What these models share, and what the next generation of interesting managers will share, is that the fund itself is a product with utility beyond capital. The question isn’t “how do we tell a better story?” It’s “how do we build something that makes the story self-evident?”

The good news is there isn’t just one answer. The events model works for us. The accelerator model works for Outlier. Deep technical contribution works for Paradigm. What doesn’t work, what has never really worked, and what LPs are increasingly unwilling to pretend works, is a pitch built entirely on relationships you can’t show and value you can’t measure.

Web3 moves fast enough that the managers who build real infrastructure now will be very hard to displace later. The ones still writing decks about their networks in three years will find the room has quietly emptied out around them. I’m genuinely curious to see what other models emerge. Competition in this space, when it’s actually focused on doing something different, is the best thing that could happen to it.

Note: The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk, Inc. or its owners and affiliates.

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