Turning Your Blockchain Into a Living Ecosystem – A Guide for Founders
The post Turning Your Blockchain Into a Living Ecosystem – A Guide for Founders appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Source: Depositphotos In the euphoric aftermath of any new blockchain’s launch, most founders unexpectedly find themselves hitting a wall, as deploying a chain (be it a standalone network or a protocol on an existing platform) is only the first step. The harder challenges often emerge after their launch, i.e. transforming a bare-bones network into a living product with real users, integrations, and sustainable activity. In fact, around 90% of blockchain projects initiated since 2017 have ultimately failed to gain any sort of traction and therefore have had to be abandoned. This sobering statistic reflects how frequently teams pour immense effort into launching, only to struggle with “what now?” once the network is running. The causes can range from technical hurdles to a lack of clear use-cases, but the outcome is the same because, without guidance and infrastructure, a newly launched chain can quickly become a ghost town rather than a thriving ecosystem. One major reason for this post-launch stagnation is the complexity of infrastructure and integrations. In this context, ‘infrastructure fatigue’ has emerged as a real phenomenon because post getting a basic chain or application live, teams often lose momentum wrestling with a myriad of technical additions such as assimilating oracles for price data, bridges for cross-chain asset transfers, identity modules for user management, analytic tools for monitoring activity. Furthermore, many teams routinely get hit with unexpected infrastructure costs or delays resulting in early users finding no explorer to view their transactions, no bridges to bring liquidity, and no real-world data feeding into smart contracts – in short, an empty ecosystem. Aurora’s No-Code Console to the Rescue For founders facing such post-launch dilemmas, Aurora Labs (known for its EVM-compatible network on NEAR Protocol) recently introduced the Aurora Cloud Console (ACC) Marketplace, a no-code, plug-and-play console designed to make launching and…
Filed under: News - @ July 2, 2025 4:28 am