Category: Builder-story

  • Play Your Own Game, All-In: Carylyne Chan on Exits, AI, Crypto & Consumer

    Play Your Own Game, All-In: Carylyne Chan on Exits, AI, Crypto & Consumer

    From a young age, she learned how to stand on her own feet, trust her instincts, and turn small beginnings into big opportunities. She didn’t wait for the “perfect moment.” She learned by doing, by experimenting, and by believing that underdogs can rise if they keep showing up with clarity and courage.

    Today, Carylyne helps founders dream bigger, move faster, and build companies that matter. She has worked across different worlds including tech, crypto, consumer and more, always with the same mindset: stay curious and keep creating.

    In this conversation, she shares the lessons, beliefs, and values that shaped her journey. Her story is a reminder that you don’t need a perfect background to build something meaningful; you just need the willingness to grow and the courage to take the first step.

    The Interview: Carylyne Chan on Exits, Building & Investing Across AI, Crypto & Consumer

    1) Tell us a bit about yourself – who is Carylyne Chan, where are you from, and what are you working on currently?

    I’m someone who loves taking sharp ideas from small, scrappy teams and scaling them into global contenders. That instinct started early — I grew up in Singapore, took my first internship at 14 at a government agency talking to strangers about environmental issues, and spent my teens building social enterprises and learning how to operate before I even knew what a startup was.


    A turbulent home life pushed me to become independent quickly, and it shaped two things that still define me today: a strong bias toward self-determination, and a deep soft spot for underdogs with outsized potential.


    My career since has moved across AI/ML, crypto, and multiple exits — including helping scale CoinMarketCap from a one-person idea into a global team and a nine-figure acquisition. I’ve lived across multiple cities in the US and China, and recently moved back to San Francisco to be closer to the center of tech’s momentum and idealism.


    Today, I run BlockSpaceForce, where we invest, operate, and incubate frontier, category-defining companies — and increasingly those at the inevitable convergence of crypto and the broader capital markets. Across everything I do, the throughline is the same: partnering early with exceptional founders and helping them punch far above their weight.

    2) You had a successful AI/ML career – AngelPad, Fortune 500 companies. Then you joined CoinMarketCap in 2018 when it didn’t even have a logo. What made you see potential others missed?

    I’ve always been drawn to categories where the macro trend is already unmistakable, but the supporting products are still early, underbuilt, or not meeting the moment. Those inflection points create room for small teams to have an outsized impact if they move quickly and build with clarity.


    CoinMarketCap is one example. Crypto was becoming a global phenomenon, and there’s a very human instinct to rank, compare, and make sense of new markets — so the need for reliable data was obvious. At the same time, relative to the importance of the category, there was still a huge amount of room to grow the products and companies inside it. That combination — an inevitable trend paired with a product that already had strong natural pull — made the opportunity clear.


    That’s generally how I choose the environments I step into: I look at where the world is already heading, and then ask whether the product or team at the center of it has the raw ingredients to grow into the role the category will eventually demand.

    3) You’ve invested in Babylon, SatLayer, Alkimiya, and others. What pattern do you see in Bitcoin infrastructure that excites you most right now?

    What excites me most is that Bitcoin is finally moving from being primarily a trillion-dollar asset to becoming a real economic platform. The asset itself is enormous, yet the economic value built on top of it is still only a tiny fraction of that — far smaller than you’d expect for something so globally held and trusted.


    The next decade is about closing that gap. We’re seeing teams build the primitives that make Bitcoin not just a store of value, but a productive base layer for the broader cryptoeconomy: secure and trustless staking and restaking, blockspace markets and optimizations, more expressive settlement layers, bridges into traditional capital markets, and more.


    Across the founders I believe in and back, the pattern is consistent: they expand what’s possible on Bitcoin without compromising its principles; they create new economic surface area instead of repackaging old ideas; and they ship with the speed and clarity that only small, deeply technical teams can bring.


    To sum it up, I find that the opportunity in Bitcoin infrastructure is enormous — not just because of where the asset is today, but because of how much value still hasn’t been activated around it.

    4) You describe yourself as turning “the underdog to top-dog.” What’s a specific strategy you’ve used multiple times to help companies dominate their category?

    What I’ve seen repeatedly is that small, sharp teams often already have the right instincts — they’re close to the problem, they move fast, and they see things others miss. What they usually need is someone to help pull all those instincts into a coherent center, so they’re not fighting their own momentum.


    The way I do that is by surfacing the team’s real point of view — the thing they believe but haven’t fully articulated yet — and then helping them build the product, messaging, and operating cadence around it. Once that spine is clear, execution becomes dramatically easier: priorities align, decisions get cleaner, and the team can finally move as one organism instead of scattered parts.
    A big part of my work is also in the day-to-day with founders: being a sounding board, a confidante, the person who can absorb complexity with them and help translate it into action. Early-stage companies rise and fall on the founder’s clarity and energy, so creating that steadiness is just as important as any strategy.
    From there, it’s about ongoing execution — building systems, tightening loops, and running focused pushes that compound over time. When a small team gains that combination of clarity, support, and operational rhythm, they start to feel much larger than they are. That’s how an underdog grows into a category leader: not through theatrics or one-offs, but through coherence and consistent, high-quality execution.

    5) You’ve navigated AI acquisition, crypto acquisition, and now building consumer brands. What’s one principle that’s remained constant across all these transitions?

    The principle that’s stayed constant for me is simple: play my own game all-in. Every chapter — AI, crypto, consumer — has come from following where my curiosity is strongest, where the learning curve is steepest, and where I feel I can genuinely change the status quo.


    My personal credo has always guided that: stay open-minded, take risks, aim for world-class execution, create rather than imitate, and keep growing toward your fullest potential. I’ve never believed in choosing paths because they’re popular or predictable; I choose the places where the work feels alive and where I can contribute something real.


    Across every transition, the same principle keeps proving itself: move toward the arenas that stretch you, that demand creativity and conviction, and that offer the chance to build something that didn’t exist before. When I make decisions from that place — not from fear, comparison, or chasing optics — the outcomes tend to compound.


    Believing you’re lucky and acting like it also helps. It keeps you bold, forward-looking, and willing to take the kinds of swings that make the journey meaningful — especially when you get to take that journey with the right people!

    6) What’s the biggest misconception founders have about exits that you’ve seen proven wrong? Based on your experience, what actually makes a company attractive to acquirers?


    One of the biggest misconceptions is that acquirers are chasing “traction” or generic growth metrics. In reality, buyers don’t acquire momentum — they acquire strategic leverage. An exit usually happens when your company gives someone else something that’s hard, slow, or expensive for them to build on their own.


    But the part founders overlook is that it’s not just a rational business decision. It’s also an emotional one. Acquirers are betting on people — on whether your team can mesh with theirs, whether there’s trust, and whether the combined company will be stronger than either side on its own. Cultural fit, continuity, and the ability to actually use and scale what you’ve built matter much more than most founders realize.


    What makes a company attractive often looks like a mix of the following:

    • you solve a problem the buyer urgently needs addressed,
    • you built something they can’t easily replicate,
    • you give them meaningful time-to-market advantage,
    • your team brings talent or insight they lack, and
    • the combined story makes sense internally and externally.


    That last part is underrated: leaders need to justify the acquisition to their board, their employees, and the market. If your product and team help them tell a clear, forward-looking narrative, you become exponentially more attractive.


    Founders often imagine exits as a reward for “success.” They’re not. They’re a strategic decision layered with human judgment. Only when both dimensions line up does the process become much clearer and far more predictable.

    7) The “Build to Exit” Debate: Some say building with an exit in mind compromises the product. Others say it’s just smart business. Where do you stand, and why?

    The debate is often framed in a way that misses the real issue. Building “for an exit” isn’t what compromises a product — getting distracted, chasing the wrong incentives, or making reactive decisions does. You can care about strategic outcomes without losing sight of what you’re building.


    My view is that great companies are built the same way whether you eventually exit or not: you solve a real problem, you build with conviction, and you create something that users genuinely value. At the same time, it’s helpful — not harmful — to understand how acquirers think, what they look for, and how timing and competitive pressures shape their decisions. That context keeps you from unintentionally closing off future paths.


    So my stance is: Build to endure, keep your standards high, and stay aware enough that if an exit becomes the right outcome, you’re already prepared for it.


    You don’t have to optimize for an acquisition, but you also don’t need to pretend it doesn’t exist. The healthiest companies keep their options open while staying fully committed to making the product exceptional.

    8) Post-acquisition, how did you navigate ‘what’s next?’, and what led you from tech to building consumer brands? Did you plan this shift, or did it unfold naturally?

    After the acquisition, I finally had the freedom to choose my next chapter with intention. Instead of jumping into the next obvious thing, I gave myself space to explore what I was genuinely curious about — the kinds of problems I wanted to solve, the experiences I wanted to design, and the worlds I wanted to help shape.
    With that autonomy, I found myself gravitating toward more tactile and culturally expressive ideas. I started noticing things that felt overlooked or unnecessarily complicated and became interested in redesigning them. That exploration led me to writing a sunscreen applicator patent and creating a sunscreen brand, and later to building a portable multi-brew tea ceremony. Each one began the same way: seeing something people had accepted as “just how it is,” and reimagining it from scratch.


    What surprised me was how familiar the process felt compared to tech. You’re still solving a real problem, still thinking deeply about narrative, distribution, user behavior, and product–market fit — just expressed through physical experiences rather than software.


    I never stopped working on and investing in crypto or tech; consumer simply became another place where I could apply the same way of building. It expanded my creative range, strengthened my operator instincts, and gave me a different lens for designing products people love.

    9) With AI commoditizing tech, distribution has become the real moat. “Build it and they will come” product led growth can still be a moat. Any advice for early stage founders with limited resources on how to balance product, speed, and distribution?

    AI changes how fast you can build, but it doesn’t change why great products win. It makes prototyping easier, lowers technical barriers, and shortens the distance between idea and execution. But it still can’t replace clarity about your users, good judgment, or the ability to create something people immediately care about.
    For early-stage founders with limited resources, the most important thing is knowing exactly who you’re building for. AI lets anyone ship a product — it doesn’t tell you if you’re solving the right problem. Teams who understand the users who feel the pain most intensely still move faster and with far less waste.


    The second piece is learning speed. AI helps you ship quickly, but the real advantage comes from staying in a tight feedback loop. Early companies succeed by getting sharper with every iteration, not by chasing perfection on day one.


    AI also highlights something that’s always mattered: discernment. When everyone can build, what stands out are the choices you make — the narrative, the moments where users instantly “get it,” the things that feel intentional. These become natural points of distribution and travel much further than broad marketing campaigns.


    And finally, even in an AI world, small teams win by choosing a few distribution channels they can execute consistently. A clean connection between product, user insight, and the right channels still beats trying to be everywhere at once.


    So while AI automates pieces of the stack, it amplifies the advantage of teams with clarity, taste, and momentum. Those fundamentals don’t change — and they’re exactly what allow small teams to create outsized impact.

    10) How do you sustain energy across so many different projects?

    I’ve found that the key to working across different projects is choosing things that naturally hold my attention. When I’m building or advising in areas I find meaningful — whether it’s Bitcoin infrastructure or redesigning a physical experience — I don’t have to force myself into motivation. Curiosity creates its own momentum.


    I’m also intentional about how I structure my time. I keep long blocks for deep work, build weeks with a rhythm that fits how I think best, and avoid spreading myself thin across constant context switches. Matching my schedule to my natural cadence has made a huge difference.


    Another part of it is staying close to founders and teams I genuinely enjoy working with. Being in real collaboration — where the thinking is sharp and the conversations are honest — is sustaining in its own way. Progress feels faster and more meaningful when it’s shared.


    And finally, I’m clear about my personal capacity. I know what I can hold, what should be handed off, and what no longer fits. When the work aligns with my curiosity, the people are strong, and the structure supports good decision-making, it becomes surprisingly manageable to contribute across multiple domains.

    11) After two successful exits, you chose to continue building diversified ventures, angel investing, advising. What’s your “why”? What keeps you in the arena?

    At this point, I build because I genuinely enjoy it. I like working with sharp founders, I like shaping new categories, and I like taking ideas that feel small or overlooked and helping them grow into something meaningful. It’s both intellectually challenging and creatively satisfying — a combination that’s hard to walk away from.


    I also have a soft spot for underdogs. I know what it feels like to start with very little and still want to change the status quo. Helping founders who have the insight and the will, but not necessarily the resources, is something I find both energizing and grounding.


    Working across different ventures — investing, advising, and building — lets me choose areas where I can contribute uniquely and stay in a steep learning curve. I’ve never had the desire to “retire.” I’d rather keep growing and keep building alongside people I respect.


    And finally, I stay in the arena because it continues to feel meaningful. The problems are bigger, the tools are better, the founders are more global, and the opportunities are more open-ended than ever. If anything, this is the most interesting moment to be building — and I want to be part of shaping what comes next.

    12) Any final insights for web3 founders? Or anything else you’d like to share that we didn’t discuss?


    Focus on what’s real. Web3 moves fast, narratives change, and hype comes and goes — but solving a real problem never stops compounding.


    Have a sharp point of view, build with discipline, and stay close to the users who feel the pain the most. Everything else becomes noise.


    And remember: you don’t need a big team to make a big dent. A small, aligned group with conviction can reshape an entire category.


    If you see something inevitable and underbuilt, go build it. No one is waiting to give you permission. When you spot the thing that won’t leave your mind, commit. And remember to play your own game, all-in!


    Carylyne’s story shows that the most powerful growth doesn’t happen all at once. It happens when you stay curious, stay open, and keep moving forward even when the road feels uncertain. She reminds us that the people who make the biggest impact are not always the ones who start with the most, but the ones who stay committed to what feels real and important.

    Stay connected with Carylyne and her deep thinking:

    Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen.

  • Meet Ishita Pandey: From Dogecoin FOMO to Building career as a Web3 Marketer

    Meet Ishita Pandey: From Dogecoin FOMO to Building career as a Web3 Marketer

    Some stories begin with a dream.
    Ishita’s began with… Dogecoin.

    What looked like a random FOMO purchase at the peak quickly became the spark that pulled her into a world of memes, builders, and unstoppable creativity. What started as curiosity on Twitter in 2021 turned into a career that reshaped her life long before she graduated college.

    Today, Ishita is one of the rising voices in Web3 content and community storytelling, shaping narratives, humanizing projects, and helping brands show up in ways that actually feel real.
    Her journey is proof that you don’t need a technical background to leave your mark in crypto; you just need the courage to show up, experiment, and stay when most people quit.

    This conversation with Ishita reveals the human side of Web3 marketing, the instability, the chaos, the creativity and how one creator turned her curiosity into a career impacting 35+ projects across the ecosystem.

    Meet Ishita Pandey: From Dogecoin FOMO to Building career as a Web3 Marketer

    The Interview: Ishita’s Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself. 


    I’m Ishita, I’m from India. I’ve been working in crypto since 2021, started out in my 2nd year of college as a social media manager and since then, I’ve worked with 35+ projects, helping them grow through marketing and community strategies

    2. What were you doing before Web3? 


    Honestly, I was just a college student before Web3 took over my life.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3? 


    It all started with Dogecoin. I jumped in at its ATH purely out of FOMO. I joined Twitter to stay updated with the market, but ended up getting deeper into the space. Over time, I started building my personal brand around crypto, and that’s what eventually helped me land my first job as a social media manager in Web3.

    4. What kind of content or marketing work do you focus on in Web3?


    I mostly focus on content and shitposting, blending storytelling, memes, and community-driven posts to make projects feel more human and relatable. I believe good shitposting is a form of marketing when done right,  it builds authenticity and connection without feeling forced.

    5. What inspired you to start creating in this space?

    I never aimed for a corporate life but always wanted a space where I could show my creativity and crypto was exactly what I was looking for. Everyone was building, memeing, experimenting, and I wanted in. I started creating just to be part of the conversation, and somewhere along the way, it turned into my thing

    6. What’s the biggest challenge you’ve faced as a creator/marketer in Web3?

    Honestly, the hardest part has been keeping up. Things change overnight: algorithms, narratives, trends, even platforms. One day, your content does great, the next it flops for no reason and the same goes for the narrative one day a specific narrative is trending and a few days later no one is talking about it. It gets exhausting trying to stay consistent and updated without burning out.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?


    I’m really proud of the journey I’ve had so far. Working with over 35 projects across so many different narratives has taught me a ton about the space. At the same time, I’ve been building my own personal brand from scratch, which has been its own challenge and reward. Juggling both has pushed me to grow faster than I ever expected, and it’s exciting to see the impact of the work I’ve put out there

    8. What’s one piece of advice you’d give to someone starting as a Web3 creator or marketer?

    My biggest tip for anyone starting in Web3 is just: show up. Be consistent, post, engage, experiment and keep an eye on what’s trending. This space moves so fast; if you’re not there, you’re missing the wave. It’s not about being the smartest; it’s about being everywhere at the right time.

    9. Who are some creators or marketers in Web3 you admire or take inspiration from?


    I really like what Zac is doing with Kast, previously with Phantom and Alex’s shitposting skills at Coinbase

    10. Where can people find or follow your work? 

    You can find me shitposting on Twitter/X: https://x.com/IshitaaPandey

    11. What is that thing/challenge you would like to change in Web3-Crypto industry?

    If I could change one thing in the Web3/Crypto space, it would be the instability. Right now, the market moves so unpredictably that it becomes a huge hurdle for mainstream adoption. I’d love to see more stability, because that’s what will let projects and communities grow sustainably and attract people who are still hesitant to enter the space.

    From buying Dogecoin at the top to working with 35+ Web3 projects, Ishita’s story shows that you don’t need the perfect plan to start, you just need to show up.
    Her journey proves one thing: consistency is a superpower in a space where trends flip overnight.

    She didn’t wait to become an expert.
    She built, posted, engaged, experimented and the industry noticed.

    If you want to see real, unfiltered Web3 storytelling in action, follow Ishita on X (@IshitaaPandey).

    Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up and follow us on X to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen.


  • Meet Aditi Polkam: Building, Breaking, and Shipping in Web3

    Meet Aditi Polkam: Building, Breaking, and Shipping in Web3

    A Web2 intern who dabbled in crypto trading during lockdown is now building across the Web3 ecosystem. Her secret? Stop waiting to be ready and start experimenting.

    Aditi Polkam’s entry into Web3 wasn’t through a grand epiphany or a prestigious program. It started with lockdown curiosity about crypto trading and evolved into writing technical content for a Web3 company. What followed was a journey of constant experimentation, countless failures, and the realization that building in public is more valuable than waiting for perfection.

    Her path from technical writer to fullstack developer to hackathon winner shows something important about Web3: there’s no single right way in. While others might obsess over learning every acronym and tool, Aditi focused on one thing at a time, built projects that broke, fixed them, and shipped anyway.

    What sets her apart isn’t just her technical skills. It’s her honest acknowledgment that feeling lost is normal in Web3, and that the overwhelming information overload everyone talks about is real. Instead of pretending otherwise, she leaned into fundamentals, found her community, and kept building even when projects failed.

    At Offline Protocol, she continues to explore new technologies hands-on, but her real contribution might be her philosophy: experimentation is underrated. Most growth doesn’t come from following a perfect roadmap. It comes from trying things, breaking things, and iterating until something works.

    Meet Aditi Polkam: Building, Breaking, and Shipping in Web3

    The Interview: Aditi’s Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Aditi: Hey, I’m Aditi. I’m from India and currently working with Offline Protocol while also experimenting with projects across the Web3 space. Most of what I do is about exploring new technologies, trying them hands-on, and figuring out how they can be applied in real-world scenarios. I enjoy building things, contributing to projects, and constantly learning along the way.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Aditi: Before Web3, I was interning at a Web2 startup where I got to work on multiple client projects. It gave me a lot of exposure to how software is built in the real world and what it means to ship things under deadlines. Around that time, I also got the opportunity to write technical content for a Web3 company. That felt like an interesting entry point, so I took it — and that’s how I slowly transitioned from just “observing Web3 from the outside” to actively contributing to it.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Aditi: I already had some idea about crypto during the lockdown – I was experimenting with trading and exploring the basics of how blockchains worked. But my actual journey into Web3 development started a year later, around 2022. That’s when I realized there’s a huge difference between knowing crypto as a user and actually building things that power this ecosystem.

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Aditi: My very first step was as a technical writer for a Web3 company. I learned a lot while breaking down complex topics into articles and docs. Later, I switched into a more hands-on role as a fullstack developer at a startup, which gave me the confidence to actually build projects from scratch. And eventually, I started participating in hackathons, contributing to DAOs, and joining communities like Developer DAO – that’s where things really clicked for me.

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Aditi: The biggest challenge was honestly the overwhelming amount of information. Everyone in Web3 talks in acronyms, there are hundreds of tools, and things evolve at lightning speed. It was easy to feel lost or feel like I didn’t belong because there was always someone who seemed to know more. There were moments where I wondered if I was even cut out for it.

    6. What helped you push through?

    Aditi: Two things really helped: a strong desire to learn the basics and community support. I knew I couldn’t skip fundamentals, so I made it a point to dig deeper even if it took extra time. At the same time, being part of communities, hosting workshops, and interacting with like-minded builders encouraged me to keep going. The combination of curiosity and peer support kept me motivated.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Aditi: A few things stand out:

    • Winning hackathons with projects that actually solved problems.
    • The contributions I’ve made to projects that people found useful.
    • Transitioning from being “just curious” to someone who can actually build and ship.

    Those moments of recognition, whether through a prize or just a “this is cool” from someone, are what I look back on with pride.

    8. Any major failure or learning moment?

    Aditi: Plenty. I’ve had projects that didn’t ship on time, experiments that completely broke, and even ideas that never really took off. But every one of those experiences taught me something – whether it was how to plan better, how to debug smarter, or just how to be okay with things not working out the first time. I think failures in Web3 are just learning curves disguised in fancy clothes.

    9. What advice would you give to someone just starting out in Web3?

    Aditi: Don’t aim to “learn everything” at once – it’s impossible. Pick one area that excites you, whether it’s smart contracts, DAOs, or frontends for dApps, and start there. The rest will fall into place as you go. Also, don’t be afraid to build in public and ask questions. Three months from now, you’ll thank yourself for starting small instead of waiting to be “ready.”

    10. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Aditi: I’m most active on Twitter/X (@aditipolkam) and I share my projects and experiments on GitHub. That’s where you’ll see my latest updates, thoughts, and work.

    11. What is that thing/challenge you would like to change in Web3-Crypto industry?

    Aditi: A lot of companies are building technically sound and fancy products, but not something an average internet user would actually want to use. We need to bridge that gap – simplify UX, focus on real-world use cases, and make Web3 products less intimidating for non-crypto people. Until then, mainstream adoption will remain a buzzword.

    12. Do you want us to cover anything that we missed?

    Aditi: Maybe just this: experimentation is underrated. Most of what I’ve learned came from trying things, breaking things, and iterating — not from following a strict path. If you’re in Web3, don’t wait for perfect conditions. Start experimenting – that’s where the real growth happens.


    From lockdown crypto curiosity to building at Offline Protocol, Aditi’s story is a reminder that Web3 careers aren’t built on perfect preparation. They’re built on willingness to experiment, fail, learn, and ship anyway. Her advice to start small and build in public isn’t just motivational talk, it’s exactly how she built her own career.

    Ready to start your Web3 journey? Follow Aditi on X (@aditipolkam) and GitHub to see what happens when you stop waiting and start building.
    Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen.

  • Meet Nidhi Singh: DevRel at Pyth Network

    Meet Nidhi Singh: DevRel at Pyth Network

    A developer who worked on anti-spam technology used by billions of Indians didn’t know those billions were using her code. Seven years later, she’s breaking down complex Web3 concepts for developers worldwide and loving every minute of it.

    Nidhi Singh’s career is a masterclass in adaptation. From writing code that billions of telecom users rely on without knowing it exists, to leading Ethereum platforms at Walmart, to now making developer experiences smoother at Pyth Network, she has constantly reinvented herself.

    What makes her story compelling isn’t just the impressive resume. It’s how she discovered her true passion not in writing code, but in explaining it. After years as a core protocol engineer, she made the bold move to developer relations, choosing communication over computation.

    Her transition reveals something important about the Web3 space: technical excellence is valuable, but the ability to make complex topics accessible might be even more crucial. Through her YouTube channel and content creation, Nidhi is filling the educational gap she wished existed when she started, all while managing a demanding full-time role in crypto.

    At Pyth Network, she’s not just supporting developers, she’s actively working to bridge the knowledge gap that keeps talented people from entering Web3. Her story proves that sometimes finding what you love means stepping away from what you’re already good at.

    The Interview: Nidhi’s Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Nidhi: Hey, I am Nidhi, born and brought up on different coastlines of India. I work as a developer relations engineer at Pyth Network, focusing on making the developer experience smoother. I am passionate about breaking down complex technical topics into easy-to-understand formats. This was something that I recently discovered and I started loving it, that’s the reason I transitioned from a core protocol role to a developer relations role. Apart from work, you will find me walking/running in parks and touching some grass.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Nidhi: I have been in the Web3 space for close to 7 years and spent close to 5 years in the enterprise blockchain space while working in big tech like Jio and Walmart for mass adoption of enterprise blockchains. I was a core engineer that contributed to the TRAI (Telecom Regulatory Authority of India) anti-spam use case, so happy to see my code being used by billions of telecom subscribers without them knowing about it. At Walmart, I led the Ethereum support for the blockchain platforms, which allowed me to think about how to design systems, manage the team, how to be a technical product manager and everything else in between. This was the period during which I had the opportunity to experiment with various engineering and product roles. If we talk about crypto specifically, my journey started as a core protocol engineer at a Layer 1 blockchain contributing on the consensus layer.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Nidhi: I heard about Web3 for the first time in 2017 when I was a participant in a hackathon in Mumbai. In the Hack, I created an interesting mobile application, there I heard about all these emerging technologies like blockchain, AI and others. At that time, blockchain had just started getting popular and my curiosity sparked from there and since then there has been no looking back.

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Nidhi: I remember the first protocol that I experimented with was Ethereum. I created a few projects, wrote smart contracts in Solidity and made my first few DApps.

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Nidhi: My whole professional journey has been full of twists and turns, as with every transition my tech stack has changed and it has only made me more resilient. I remain to be highly self-motivated, but there have been certain situations when things were not clear to me but I kept my hustle on. One of the challenges that I faced while entering the web3 space was the unavailability of the educational content that would have accelerated my journey so that gap has always stayed in my mind and to fill it I’ve also started my YouTube channel.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Nidhi: I am proud of myself for being able to get out of my comfort zone every now and then, which is one thing that keeps me going. Last year, I started my YouTube channel and kicked off my journey of content creation, grew my channel to 650+ subscribers on YouTube and started working on my personal brand. I started with what equipment I had, I didn’t want to invest in any expensive home setup. My focus has been to create quality content. Managing your own passion along with a full-time job in crypto is tough, but I used to find time on my weekends to do it. It requires dedicated efforts, you need to keep going even when you get few views but being consistent is what matters the most.

    9. What advice would you give to someone just starting out in Web3?

    Nidhi: For someone who is new in the space, my only piece of advice is to be yourself and be authentic as it’s so easy to get lost. Don’t be afraid to experiment and fail and then experiment again until you figure out what you enjoy the most. This is applicable to any domain in general, but it is especially relevant in the blockchain space as things are changing at a fast pace, you need to be able to identify what to learn and what to experiment with and keep doing it without any distractions because the narrative is going to change every other day. I really love how this space keeps on evolving and you need to be on your toes.

    10. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Nidhi: You can find me on X, YouTube and LinkedIn. Across all three I have the same handle, @nidhisinghattri

    X: https://x.com/nidhisinghattri

    LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/nidhisinghattri

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/@NidhiSinghAttri – Don’t forget to check out my Oracle series and DeFi series.

    GitHub: http://github.com/nidhi-singh02 if you are a developer.

    11. What is that thing/challenge you would like to change in Web3-Crypto industry?

    Nidhi: I would like to create more awareness about the crypto space in general, considering it is perceived not so well, folks often think of it as a means to get rich real quick. In that regard, I have taken small initiative by providing quality educational content related to web3 for free. I am trying my best to bridge that knowledge gap that folks have when it comes to understanding web3 from the general perspective as well as the technical perspective. Would love support from all of us in spreading the word about this initiative so more folks are aware of it.

    From contributing to systems used by billions to teaching the next generation of Web3 builders, Nidhi’s journey reminds us that career pivots aren’t just about changing roles. They’re about discovering where your passion truly lies. Her commitment to bridging the knowledge gap she once experienced herself shows that sometimes the best teachers are those who remember what it was like to be a student.

    Ready to start your own Web3 journey? Follow Nidhi’s work on YouTube and social media to learn from someone who’s walked the path and is now lighting the way for others.

    Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen

  • From Stanford Campus to Leading Web3 Developer Relations at Celo

    From Stanford Campus to Leading Web3 Developer Relations at Celo

    A Stanford computer science student walks into an entrepreneur event and gets asked for her Twitter handle. Her response? “What’s Twitter?” Fast forward to today, and she’s now leading developer relations at Celo, one of the most important layer two blockchains focused on real world applications.

    Sophia’s rise in Web3 breaks every normal career path you’ve heard about. While most people enter this space through technical skills or investment backgrounds, she found it through pure curiosity and a willingness to explore new communities online.

    What makes her story remarkable is how not knowing about social media became the gateway to discovering an entirely new industry. From joining her first Web3 groups as a Stanford student to now leading developer relations at a major blockchain platform, her journey shows the surprising ways success can happen in this industry.

    At Celo, Sophia isn’t just managing developer relationships. She’s actively helping one of Ethereum’s most important layer two solutions connect with developers around the world. Her work focuses on real-world adoption and building applications that actually matter to people’s daily lives.

    Her story proves that Web3 success often comes from unexpected places and that community involvement can be just as important as technical skills. Through genuine curiosity about how technology impacts society, she built the foundation for a thriving career in one of the most exciting industries today.

    sophia inforgraphics

    The Interview: Sophia’s Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Sophia: I’m Sophia. I am originally from the Bay Area, born and raised here, currently living here, and I am currently the developer relations lead at Celo, which is a layer two on Ethereum, and it’s a frontier chain scaling with real-world adoption and real-world apps.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Sophia: I was still in school, so I went to Stanford for my undergrad. I studied computer science and product design, but I was super into different, like, just, like, building things. So I was always tinkering on different projects and different stuff. I even left school to run a startup full-time, and I was, yeah, just really into, like, figuring out what was cutting edge, what could I build, what could I create. I just loved products and creating and building products. And so I did that a lot while I was in school.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Sophia: I first heard about Web3 a little bit on Twitter. I was at an event for student entrepreneurs and on a panel for student entrepreneurs and they were talking about there’s a lot of people there that are really into Web3 and the intersection of future of tech. And afterwards they were like, Hey, like, can we follow you on Twitter? And I was like, what’s Twitter? And so I got on Twitter. I started following all these folks and everyone is very like Web3 focused. And I just got started getting involved in communities, a few different ones.

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Sophia: A Web3 familia I think was one of the first ones and SheFi and yeah I just started really getting involved in some of these like web3 like I think web3 ladies was an early one I I did and it was really cool I learned so much this is like 2021 2022 and I was still in school at the time but it was just so cool getting to learn about all of these programs and then the first thing that actually brought me into the space officially was I went to ETH Denver and visited like I was staying at one of the hacker houses and I was just so impressed that like as a student they would take you to conferences and pay for you to your accommodations and you could win hackathon money it was just such a new eye-opening way for me so that’s definitely what got me originally in this space is just like like paying for travel.

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Sophia: I would say, when I first was doing all these hackathons, I was really interested in building, but then as I was getting closer to graduating, I really wanted to figure out what job I wanted to do in the space. And so I set up like all these coffee chats. I would do like three coffee chats a day with people in the industry, just kind of talking about the different opportunities. And at the time, like I knew there was something I was so excited about, but I couldn’t exactly put my finger on what it was. And at the time it was like, oh, you can either do DeFi or NFTs or gaming or payments. and I was like, I don’t know, these specific areas I’m not that interested in but there’s like this intersection between Blockchain and society and how you know how cutting-edge tech is influencing the world that I was so excited about I couldn’t put my finger and articulate what exactly it was

    6. What helped you push through?

    Sophia: Eventually I discovered a Gitcoin and Gitcoin definitely led me down a path that I was really excited about.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Sophia: Something I’m most proud of so far in my journey is joining Celo and getting to lead the developer relations team at Celo. So it was just so cool getting to go a little bit from like Gitcoin, which is a smaller team, and then I then, through Gitcoin, started leading Public Goods Network, which is also a chain, a blockchain. And I was running a lot of that, and it was a lot smaller. And when I then transitioned to Celo, it was like, it was so cool because like the stakes were a lot bigger.

    8. Any major failure or learning moment?

    Sophia: Honestly leading public goods networks that was one of the first OP stack L twos and I got to lead that and I learned how difficult it is to launch a chain… but the chain did shut down so it was also technically a major failure but I’m glad that it did shut down because I think not all chains need to yeah need to exist you don’t need to launch a change just for the sake of launching a chain.

    9. What advice would you give to someone just starting out in Web3?

    Sophia: I would say join a hackathon. I think that’s one of the most tangible ways to get involved in Web3… There’s so many diverse skill sets that are so appreciated in hackathons now from like marketing to coming up with the product idea to designing the thing to communicating what you’re building. There’s so many aspects and a lot of the coding I see is getting done with AI. So it’s like I feel like there’s less of a technical focus right now in hackathons and more of like a creative focus.

    10. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Sophia: And if anyone wants to find me or follow my work, the best place would probably be on X or on Twitter. My username is @sodofi_ or you can find me on Farcaster on: @sophia

    From not knowing what Twitter was to leading developer relations at one of the most important blockchains around, Sophia’s journey shows that Web3 success can come from the most unexpected beginnings. Her focus on community involvement, hackathon participation, and staying curious about how technology and society connect offers a clear path for anyone looking to build a meaningful career in this space. Through her work at Celo, she continues to prove that understanding people and communities is just as valuable as understanding code.

    Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen.

  • Kevin’s Web3 Journey: From Cameras to Code to Community

    Kevin’s Web3 Journey: From Cameras to Code to Community

    Some people find their calling in the most unexpected places. For Kevin, it started with cameras at blockchain conferences and evolved into building communities that shape the future of decentralized technology. What began as a side hobby capturing moments at Bitcoin conferences has transformed into a mission to help developers worldwide enter the exciting world of Web3.

    Kevin’s story is one of curiosity, persistence, and genuine passion for helping others succeed. From his early days as a Site Reliability Engineer to becoming a leading voice in developer education, his journey shows how technical skills combined with community spirit can create lasting impact in the rapidly evolving blockchain space.

    Today, as a Developer Relations professional at The Graph Protocol, Kevin builds something more valuable than applications: pathways for other developers to follow. Through workshops, educational content, and his upcoming Genesys platform, he’s making Web3 accessible to newcomers.

    His approach is refreshingly practical. Rather than getting lost in complex theories, Kevin focuses on hands on learning and real world building. This philosophy has helped hundreds of developers take their first steps into Web3, turning curiosity into career changing skills.

    This conversation with Kevin reveals the human side of blockchain development. We explore his journey from traditional web applications to smart contracts, the challenges that almost made him quit, and the communities that kept him going. Most importantly, we discuss his vision for making Web3 more accessible to developers everywhere.

    The Interview: Kevin on Building Communities in Web3

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Kevin: My name is Kevin, and I was born in California, USA. I’ve been passionate about technology since I was a young child. I’m also a photographer, DJ, and father of two boys.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Kevin: I worked for about three years as a Site Reliability Engineer at YellowPages.com, then helped build and launch NGINX in the US as a Solutions Engineer and Product Specialist. I also began my journey into Web3 as a professional photographer, covering events like Bitcoin Conference, ETH Denver, and ETHGlobal Hackathons around the world.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Kevin: I remember hearing about Bitcoin in its early days and shrugged it off like most of us did. However, my interest really grew when I witnessed the Ethereum rally in 2017. I was amazed to learn that you could build fully decentralized and unstoppable applications on the EVM, and I was instantly hooked!

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Kevin: I had been doing photography in the space for a long time, and in my off time, I began learning through SpeedRunEthereum and using Scaffold-ETH. I was amazed at how enjoyable writing smart contracts was and wanted to teach others. I started creating YouTube videos and conducting workshops for my current company about Ethereum and Web3, which led me down the rabbit hole. Eventually, I was fortunate enough to meet Austin Griffith, who really helped me reach the next level and welcomed me into the BuidlGuidl to help support builders in the space. Since then, I’ve given over 100 workshops on Scaffold-ETH and SpeedRunEthereum and helped countless developers enter the space.

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Kevin: Understanding the tooling differences between traditional web applications and blockchain-based applications was one of the biggest challenges. I found that diving into the EVM and understanding its core components really helped elevate my understanding of how smart contracts are executed under the hood.

    6. What helped you push through?

    Kevin: Excellent videos by Austin Griffith, Nader Dabit, Patrick Collins, and Smart Contract Programmer really helped me overcome the hurdle of building onchain applications. Additionally, having a starter kit like Scaffold-ETH made it much easier to get started building, as I could abstract some of the EVM nuances and return to them later when I needed to dive deeper.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Kevin: I’m proud that I can help others achieve the same success I’ve experienced. I believe that building a community for builders is the best way for me to contribute to the space. This is why I’m launching Genesys, a community where developers can come together and build the next wave of onchain applications.

    8. Any major failure or learning moment?

    Kevin: I think learning is something you have to do constantly. I’ve always tried to consistently push myself to try new things and stay ahead of major setbacks. However, there have been many times when I lost energy and experienced burnout. This is the most critical point in your journey. You just have to take some time for yourself, then push through and remember why you’re here.

    9. What advice would you give to someone just starting out in Web3?

    Kevin: Don’t be afraid to try things you wouldn’t normally feel comfortable doing. There have been many times when I started working on a codebase and realized it was going to be much more difficult than I had anticipated, but going through that process taught me a lot and elevated my knowledge.

    10. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Kevin: You can find me on X at https://x.com/cryptomastery_ , on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/@cryptomastery_ , and on Genesys at https://www.genesysapp.xyz/user/0x89480c2e67876650b48622907ff5c48a569a36c7

    Kevin’s journey reminds us that the most impactful contributions in Web3 often come from those who combine technical expertise with a genuine desire to help others. His transition from capturing blockchain events through a camera lens to actively building developer relations at The Graph Protocol and creating communities shows how diverse backgrounds can create unique value in this space.

    Through his work at The Graph Protocol, Genesys, and his educational efforts, Kevin continues to lower the barriers for developers entering Web3. His story proves that sometimes the best way to master something is to teach it to others, creating a cycle of learning and growth that benefits the entire ecosystem.

    Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite only Telegram community where the real conversations happen

  • Meet Pandit Dhamdhere: Building Against All Odds

    Meet Pandit Dhamdhere: Building Against All Odds

    In a quiet village in Pune district, far from any startup hubs or big tech campuses, a young man decided to teach himself how to code. With no degree, no formal training, Pandit Dhamdhere entered a space where talent and persistence mattered more than certificates. Today, despite a recent setback, his journey proves that passion and persistence can overcome even the most challenging circumstances.

    While working 16-hour days for $100 a month, he would spend another 4 hours at night learning JavaScript and Solidity, often sleeping only 4 hours before starting over again. In 2020, a single introduction to Web3 changed the direction of his life.

    Pandit’s journey is a reminder that in Web3, you don’t need perfect conditions, you need the courage to start and the persistence to keep going.

    This conversation with Pandit reveals the mindset needed to keep building despite self-doubt, the power of community in an online-first industry, and why sometimes the biggest battles aren’t with code but with your own limiting beliefs. His story is still being written, and the recent interview rejection that crushed his four-year dream might just be the setup for something bigger.

    The Interview: Pandit Dhamdhere on His Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Pandit Dhamdhere: I’m Pandit Dhamdhere, and I’m from a village in Pune district, Maharashtra. I was recently laid off from the company I was working for, so currently I’m working part-time with many startups while building my own stuff.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: I’m a college dropout from 11th standard, and I come from a farming background. That was pretty much my reality before I discovered this space.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: I first heard about Web3 on Twitter back in 2020. That’s where it all started for me.

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: While I was doing JavaScript and frontend stuff, a friend introduced me to Solidity. I loved it immediately and started with the basics. My first project was creating an ERC-20 token after doing the usual Hello World programs.

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: The challenge wasn’t really technical. It was a battle with myself. It was hard to believe in myself because I don’t have a degree. I used to think, “You’re learning and building, but who’s going to hire you when you don’t have a degree?” That self-doubt was the biggest obstacle.

    6. What helped you push through?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: The Twitter community and some of my friends who helped me throughout my journey. I used to ask questions by DMing people on Twitter and Discord. I would ask questions to people in Twitter Spaces. That helped me a lot. It’s really the community that kept me going.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: I’m proud of the skills I learned despite unfavorable conditions. Once upon a time, there was a period in my life where I had to work 16 hours for $100 a month, and I used to learn and code for 4 hours and sleep for 4 hours. I’m proud that I didn’t give up during that time.

    8. Any major failure or learning moment?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: Recently, I failed to crack an interview at one of the biggest Web3 startups, which I’ve been dreaming to work with for the last 4 years. That was a major setback, but it’s also a learning moment about persistence and not giving up on your dreams.

    9. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Pandit Dhamdhere: You can find me @panditdhamdhere on X and LinkedIn.

    What makes Pandit’s story special isn’t just the skills he learned or the projects he built. It’s proof that in this space, hard work matters more than having the right degree. When he messaged strangers on Twitter asking for help, he found something powerful: people who were willing to teach and guide him.

    The numbers tell his story best. Four hours of sleep, four hours of learning, sixteen hours of working just to survive. Most people would have given up. Pandit kept going, choosing to grow even when it was the harder path.

    This space needs more people like Pandit, who know what struggle feels like and still choose to build. His story is far from over.

    Read to start your own journey no matter where you come from? Do what Pandit did: start building, ask questions, and don’t let doubt stop you.

    Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite-only Telegram community where the real conversations happen.

  • Rishikesh Kale: The Web3 Native Who Never Looked Back

    Rishikesh Kale: The Web3 Native Who Never Looked Back

    While his college friends were chasing traditional job placements with attractive packages, Rishikesh Kale made a decision that would define his entire career. He chose to stay in Web3, even when the path seemed uncertain and the resources were scarce. Today, as a Developer Advocate at FIL-B, his story proves that sometimes not going all in on a technology you believe in is the bigger risk, a risk that could mean missing out on the opportunity to shape an emerging field.

    Unlike many who transitioned into Web3 from other careers, Rishikesh Kale took a different path. He started with blockchain right after college, making Web3 not just a career choice but his only industry focus. From winning coding competitions with creative dApps to learning at a time when resources were scarce, his journey reflects what it truly means to grow alongside an emerging technology.

    Based in Nagpur, India, Rishikesh has seen Web3 change from a space where people had to learn coding through games like CryptoZombies to today’s world full of tools and chances. His experience gives a special view of building a career in blockchain from scratch, especially for those who choose to go deep instead of just trying it out.

    This talk with Rishikesh shows the mindset needed to do well in Web3’s early days, why patience matters in a space often linked with quick wins, and real advice for newcomers finding their way through today’s opportunities. His story proves the power of not giving up and the rewards that come to those who truly believe in the future of decentralized technology.

    Rishikesh Kale: The Web3 Native Who Never Looked Back

    The Interview: Rishikesh Kale on His Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Rishikesh Kale: I’m Rishikesh Kale, and I’m based in Nagpur, India. Currently, I’m working as a Developer Advocate at FIL-B.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Rishikesh Kale: My journey into Web3 began right out of college; it was my first love and has remained so ever since. I didn’t have a prior career outside of this space.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Rishikesh Kale: I first heard about Blockchain through my brother. After his introduction, I delved deeper by reading various articles and documentation online.

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Rishikesh Kale: My real entry point was a hackathon during my college days. My friends and I developed a dApp called Vidhira, a social media platform designed for creators and artists. We ended up winning the hackathon and taking first place!

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Rishikesh Kale: One of the biggest challenges I faced early on was the limited availability of educational resources. This was back when Ganache and Remix IDE were still relatively new, and there weren’t many videos or beginner-friendly materials. I largely learned Solidity by playing the CryptoZombies game and then continued my learning from there.

    6. What helped you push through?

    Rishikesh Kale: What kept me going was the desire to implement what I was learning and find opportunities. While waiting for internship opportunities, which felt like a long tunnel, I kept building and participating in more hackathons, knowing that the efforts would pay off eventually.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Rishikesh Kale: I’m most proud of showing up and not turning back. It was tempting to choose a traditional job when my friends were getting attractive campus placements. However, I chose to stick with blockchain and remained patient, and I’m proud of that decision.

    8. Any major failure or learning moment?

    Rishikesh Kale: Every hackathon has been a significant learning moment for me. Instead of just “bounty hunting,” I always tried to build on new protocols. This approach, while challenging in terms of ideation and execution, taught me a tremendous amount and was a great learning process.

    9. What advice would you give to someone just starting out in Web3?

    Rishikesh Kale: If you’re just starting in Web3, patience is key. It’s rare to hit a jackpot early on. There’s a misconception that Web3 is a space where you can earn a lot of money quickly. While it will definitely pay off one day, it’s not necessarily from day one. Focus on having a solid learning and building journey, and opportunities will follow.

    10. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Rishikesh Kale: You can find or follow my work on Twitter/telegram/linkedIn: @callMeRishhh

    Rishikesh Kale’s story reminds us that Web3 isn’t just about quick financial gains or following the latest trends. It’s about building something meaningful, staying patient during uncertain times, and believing in the long-term vision of decentralized technology. His journey from a college student learning Solidity through games to a Developer Advocate at FIL-B shows that consistent effort and genuine curiosity can lead to remarkable opportunities.

    For those considering a similar path, Rishikesh’s experience offers a valuable lesson: the space rewards those who show up consistently, keep building, and resist the temptation to chase shortcuts. In a world where everyone is looking for the next big opportunity, sometimes the biggest opportunity is the one you’re already working on.

    Ready to start your own Web3 journey? Follow Rishikesh’s approach: start building, participate in hackathons, and focus on learning rather than immediate returns. Connect with him on Twitter @callMeRishhh to learn more about his work and get insights into the developer advocate role in Web3.

    Want to build, learn, and grow in the Web3 space alongside like-minded developers? Join the BlockchainHQ community where builders share knowledge, collaborate on projects, and support each other’s growth. Sign up from here: https://blockchainhq.xyz/auth and follow us on X https://x.com/blockchainhqxyz to become part of our invite only Telegram community where the real conversations happen

  • Meet Patrick Collins: Securing Web3, Educating and Onboarding Builders

    Meet Patrick Collins: Securing Web3, Educating and Onboarding Builders

    In the fast-changing world of Web3, some people really stand out. They bring clear ideas, deep knowledge, and a true passion for building a better digital future. Patrick Collins is definitely one of these important people. As a top smart contract engineer, a dedicated teacher, and a key leader at Cyfrin, he’s not just watching new digital technologies grow, he’s actively helping to shape them.

    Patrick’s path into Web3 shows how important it is to be curious, keep going when things are tough, and truly want to make this new area safer and easier for everyone to use. From his early days figuring out how to put information onto the blockchain to his current work leading the way in blockchain security and teaching, his journey offers valuable lessons for both experienced people and those just starting out.

    At Cyfrin, Patrick and his team are working on some of the biggest challenges in Web3 today. They make sure smart contracts are strong and reliable, and they help train the next group of skilled developers and security experts. Their work not only protects big companies in the industry but also helps individuals through thorough, often free, learning programs like Cyfrin Updraft.

    This interview is a special chance to hear directly from Patrick Collins. We’ll talk about his personal story, the important moments that shaped his career, and his honest advice for navigating the exciting but sometimes difficult world of Web3. Get ready to learn from someone who truly believes in the power of decentralized technology and is working hard to make it all happen.

    Meet Patrick Collins: Securing Web3, Educating and Onboarding Builders

    The Interview: Patrick Collins on His Web3 Journey

    1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

    Patrick Collins: I’m Patrick Collins. I’m from MA in the United States. I’m working on making Web3 more secure with security and educational initiatives as a part of Cyfrin.

    2. What were you doing before Web3?

    Patrick Collins: Before Web3, I worked as a software support engineer at an asset manager, and as a Devrel at a stock data company.

    3. How did you first hear about Web3?

    Patrick Collins: I heard about Web3 first when I had heard about Chainlink and how they wanted to “get financial data on chain” which sounded bizarre to me. At the time, crypto was just like “bitcoin” and it didn’t make sense to me to “put data into bitcoin.”

    4. What was your first step into the space?

    Patrick Collins: I went to the ETH Denver hackathon and spent the hackathon learning Solidity.

    5. What was one big challenge you faced early on?

    Patrick Collins: Getting started in general was confusing. I didn’t know who to trust, what was good vs bad Web3, there were so many competing narratives. One in particular was if using “send”, “transfer”, or “call” on moving ETH. Why are there 3 functions?

    6. What helped you push through?

    Patrick Collins: My curiosity more or less. I thought the tech was sooooo cool and I just wanted to learn more.

    7. What are you most proud of so far in your journey?

    Patrick Collins: Cyfrin. Everything we’ve done so far, and everything we are going to do. We not only secure some of the largest companies in the industry, but we onboard some of the best people through our security education, and make the whole industry better in safer ways.

    8. Any major failure or learning moment?

    Patrick Collins: I fail all the time. Get better and move on. One of my favorite learnings was, I had some feedback that my videos were obnoxious and ruining the brand of the product I was promoting. That I needed to be more boring ‘cuz “devs like boring.” So I made two videos of the same content, one “boring” and one ridiculous. To this day, the ridiculous one has performed over 20x better than the boring one.

    9. What advice would you give to someone just starting out in Web3?

    Patrick Collins: Go to Cyfrin Updraft, compete on CodeHawks, and you’ll be set up for success.

    10. Where can people find or follow your work?

    Patrick Collins: X – @PatrickAlphaC and @patrickalphac on YouTube.

    11. Any advice would you like to share with builders and learners?

    Patrick Collins: Understand why you want to do what you do. Write it down. So that when things get hard, you can remember why you’re doing it and push through.

    It’s truly inspiring to see how Patrick Collins started his journey in Web3. His dedication to sharing knowledge through educational resources has helped thousands of individuals kickstart their careers in Web3. Furthermore, his ongoing efforts are adding immense value to the Web3 space by assisting companies in making their products secure and, as always, helping many across the globe with Cyfrin Updraft’s educational initiatives.