Ever wondered why some crypto products take off while others, despite amazing technology, just fade away?
In 2026, it’s becoming clear:
it’s not the blockchain under the hood that matters — it’s how effortless it feels for BTC users to actually use the product.
I was reading an article by Vlad Anderson, and one insight really stuck with me. It wasn’t exactly shocking — I’ve seen this pattern before — but it was fascinating nonetheless.
Many teams spend months building flawless tech:
custom wallets, multi-chain support, complex KYC flows. On paper, everything looks perfect. In reality, onboarding can take 10–15 minutes, users drop off, and the team ends up managing complexity instead of growing the product.
Then there’s the opposite approach.
One founder decided to integrate a ready-made Wallet-as-a-Service, hiding all the messy backend details — KYC, multi-chain support, encryption — and suddenly users could complete their first transaction in minutes. Activation jumped from 12–18% to 35–45%, and the team saved months of development and hundreds of thousands of dollars.
This really drives home a simple but critical lesson:
in crypto, success isn’t about perfect tech — it’s about effortless UX. You can have all the blockchain wizardry in the world, but if people can’t get started in a couple of clicks, it doesn’t matter.
If you want to dive deeper, you can read the full article here.
BTC and UX: Why Perfect Tech Alone Won’t Make Your Product Popular was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.



Market participants are eagerly anticipating at least a 25 basis point (BPS) interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve on Wednesday. The Federal Reserve, the central bank of the United States, is expected to begin slashing interest rates on Wednesday, with analysts expecting a 25 basis point (BPS) cut and a boost to risk asset prices in the long term.Crypto prices are strongly correlated with liquidity cycles, Coin Bureau founder and market analyst Nic Puckrin said. However, while lower interest rates tend to raise asset prices long-term, Puckrin warned of a short-term price correction. “The main risk is that the move is already priced in, Puckrin said, adding, “hope is high and there’s a big chance of a ‘sell the news’ pullback. When that happens, speculative corners, memecoins in particular, are most vulnerable.”Read more