# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Adoption

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Adoption", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

a16z: The Best Technology Doesn't Always Win in the Enterprise Market

a16z: Why the "Best" Tech Doesn't Always Win in Enterprise Markets In the current blockchain application cycle, founders are learning a crucial lesson: enterprises don't buy the "best" technology; they buy the upgrade path with the least disruption. For decades, new enterprise tech has offered promises of order-of-magnitude improvements—faster settlement, lower costs, cleaner architecture—but adoption rarely matches technical superiority. The gap isn't performance but product-market fit. Enterprises prioritize minimizing downside risk over maximizing gains. Decision-makers in large institutions face asymmetric penalties: missing an opportunity is rarely punished, but a visible failure can damage careers and attract regulatory scrutiny. Thus, decisions are driven by "what is least likely to fail" rather than "what might be achieved." Enterprise decisions are made by a coalition of stakeholders—legal, compliance, risk, finance, security—each with veto power and different concerns. The "customer" is rarely a single buyer but a group focused on avoiding errors. Successful founders identify these decision-makers early and tailor their pitch to address specific institutional constraints. Third-party consultants and system integrators often act as gatekeepers, repackaging new technology into familiar frameworks to reduce perceived risk. Ignoring this layer is a strategic mistake. A common error is using a one-size-fits-all sales pitch or advocating for a "rip-and-replace" approach. Enterprises prefer incremental integration that complements existing systems, as seen in Uniswap's collaboration with BlackRock on tokenized funds, which extended traditional fund structures onto the chain without overhauling operations. Enterprises hedge their bets by running multiple pilots. Winning requires becoming the "right hedge"—not just through technical superiority but by demonstrating professionalism, predictability, and credibility within institutional constraints. Ideological purity around decentralization often fails to resonate with risk-averse enterprises. Success comes from adapting to the enterprise's operational realities, not demanding they adopt a full vision immediately. The most successful technologies are those that integrate seamlessly into existing workflows, reducing uncertainty and enabling gradual, scalable adoption.

marsbit03/11 09:43

a16z: The Best Technology Doesn't Always Win in the Enterprise Market

marsbit03/11 09:43

The Largest Market for Stablecoins Is Not Cross-Border Payments

Stablecoins are experiencing significant growth, with their circulating supply more than doubling and adjusted transaction volume tripling over the past two years. However, the nature of this growth is shifting. Data from Allium’s latest report indicates that stablecoins are increasingly being used as a payment rail rather than a savings or speculative asset. Key metrics show that transaction velocity has increased from 2.6x to over 6x, indicating that stablecoins are being used more frequently for transactions rather than held as stores of value. While consumer-to-consumer (C2C) transactions remain the largest category by volume, their growth has slowed. In contrast, consumer-to-business (C2B) and business-to-business (B2B) payments are growing rapidly—131% and 87% respectively—suggesting increased adoption in commercial use cases like subscriptions, invoices, and supply chain payments. Notably, the narrative that stablecoins are primarily used for cross-border remittances is contradicted by the fact that about 74% of transactions are domestic. The declining average transaction size further supports the idea that stablecoins are being used for routine, lower-value payments rather than large international transfers. This shift positions stablecoins as competitors to domestic payment systems like ACH, rather than as tools for global remittances. The maturation of stablecoin infrastructure is evident as usage moves beyond experimental peer-to-peer transfers toward consistent, high-frequency commercial applications. If C2B and B2B growth continues even during crypto market downturns, it would signal that stablecoin payment infrastructure is decoupling from crypto’s speculative cycles.

比推03/09 21:23

The Largest Market for Stablecoins Is Not Cross-Border Payments

比推03/09 21:23

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