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The Simple Truth: Why Web3 Will Win When Consumers Stop Thinking About It
Here’s a question worth pondering: How many people can explain how their toilet actually works? Probably not many. And that’s exactly the point. Complex systems achieve mass adoption the moment users stop needing to understand them—they just need to experience the value.
This principle, according to Keith Grossman, President of Enterprise at MoonPay, is precisely what will determine whether blockchain technology becomes mainstream or remains a niche pursuit. Grossman will share more insights on this topic at Benzinga’s Future of Digital Assets conference on November 14—an event worth marking on your calendar if you follow the Web3 space.
The Naming Problem Isn’t Actually a Problem
First, let’s address the elephant in the room: the term “Web3” itself will likely disappear. This has happened before. During the dot-com era, we didn’t celebrate “dot-com companies” forever—we just started calling them Amazon, Salesforce, and eBay. Today, nobody identifies these as pioneers of a movement; they’re simply businesses that solved real problems.
The same trajectory awaits blockchain technology. When the underlying infrastructure becomes normalized, the technology fades into the background, and only the value proposition remains visible to end users.
Bottom-Up Verification Changes Everything
Here’s where blockchain’s real innovation lies: it fundamentally shifts how trust is established. Currently, every transaction, contract, and exchange requires top-down verification—human gatekeepers at every step. This isn’t just inefficient; it’s expensive and creates unnecessary bottlenecks.
Blockchain inverts this model. Trust emerges from the system itself, verified through transparent, mathematical protocols rather than institutional intermediaries. The difference is crucial: this isn’t about creating “trustless” environments (nobody actually wants that). It’s about replacing institutional trust with technological certainty.
The Experience Layer Is Everything
Remember when HD televisions first arrived? Nobody needed a tutorial on 720p resolution. They didn’t attend seminars on refresh rates. They simply saw a better picture and wanted one.
The same applies here. “Intel Inside” was once ubiquitous in marketing. Then Steve Jobs held up an iPod and said “1,000 songs in your pocket”—and suddenly, nobody cared what processor powered the device. The technology became invisible; the experience became irresistible.
Keith Grossman witnessed this firsthand through MoonPay’s initiatives, including a Scavenger Hunt experience at South Street Seaport in New York. The question guiding such projects: How do we deliver enhanced value without requiring consumers to become blockchain engineers first?
Companies like Nike and Starbucks are experimenting with similar approaches, building engaging experiences layered on top of Web3 infrastructure without making the technology the focus.
Why This Matters Right Now
The breakthrough moment for Web3 won’t arrive when more people understand cryptography or consensus mechanisms. It arrives when someone picks up their phone, completes a transaction, and thinks: “That was easier than before.”
No complicated explanations. No technical jargon. Just a better way that works.
Keith Grossman’s career—from pioneering TIME Pieces’ NFT strategy at TIME to his current role at MoonPay—reflects this evolution. The focus has never been on explaining blockchain to the masses. The focus has always been on crafting experiences so compelling that the underlying technology becomes irrelevant.
In other words: your toilet is complicated. But you don’t need to understand plumbing to use it. Web3 will achieve adoption the same way.
Learn more at Benzinga’s Future of Digital Assets conference on November 14.