās written a couple pieces for us. Weāll have to grow and grow prudently.
The distributed mobile company, itās a new thing. Weāre looking at the folks who perhaps havenāt done it as well, or have grown too fast. You see Consensys cutting back. Consensys has done, I donāt mean to pick on them, theyāve done some incredible things for the Ethereum ecosystem, and for the crypto ecosystem at large. But, grew too fast and then had to pull back, which can hurt folks. By the way, thatās I think positive for the rest of the ecosystem. Weāre talking to Consensys folks ourselves. I think thereās going to be landing places for that talent.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. I think, I can imagine in a couple of years, weāre going to look back at 2018 and hopefully say, Iām glad that happened. It was needed, it was required. We needed that to shake everything out, so people will focus on fundamentals again.
Mike Dudas: Thatās what we say about, we make mistakes as a company, in different areas. Whether itās resource planning, hiring, you name it. As long as you can do a retro, take those lessons, and grow from them, I have this experience from previous businesses, and not dwell. Just hey, if I was dwelling on the fact that I lost 80% of the notional Bitcoin that I had at the beginning of the year, Iād drive myself nuts. I donāt. I thought about it as play money, and I hedged by actually building a business, that I think is going to be tremendously valuable in the long run.
Peter McCormack: Look, you saw my tweet, right?
Mike Dudas: Yeah.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. No, itās fine.
Mike Dudas: Youāve got a lot of stuff going on. Youāre going to look at this in five years and say, hell, I really think, because I see you, the energy that you bring ⦠Now, itās my turn to say nice things about you. That I see the energy that you bring in all of your endeavours. By the way, just like I know you donāt agree with 100% of what I say publicly, I donāt always agree with you, but I have such respect for your energy, your conviction, and your honesty and openness, because again, Iām the same way, very honest and open. Itās risky and it exposes you, vulnerability to other people, that they can then point to later.
The bottom line is, youāre a doer. Youāre doing three, four, five things now, and youāre going to be successful because I think you have good judgment. People are interested in what you do. You have good ideas. Youāre thoughtful. Youāre in, as far as I believe, the right market at the right time.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. Thereās a lot of luck there. It was just on your point, you said you hedged, you wish ⦠I wish Iād sold. I got a phone call from The Guardian newspaper today because they wanted to talk about what happened. They thought I was all depressed and miserable, and I said, you know what, Iām not. They asked if there were regrets, and I said, regrets are stupid, because every decision Iāve made at the time, I thought it was the right one. There is no point in having regrets, but like you, I hedged. I was like, this isnāt going to go on forever. Iām going to build a podcast, Iāve got a sustainable income, Iām not broke. I havenāt lost my house or anything.
Actually, I think weāll look back and, if someone turned around to me and said, you can have all the money, but you wouldnāt have the podcast, I wouldnāt take it, because what would I be doing?
Mike Dudas: You have this platform now, itās growing, this is how I feel about The Block as well. Yeah, bottom line, if you can take that positive approach, stay out of depression, which Iām somebody, and Iāve said this publicly, who over periods of my life, I fight on a daily basis, to clinically ⦠I forget the exact description, but social anxiety disorder. Itās a challenge, and it impacts how I engage with people. Iāve basically, I work day in and day out so that I can overcome it, and be that outgoing person, which is so key to my business.
If youāre resilient, even despite it being hard and challenging, day to day, in taking those setbacks, which, of course, as a startup CEO, you can imagine, weāve had setbacks. You revealed the setbacks youāve seen over the past year, and come out of it with that spirit. Then look at the things youāre lucky about. Yeah, I tweeted this recently, but Iāve got a beautiful family, son and a daughter, four and a half-year-old daughter, one-year-old son. Amazing wife. My parents are incredible. Brother, my wifeās family. Itās awesome.
Feel very fortunate about all that. Thatās the stuff thatās important when Iām not tweeting.
Peter McCormack: Anxiety though, itās pretty rough, right?
Mike Dudas: It is. Yeah. I developed, in my early 20s, and didnāt know what it was until my mid-20s. It was most crippling when I didnāt know what it was. I would literally if I got up in front of an audience, I would literally break into a cold sweat, and then the anticipatory anxiety would become very nerve-racking. Then you start to avoid. Iāve always been a social, outgoing person, and youāre like, what the heck is this? Often, it happens to that type of a personality.
Iāve, over the years, managed it. Itās been literally, Iām almost 40. Iāve been managing it since I was, managing it well since I was 26, itās been 14 years. No fun. Daily battle. Many other people have, thatās what you would call a mental, letās say mental illness, much in other aspects of my health. Iām very fortunate.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. Iāve had bouts of anxiety for five years, panic attacks, SVTs.
Mike Dudas: Yeah. I read about it. Thatās why I felt comfortable chatting with you about it. Mine hasnāt gotten to that point, but there was a period actually when I literally would, it was painful to fly, because I associated it with, and then physical things, again, would manifest. It wouldnāt be a heart rate, but sweating and Iād get these weird things like leg cramps, and all kinds of odd stuff.
The brain is a powerful thing in positive ways and can be a powerful thing in negative ways. I find when I talk to other people doing really exciting, interesting, on the edge things, many of them share these unique things that they manage, and that drives them to be better, and let them exist on the extremes and the edges.
I feel that is comforting, and that I know there are many other people out there. Again, Iāve been ⦠The most successful parts of my career have been while Iāve been managing that, drives me to prove, hell, Iām going to win and win again.
Peter McCormack: Man, I get it. Iāve been there. Been through the roughest times and the good times, I know what itās like.
Listen, look, this is really good stuff. Letās talk about next year. 2019. Give me your predictions, Mike. What do you think is going to happen?
Mike Dudas: I think that this industry is going to return to a really positive builder mentality industry, across all key segments. Weāve seen the infrastructure being built on the institutional side, in terms of Fidelity and others, building out institutional products. I think weāre going to start to see some really, really early, new consumer-facing adoption. Endorsement from big companies like Starbucks, like Fidelity. I come from a world where I believe thatās important, even though I know many of the early folks and libertarians would say, maximalists might say, of certain types, would say, or crypto-anarchists, not maximalists, but say hey, this is bad, theyāre co-opting our technology and our money.
I think itās necessary for mass adoption. Youāre going to see broader adoption and usage of these technologies. Youāre going to see more building without the hashtag. Youāre not going to see people bragging about building. Youāre going to see some cool product announcements. I think people are going to follow the lightning labs of the world, and realize that actually, delivering product and then showing how the nodes are growing, week over week, and having people talk about it, folks like Casa who are delivering products, folks like Ledger, folks like Nomics, who just announced a raise today, those are the people to follow. Folks like Rick Burton at Balance who keep trucking along, and just mentioned yesterday that he was able to find a lead for his next round.
Iām excited to watch those builders. Julian from AMOC Protocol. The protocols themselves. Even the projects that are delayed, Iām somebody whoās interested in projects far beyond just Bitcoin, Ethereum. I was excited to hear Definity say hey, this is coming next. Even Hashgraph today talking about things in the future.
I think weāre going to see a lot more things come into reality. Then weāre going to see some things come to a head, things that donāt work. Weāre going to see much more regulatory enforcement, and some projects are going to settle and go away, and I think thatās a healthy thing. Youāre going to see projects make prudent decisions like Basis did, to shut down when they realize what they proposed isnāt feasible.
I thought that team wound down in an exceptionally professional way and should be proud of themselves. Then, weāre going to start to see, I think ⦠I think there will be a high profile just disintegration. I donāt know what project it is, but I think ⦠Bitcoin Cash is doing it to themselves. Just a big massive highly valued project that doesnāt deliver. Iām not going to name names, I have some in mind, that the value craters, even more than it already has.
That, Iāll end with the notion of, I think youāre going to see separation in 2019. Maybe Iām hoping and projecting here. Between high-quality project price, youāre going to see some drop, a lot of tokens drop to -99% of all time high. Yes, I do, and itās hard to speak in these short-term periods, and Iām not going to make any investment advice or price predictions, but wherever Bitcoin ends the year, I think 12 months later, itās not going to go much lower than that. Or, Iāll say this.
Two to three years out, I see it being higher than what it is now.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. Iām with you.
Mike Dudas: In every metric, cash rate, activity, on the network, transactions, consumer usage, and price.
Peter McCormack: I donāt know about you, Iām actually in some ways, Iām excited more than ever.
Mike Dudas: Oh my God, yeah. Thatās what I shouldāve said. I donāt think youāre going to see a stop to the flow of people. I do think youāre going to see more people entering into this ecosystem. One of the reasons, by the way, is because I actually think, itās important to consider crypto, and I just use that word as slang, but crypto in the context of the larger global economy. I think weāre going to start to see some real trouble in the larger global economy, and thatās going to lead to layoffs, youāre going to see more people, people in technology looking for things to do. Google and Amazon continue to expand, theyāll hoover up tons of talent. Theyāre building campuses here in New York.
Thereās a lot of other companies that are going to bleed people. I wouldnāt be surprised if you see some of those folks coming into this ecosystem, and this asset class. Youāll start to see I think moreĀ ā¦
The one thing that Iām unsure of, the one thing I want to see, just so people stop talking about it, is this goddamn ETF just getting approved or not. Iām sure Gabor has talked about this. Was he on your show, talking about it?
Peter McCormack: Yeah. He was on a few weeks ago. You know what, he put out one tweet thatās really interesting. I canāt remember the exact wording, but Iāll find it and put it in the show notes. He said something along the lines of, that Coin Base is able to issue shit coin after shit coin, to retail investors, whilst they are building a regulated product for institutional investors, and they canāt get approval.
Mike Dudas: Itās great, Iām glad you brought that up. Please do interview my colleague Larry on an upcoming show, because he and I actually just agree fundamentally on this. I think of Bitcoin ETF, it should be approved. If you look at other assets that have been approved, when you look at market manipulation and those markets, I would argue, and Gabor would as well, that thereās no more than there is, at least to be alleged, in the Bitcoin market. Thereās a whole host of other factors they consider.
Then the next question is hey, was that tweet responsible. Iām of the opinion, I really like him, and Iām the type of guy who tweets some things that people donāt always necessarily think are proper. I thought it was fun. I think he just called out the wrong company. Now, full disclosure, Coin Base is an investor in The Block, very small, less than 0.3% of the company. I have a place here in my heart for them, they got me into crypto. My first meeting in crypto was when I was at Braintree and met Coin Base.
I view them as a very credible, very secure exchange. Theyāve still only listed, what, 10, 12 coins at most. Silly one to pick on is what I would say. I think listing a token for trading is very, very different than having it be an ETF, available to unaccredited investors and available through traditional channels.
Once you get that Bitcoin ETF approved, it then can start showing up, not for people who seek it out on Coin Base, but for people who might see that in their traditional accounts. It is a big difference. It was just a weird analogy.
Peter McCormack: Okay. What are your predictions for The Block for next year?
Mike Dudas: My prediction for The Block is that when you look at us five years from now, we are going to be the absolute standard in the crypto ecosystem, in terms of the brand that people think of when they think of media, information, you name it. Like Bloomberg is to traditional financial markets, people will think of The Block as that to crypto. I donāt think weāll talk about it as crypto then, I believe it will be digital assets. It will include things like tokenized securities, it will include some of the things that people today classify as FinTech. I think FinTech as a word starts to go away, and weāll start to talk more about digital assets and things of that nature.
I have every intention to make us the preeminent media and information brand. Multimedia by the way, so weāll expand into other media in this world. Then lastly, I think media and information companies have not done a good job of creating communities. I think within the crypto ecosystem in particular, just like Twitch has done in video gaming, I think people love Telegram, they love Slack in the crypto ecosystem to communicate with one another, and they learn in that way.
We are going to over the next few years build in an element of communication and community. LinkedIn will not exist in this ecosystem. We can act as a replacement for them. Itās easy to say that, we have a pretty interesting plan on how we will get there.
Peter McCormack: Oh. Amazing. Whoās going to win the Premier League?
Mike Dudas: Liverpool. I would say by three points at the end.
Peter McCormack: I think itās going to be close. Thatās all I can say. I think itās going to be tight, itās going to be close.
Mike Dudas: Yeah. Iām not a lifelong fan like you are. Iām a six-year fan.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. Thatās enough. If you ever get over here Mike, Iām going to get us tickets and Iāll take us to a game.
Mike Dudas: Yeah. We tried the last time, I ended up going to see Liverpool versus Palace, and it was an absolute blast.
Peter McCormack: Was that at Palace?
Mike Dudas: Whatās that?
Peter McCormack: Was that at Palace?
Mike Dudas: Yeah. I didnāt wear any gear.
Peter McCormack: Thatās a great ground. That ground is great. Itās a noisy ground.
Mike Dudas: Oh my goodness. I did cheer at the whistle, 2ā0, and the folks around me, season ticket holders, not pleased, told me to keep it down. I was an American fan. Youāre not allowed to clap for a team when they win unless youāre in the visitorās, supporterās area, I guess.
Peter McCormack: Yeah. I know the chairman because he used to be a client of mine. We used to do the web work and digital work for Crystal Palace. I got to know Parrish, and he invited me to the game where we were all three all, at, you know when we missed out on winning the league, what a game.
All right. Listen, look, Mike, this has been great. I knew it would be. Tell me, tell everyone how they can follow The Block and how they can follow you, and who you want to hear from.
Mike Dudas: Of course. You can find us at www.theblockcrypto.com. Weāre @theblock__ on Twitter, we got to fix that. Iām @dudas on Twitter. Love to engage, I have open DMs, we have open DMs for The Block. Please communicate with us. Weāre looking for world-class researchers to work with us. World class analysts and world-class journalists, who have a deep, deep interest in the crypto ecosystem.
Weāre always, always, always looking for tips. If you have an interesting story that youād either like to write as a contributor yourself, or a tip that you want to share with us either anonymously or under your identity, please donāt hesitate to reach out to us.
Peter McCormack: All right, man. That was cool. Thanks a lot, Mike.
Mike Dudas: All right. Thank you, brother.
Connect with What Bitcoin Did:Listen: iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | SoundCloud | YouTube | **TuneIn**Follow: Website | Email| Blog | Twitter | Medium | Instagram | YouTube