Editor's Note: The crypto industry is entering a new phase of communication. In the past, a whitepaper, a token, and a grand vision were enough to attract the attention of media, communities, and capital. However, amid increasing regulatory scrutiny, industry scandals, and accumulating informational noise, the patience of external audiences for 'stories' is waning.
The core judgment put forward in this article is that the crypto industry has entered the 'show me' era: the market no longer just asks what you want to do, but presses you on what you have already built, who is using it, whether the data is real, and whether partnerships are operational. As traditional financial institutions like BlackRock, Fidelity, J.P. Morgan, and Franklin Templeton enter the crypto space with products rather than concepts, the industry's standard for judging 'credible projects' has been raised overall.
This means the communication logic for startups must also change. Vision is still important, but it can no longer substitute for evidence. Real transaction volume, mainnet data, active users, revenue, retention, third-party validation, audit reports, and publicly endorsable partners are becoming the new 'evidence stack'. Compared to 'We are building the future of payments,' a more persuasive statement is: We have already reduced cross-border settlement time from three days to four minutes, and real businesses are already using it.
For crypto projects, this is both pressure and opportunity. Higher communication barriers will weed out a lot of noise reliant on conceptual packaging, but will also make it easier for teams with real products, data, and users to be seen. The question is no longer whether a project can tell a big enough story, but whether it can produce sufficiently solid evidence to keep that story credible.
Below is the original text:
For decades, the technology industry has been able to garner public recognition and external acclaim based on the interesting ideas emerging from it.
This reached a point where the startup mantra 'Minimum Viable Product' (MVP) even shared its abbreviation with a star like Jalen Brunson. (Forever New York.)
But over the past decade, especially in recent years, the tech industry has changed dramatically: MVPs, good ideas, and great teams are no longer enough to impress external audiences. The crypto industry has been hit particularly hard—unresolved regulatory issues, coupled with bad actors constantly making headlines, have made people's 'BS detectors' increasingly sensitive. As the noise grows louder, people have also become more proactive in filtering information.
And when traditional finance (TradFi) players really started taking crypto seriously—like BlackRock launching a tokenized money market fund, Fidelity filing for a crypto ETF, J.P. Morgan settling transactions on its own blockchain—the focus of the discussion shifted accordingly. What's changing isn't just 'what crypto is,' but also 'what it means to be taken seriously in this industry.'
We are now at this inflection point. This point has quietly rewritten the communication rules for all crypto builders. Welcome to the 'show me' era.
What changed? Why now?
For most of its history, the crypto industry has operated on a logic of 'promise': the vision *is* the product. You could launch a project with just a whitepaper and a token, and the media and crypto community would follow along. People were always betting on what something *could become* in the future, not what it had already proven. That dynamic has now changed.
Why? Simply put, I think this shift in communication style stems from the combined effect of several factors: the technology is over two decades old, yet public skepticism persists and even deepens; traditional financial institutions are entering the crypto space at scale, not just with nominal involvement, but with real products; meanwhile, the AI industry is also delivering tangible, consumer-facing products—though its success seems overnight, it was actually built over decades.
Large institutions are no longer just watching the space or confining experiments to 'innovation labs.' They are now building infrastructure for scaled application: BlackRock and Larry Fink fully embracing tokenization; Fidelity building custody and ETF infrastructure; J.P. Morgan launching the Onyx network; Franklin Templeton launching an on-chain money market fund.
These are no longer experiments; they are real products, backed by the compliance frameworks, institutional clients, and balance sheets of traditional finance.
The large-scale entry of traditional finance has raised the baseline for 'seriousness' in crypto. When the world's largest asset manager starts tokenizing treasury bonds, what a credible project needs to prove to media, partners, and the market also rises accordingly.
From a policy perspective, the industry has also gone mainstream. With stablecoin legislation (the GENIUS Act) passing last year and now comprehensive market structure legislation (the CLARITY Act) poised for a full Senate vote, product communication is expected to evolve further. If the CLARITY Act passes, founders will be able to publicly discuss what they are building with unprecedented specificity.
All these changes combined mean the industry has matured—whether it's ready or not.
The result is that the starting point for communication is no longer 'what you're doing,' but rather: 'what have you already built? Who is using it?'
In practice, this means an attractive story alone no longer truly moves the needle. We need evidence.
The New Evidence Stack
The narrative that used to work was: 'We're building X for Y, and here's why it matters.' Today, that narrative needs a second act. I call it the 'evidence stack': a layer of proof that transforms a hypothetical, abstract narrative into a credible, concrete one.
So, what should this evidence stack look like?
Substantive partnerships, not 'in talks.' This means real integrations, deployed contracts, and partners willing to publicly state why they chose you. In the past, partnership announcements were often a lazy substitute for sluggish growth. Now, they only work if the partnership itself is evidence of growth. That is, a large institution, protocol, or platform chose you over a dozen alternatives, and you can clearly explain why.
This also means sharing more hard data: not testnet, but transaction volume on mainnet; number of active wallets; revenue; retention curves. Not 'growing fast,' but specific percentages, timeframes, and baselines. Journalists covering this space have become increasingly sophisticated; they do their own on-chain verification. If your data doesn't hold up on Dune, CoinMarketCap, or other analytics dashboards, your story won't either.
The evidence stack also includes real product-market fit signals. Who is using your product? Why do they keep using it, including why other market customers keep using it?
I believe the clearest evidence of fit isn't a launch announcement, but a community that existed and was growing organically *before* any PR push.
If your most enthusiastic users are your investors or the project's stakeholders, that's a yellow flag, as they have an economic incentive to amplify. But if those users found you through word-of-mouth, that's a story worth telling.
The key here is: coverage and attention existed *before* being media-driven, not *because* of a PR push. Third-party validation, audits, and independent research are all important evidence. The most credible evidence is the kind you didn't manufacture yourself. It's when others are demonstrating to the world: there's really something here.
What does this mean for startup communication?
When you're early-stage, with a product still taking shape but a very clear vision, the easiest impulse is to lead with the vision, with the manifesto. It feels authentic. And it *is* authentic.
But in the current environment, that expression will be read as a risk.
A better approach is to structure your narrative around the facts you can prove. Start with the data points you're most confident in, even if they're small. For example, one thousand daily active users who don't know the founder are more convincing than a one million dollar strategic fundraise. A protocol that processed $50 million in transaction volume in its first 90 days live is more interesting than a protocol that *will* process volume once it scales.
This also means describing your claims more precisely. 'We're building the future of payments' is a thesis statement, not an evidence point. 'We've already reduced cross-border settlement time from three days to four minutes, and three companies are using it today' is an evidence point, and it inherently contains a larger thesis.
For communication teams, and founders doing their own communication, the practical implication is: the story should grow *out of* the facts, not have the story first and then look for facts to support it. It's a different way of writing—in a sense harder and requiring more discipline—but it's more effective. Especially now.
The Long Game
None of this means vision is no longer important. The best crypto communication still operates on two tracks simultaneously: here's what we've built; here's why it's just the beginning of something bigger. The difference lies in narrative order and information proportion.
By 'proportion,' I mean that in 2021, you could perhaps get away with 80% vision and 20% substance. Today, that ratio has flipped.
You can still publish whitepapers, publish manifestos... but it's not enough anymore. Vision still matters; it gives the evidence points greater meaning and provides journalists and analysts with a direction to keep writing. But the vision must be *earned* by the substance beneath it.
The 'show me' era isn't a temporary industry correction. The sophistication of the crypto audience—whether media, institutions, or retail—has permanently leveled up.
The best builders in the space have realized this is actually good news. If you have real growth, real data, and real partners, a higher bar works in your favor; it filters out noise and makes your signal louder by contrast.
The question is: is your communication strategy designed to showcase that evidence, or is it still in the business of promising it?








