Fireblocks Co-Founder and CEO, Michael Shaulov, talks about their first days (“‘people told our idea was dumb’”), crypto security, industry-wide challenges, the ongoing market downturn, and how Fireblocks is positioned to weather the storm.
Fireblocks is one of the largest providers of custody infrastructure solutions in the cryptocurrency industry. The company was founded back in 2018 by Michael Shaulov, Pavel Berengoltz, and Idan Ofrat.
In January this year, Fireblocks raised $550 million at a whopping valuation of $8 billion. From a small team of a few people at the beginning, an idea that many believed to be “dumb and stupid,” the company grew into a team of 500 employees which is servicing the most prominent players in the industry.
CryptoPotato got the chance to talk to Michael Shaulov – one of the three co-founders and the company’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO).
As mentioned above, Fireblocks has come a long way in the past four years, and its last valuation puts it at $8 billion – a staggering and quick growth, by all means. But it hasn’t always been like this, and the path has not been without its critics.
A really funny story I have is that when we actually started, people were telling me that the idea is dumb and stupid. They said people will continue using cold storage and why do we even bother focusing on the hot storage problem or the transfer problem.
Shaulov shared that he didn’t anticipate the company to grow so quickly, especially in the last 18 months, which he describes as “very unexpected and occasionally even unplanned.” According to the CEO, they’ve managed to build a product with an “exceptional product-market-fit for where the market was heading and is heading.”
And even though it’s been a wild journey for the entire industry, Shaulov says that in his view, “the company hasn’t changed a lot, although it did grow from 3 or 10 people as we were in the beginning to about 500 people at this point in time.”
It’s not like we were expecting this type of growth, but we are happy that we’re able to deliver something that’s valuable.
The past couple of months have been particularly challenging for the entire cryptocurrency industry, which saw trillions of dollars get wiped off the total market capitalization. From nearly $2 trillion 60 days ago, the market cap is currently resting at around $900 billion.
That said, Shaulov thinks that these tumultuous times have brought up one of the biggest challenges for the cryptocurrency field as a whole – real-world use cases.
I think that the main challenge right now, and it’s probably the most timely challenge, given everything that is going on in the industry in the last couple of weeks is to really find and empower the real-world use cases.
He believes that the industry has been focused on trading cryptocurrency for the vast majority of the time.
As we all know, outside of Bitcoin, the value of Ethereum or Solana is the question of how this will actually be used for real-world use cases – will it be used for payments? Will it be used for tokenized assets?
According to him, the industry is starting to see some of those use cases emerge, but “we need to see more and more of those across everything rather than focusing on crypto trading use cases.”
The problem with that, and what makes it hard, though, is that “you need to go and transform existing industries through innovations.”
Shaulov, much like other executives and founders in the space, believes that the current market slowdown is an opportunity to focus on deliverables and continue building.
However, he did say that the downturn certainly impacted their clients.
The last set of incients – both from Luna and as of recent – the entire deleveraging in the market from Celsius, Three Arrows Capital, and so on, is definitely imapcting our client base and the continuous expansion of the market.
Amid the turbulent conditions, Fireblocks continues to hire people in the research and development (R&D) compartment. The CEO said that the slowdown allows them to focus more resources internally to streamline processes and make them more efficient.
He also shared that even though Celsius, Three Arrows Capital, and Voyager are all their clients, the company’s client base is very diversified, including banks and institutions where this type of market volatility doesn’t impact them as much because they are focused on long-term real-world use cases.
Shaulov also doesn’t think that companies cutting staff need to be a bad thing necessarily.
To hear more about how Fireblocks plans to tackle the ongoing downturn and their foray into Web3, make sure to check out the full video above.
Georgi Georgiev is CryptoPotato’s editor-in-chief and a seasoned writer with over two years of experience writing about blockchain and cryptocurrencies. Georgi’s passion for Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies bloomed in late 2016 and he hasn’t looked back since. Crypto’s technological and economic implications are what interest him most, and he has one eye turned to the market whenever he’s not sleeping. Contact George: LinkedIn
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