Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - The Autonomous Digital Economy Is Here
Episode Date: July 5, 2026I help founders & executives generating more than $10M in revenue find their Easy Mode. Start here: https://ryanhanley.com/subscribe Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtube.com/ryanmhanley The ...internet we use today is only half built. We spent the last 40 years digitalizing communication and content. Now, we are digitalizing value, intelligence, and work. Matthew Le Merle, Managing Partner of Fifth Era and Blockchain Coinvestors, calls this the autonomous digital economy. And if you are running a business today, it is coming for your margins whether you are ready or not. We break down why blockchain adoption feels slow when it is right on schedule. We look at the hidden taxes built into our current financial system and how tokenization removes that friction. We also look at AI agents doing work humans were never designed to do in the first place. You can choose the axis of fear, worrying about what innovation will cost you. Or you can choose the axis of the innovator, believing new technology will solve today's problems and open opportunities we cannot even imagine yet. This is the way. Hanley. Connect with Matthew Le Merle: Website: https://www.matthewlemerle.com Fifth Era: https://www.fifthera.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewlemerle/ Fifth Era LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/fifthera X: https://twitter.com/BCoinvestors Follow Ryan: Website: https://ryanhanley.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/ryan_hanley Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
For the first time, computers are driving more than half of the internet traffic.
We're moving fast and it's all inevitable.
What is it about blockchain that we're not just grabbing onto this and running?
Every asset in the world has an owner.
If they can't monetize it, they want to kill it.
Most human beings fear that innovation will cost them the goods of today
and will open up bads in the future.
Innovation might actually solve today's problems
and it might unlock future goods we can't even imagine yet.
Matthew, I'm so excited to have you on the show, man.
We are about to have a conversation around a topic that I feel like I haven't had enough
guests on the show about where we're going, but I'm so incredibly interested in your
take on this idea of autonomous digital economy and where you and your investment firms see
the world going.
I just appreciate you taking this time, my man.
Fantastic, Ryan.
I'm glad to be here.
I hope we can do a good job for your audience.
I have absolutely no doubt that you will.
So let's set the stage right away.
When we say this term, this is your term,
an autonomous digital economy.
What exactly at a high level does that mean?
And then we can start to break into the branches
and the different legs of the stool
as we go through our conversation.
Yes, thanks, Ryan.
It's something that we're all in the middle of.
We're sort of experiencing it every day,
and yet we're a bit confused about where it's all heading.
And I find it helps people to sort of get their heads around.
If you just think about what we've already done,
the last 30, 40 years, we digitalized communications and content,
and we did that with the internet.
And today we use it every day, every small business,
you know, relies upon it.
every one of us every day is using that technology and those innovations.
The issue is we didn't get round yet to digitalizing various other things, including value.
We can't really move value natively over all of that infrastructure.
We just spent 30, 40 years building.
And of course, decision-making, intelligence, and even work is increasingly accessible and digitalizable,
so that advanced computing can assist us in very many ways.
And for us, if you converge all of that together,
if you converge the Internet, AI and agents,
and digital finance and blockchain,
if you converge it all together and you look ahead a few years,
I think you begin to see that, you know,
pretty much the entire economy will be running on digital rails.
a lot of the decision-making and work will probably be made by agents,
and the digital infrastructure that we already have, the internet stack,
will have to be upgraded so that we can run value and make transactions
and keep it secure and deal with issues like identity over those rails globally.
So for us, an autonomous digital economy is the future.
It's one of the things that's most inevitable, and we're about halfway there.
And the last thing I'll say, Ryan, is if anyone's thinking this isn't going to happen,
Cloudflare announced last month that for the first time, computers and agents are driving
about over half of all the world's internet traffic.
So we're moving fast, and it's all inevitable.
I want to start with blockchain as a time.
technology, not getting down into coins or anything like that or tokenization yet, but just the
technology in general. So my core industry that I came out of that I built my career in was
the property casualty insurance world. And since I learned about what blockchain was and I
dove deep into it to understand it, to me, it has been the most obvious technological improvement
that the insurance industry could make in streamlining how transaction.
are done, how data is trans.
It's almost like the insurance industry was built for blockchain to understand how these
transactions are made, the risk that's captured in that transaction being on the past that
data between the, and sometimes dozens of organizations that need to touch it in order
properly under it, et cetera.
However, very, very slow adoption, almost, almost none.
There's a few obscure, and I only mean obscure because they're small startups that have
played around with different uses for blockchain in that space.
but it seems despite, I don't know many experts in any field
who have spent any time with this blockchain technology
that wouldn't say it's powerful, it has widespread application,
that it can solve many of the privacy issues,
many of the issues with laundering and things that are done with,
yet it feels like everyone's scared of it,
or it just seems like an incredibly slow
in this technology being brought into our ecosystem,
ecosystem. Why do you think that is? Like, what is it about blockchain that we're not just
grabbing onto this and running? Yeah. So this is, it's interesting that you asked the question
in that way. And I think embedded in your, the way you ask the question is certain expectations
you might have about how quick change occurs. You know, we, we invented the internet in the
70s. Some people were using it a little bit in the 80s.
It really didn't ramp up until the 90s, where we all begun to say, well, what's email or what's a website or, you know, let alone can I buy something online?
You know, by the zeros, we still only had less than, you know, half the US and in most other countries substantially less than half of the people online.
and here we are in the 20s,
and we still only have two-thirds of the world online,
and you'd be surprised.
I mean, a lot of people still go shopping in shopping malls
and don't buy everything at Amazon.
So the point I'm making there is that that's a 40-50-year trajectory.
In the case of the digitalization of value and blockchain and running,
value and transactions over the internet natively.
We're really only 15 years in, and the first few years of those 15 years, this was really not
being thought of as being a technology that would apply to every business and every company.
So I feel we're very early.
Now, having said that, the adoption rates are ramping really fast.
So there's certain areas such as stable coins in the developing world.
digitalized funds and treasurers used in the crypto world for various purposes
and the beginnings of real world asset tokenization where we're beginning to come on board
and I think at this point the CEOs of every bank asset management firm payment company
understands that this is superior technology and that they will be deploying it
into their operations. Now we get to the question of insurance
And I think I don't, I have not studied insurance that closely vis-a-vis of blockchain adoption.
But I think in most industries, you have to begin with the pain points that they really care about every day.
And my bet is that the payment is not the biggest issue in insurance.
I think it's the decision-making.
You know, it's the assessment of risk and return and decisions around whether or not to insure something.
whether or not to close insurance contracts, et cetera,
and the nuance around that.
And here, there's no question in my mind
that this is now really getting upgraded fast.
We know that AI can simply do a better job,
a better job of assessing potential outcomes and risks
and so on in huge databases and huge datasets.
that whether they be public or proprietary, that is beginning to occur.
And I think I'd be very surprised if there's any large insurance company in the world
where on issues such as that, assessing risk, assessing potential returns
and making the decisions around how to price insurance products,
they're not beginning to experiment with those technologies.
So I feel like in the context of the autonomous digital economy,
in an area like insurance,
you're more likely to see decision-making and risk determination
being powered by the types of technologies that we invest in,
and the transaction and payment portion of it
is not as fundamentally important in that industry,
and they can take time.
It's not sort of like their Visa or MasterCard,
and they've got to handle the business.
billions of transactions and do it in very efficient ways.
And clearly, these are MastCard have already committed to using blockchain.
So it's a long answer, Ryan, but I think all of this is coming to insurance, but it's just
not the first industry that's getting impacted.
And if you go back to the internet, it's the same thing.
I mean, if you remember, we, industries fell in, in,
sequence and they didn't all embrace electronic commerce at the same time. And in fact,
there are some industries which still are mostly mortar with very little click activity occurring
around them. And I think you should expect the same in this next phase. I think that's a really
good and interesting take that I maybe, maybe my, my ambition sometimes outweighs my logic on the
fact that I would like my my hope would be things would move faster than reality and history
would teach us that they do that's probably what that is uh an aspirational wish for for these things but
and i use you know i i i don't solely operate in the insurance industry anymore but i always kind
of use it as a bellwether because they tend to be a laggard right um in in in the adoption but i
think your take on where their priority is is is correct i you know it's they're making their money off
their determination on whether or not someone's house is going to burn down
not in their ability to transact business faster via payment from insured to carrier.
So that actually makes a lot of sense.
Now, you used a term in there that I think maybe for you and I, we understand pretty well,
but I think some people in the audience may not, which is this idea of tokenization.
And they may have even heard, some of the audience may have heard, like tokenizing hard assets.
And one example that I'll give and then I'll pass it over to you is I was looking at
at a platform recently, just doing some research because I was interested, that takes rental
properties and the owners essentially tokenize the equity and then you can buy, you know,
they had their own coin that they were using just inside the platform as a way to capture that
value, but you could buy tokens into a property and then as distributions came out of that
property, you got your percentage of value.
Like maybe just define tokenization.
in general, and then I'd love to maybe just dig into where you see this happening in some of its
use cases. As you were talking, it did occur to me that I literally talked. The last question,
I focused on property and casualty insurance, but obviously prediction markets, we could talk
more broadly about risk and how these technologies can help offset risk. But now going on to this
new topic of tokenization. So I find that for most small business folks and entrepreneurs,
The best way to to begin this conversation is the following.
Every asset in the world has an owner.
And the challenges, the proof of ownership is very fragmented, and in often cases,
in oftentimes it's paper or close to paper.
So obviously in something like public equities, we digitalize the share certificate
quite a long time ago with the Big Bang.
But if you invest in a fund, if you invest in a company,
if you buy something of value, a watch,
or something like a Kruger,
and almost certainly your only proof of ownership is going to be some paper.
And that's not very efficient.
By the time you get to things like real estate,
the proof of ownership and the title may require many,
many days or weeks to sort out, and there'll be a lot of paper shuffling, a lot of notarization
of documents, et cetera, et cetera. The problem with that is it makes it very high friction for us
to move the value, i.e. exchange the asset value quickly, cheaply, and easily over the internet.
If you want to sell a building, typically it's going to take you 45 to 60 days just to do all
the documentation and for the asset to change hands.
We already know that if we digitalize the proof of ownership,
we can make it run over the internet.
And the technology we use to do that is tokenization,
and it sits on blockchain rails.
It's essentially the technology, the innovation,
that Satoshi Nakamoto created in order to be able to move
peer-to-peer cash over the internet, which became Bitcoin.
So it's the same technology, but now we're applying it to traditional assets.
And so dollars, you can take a dollar, you can tokenize that dollar,
and now that dollar can move as quickly as an email or a message over the internet,
and we call those stable coins, and they have names like Tether and Circle.
You can do the same with commodities.
You can take an ounce of gold and the ownership of that ounce of gold sitting in a vault somewhere.
And now with that, you can tokenize and record the ownership on a blockchain.
And now that token, that gold-backed token, can move to anyone in the world in real time at almost no cost.
And now we're going to get to what we're calling real-world assets.
it's actually, I view gold as a real world asset,
but don't worry about that.
Now, let's talk about real estate.
Conceptually, it's the same thing.
I could take the title that says,
this is the title for a building in San Francisco.
I could record that title,
and the ownership of that title on a blockchain,
issue a token,
and that token can be used to move,
transfer, exchange, that value.
Now, that already is a very big idea because this dramatically speeds up, reduces the cost, and simplifies the markets for those assets.
But it also unlocked some other things, which are also really important.
One is it allows the arrival of high-frequency trading, which in the world of public equities really was only unlocked when we digitalized public equity share certificates.
So you get iFiguency trading, which in turn means you get much more liquidity potentially.
It doesn't guarantee that anyone wants your asset, but conceptually, more people can choose to trade the asset.
Thirdly, you get better price discovery, which is really important in real estate, and we can come back to that.
And then there's some other things like fractional ownership that get unlocked.
So that's where we're heading.
We are going to tokenize and digitalize the ownership certificate for every asset in the world over time.
But some assets are more easy than others.
So a dollar is easy, right?
Because it's actually very easy because with a dollar, there's no corporate actions.
You know, there's no dividends.
There's no splits.
There's no mergers and acquisition activity.
By the time you get to real estate, it's really complicated, right?
Because with real estate, you know, you've got to make sure the janitor actually goes and cleans the building.
And if the HVAC break, someone's got to fix it.
And how does the ownership of the token equate to all those costs and expenses and activities?
And obviously, you wouldn't want to own a token in a building, a fractional ownership of a big building, the Salesforce Tower,
without you knowing whether everything else that needs to be done to Salesforce
towers occurs.
So tokenizing real estate ownership is much more complicated, I think,
than tokenizing dollars or ounces of gold.
So I'll stop there, Ryan.
I mean, if you want to double click on real estate, I'm happy to,
and I don't really know where your audience is most interested.
But what I can tell you with certainty is, as part of the,
autonomous digital future that we're describing, we will digitalize the ownership,
proof of ownership of every asset, and that that will allow most assets, most asset classes
to be traded quicker, cheaper, and easier over the rails that we just spent 50 years building.
Yeah, I think of something like the title to your home and the fact that there's an entire
cottage industry built around it called title insurance and the title search
process, which is an entire, what, three week, takes three weeks for them to figure out.
And then because the system is so, you know, kind of paper driven in some cases like,
you know, the home that I own was built in 1960.
Well, there's been three owners.
Well, you have to go verify the three owners, verify that the transaction was done
properly from each one of those owners.
And then you have to buy insurance against the title to make sure that that research
wasn't done improperly and somehow someone doesn't have a claim sitting. You think about all those
pieces where if the title ownership is sitting on the blockchain and you can just reference that
in a finger snap, you know exactly what's there, what's been applied, what hasn't, and follow
essentially, and let me know if I'm using this word wrong, but a chain of custody over time as to
each one of those owners, you can see that and it's just there at your fingertips versus
having to send somebody to the local county clerk's office and do FOIA request.
figure out, you know, who actually own this and if anyone's ever put a lien against it.
Is that kind of the idea and how we compact these things?
It is. It is, Ryan. And I'm going to interject a thought here for your audience because
it's a little baffling to me. You know, five and four and three years ago, there were a lot
of people who were trying to kill blockchain, in America especially. And they were very
powerful people, including our administration, the heads of some of our federal agencies and a lot of
senators and other folks. And I never really understood it because the example you just gave,
the average American, the biggest asset they'll ever own is their home, the apartment or the house.
And most Americans don't have a lot of money. So it turns out that the average apartment in half or the
average owned residents in America by an American citizen has a value of somewhere between
$200,000 and $250,000. Maybe a little bit more now. My data might be a little bit out of date.
But let's say, $250,000. Each time they try and buy and sell their own house, it takes them
45 to 60 days minimum in the closing process. But this is the shocker. It costs them an
average a $20,000 to trade a $250,000 property. They lose 10% of the value of their home each
time they try and buy and sell it. And you would think that the government players who are there
to protect the average American would understand that if we can take that 20,000 down to
2000, and if we can make the 60 days be five to 10 days, maybe, that would be an enormous benefit
to every American. It would be amazing. And then, and to your point, if we could eliminate the
title insurance altogether, which frankly we should be able to do, because the government by now
should have the information about the title digitalized, and they should have issues like liens or
rights of way digitalized. In fact, they probably do, but it's not necessarily very accessible.
But this is sort of a consumer, this is a fundamental right of every American citizen in my
mind to be able to have innovators improve their lives, stop burdening them with excess cost
and work and time. And so it's obvious. It should have been, everyone should have been so
excited that these new innovations and technologies were going to unlock this. But for whatever reason,
the anti-crypto army decided to try and choke down on the industry illegally, and we're now
coming out of that phase. So that's a little bit going back to your earlier point, Ryan,
about the speed of adoption. Well, just to be clear, of the last 15 years since blockchain
was invented, there's at least five years in there when America was trying to.
to kill the industry. For some reason, none of us really understand. Not to go conspiracy theory
on you, but I think you have the false assumption that our politicians and elite business owners
are actually operating in the best interest of the consuming public. I think that would be one
assumption I would question. Oftentimes it feels like if they can't monetize it, they want to kill it.
And I think our data, the fight against AI, the fact that we now have politicians who are advocating the seizure and ownership transfer of public or private companies as public good and the fight against these data centers, which, which I understand some of the concerns, but the irrationality of most of the argument against data centers to me, it, to me, to me,
signals that there's some unseen incentive or conversation happening that is forcing the negativity, right?
It doesn't seem warranted that, you know, you can put a similar size building for a Walmart or,
sorry, an Amazon warehouse out here. You know, I live in upstate New York. There's plenty of empty land.
They just put a huge Amazon building that looks like its own city. You know,
about 20 minutes from where I'm sitting.
Sorry.
No, no upheaval.
They did the environmental report.
Off it goes, building built, jobs created.
Everything's good.
Data center, essentially the same size.
You have people picketing.
You have people, you know, protesting.
You have, you know, these signature campaigns going out to different politicians to fight
these things.
And the argument feels very irrational to me.
And maybe just taking a broad stroke over all these technical.
and the we've always been the innovative we've been the country and really how we established
ourselves in the world and the place that we currently sit is because we were so so pro
innovation so pro technology so pro you know pushing forward into the unknown yet you know in
this case we're just blockchain AI and the and we'll just say the data center supporting the infrastructure
that we need to push all this there are major campaigns to derail this growth and I
I find it intriguing to say the least.
Yeah, so I'm not a politician.
I'm not a lobbyist.
I'm not a government affairs person.
So in a way, I'm just an investor, and we'll talk more about that in a minute.
But just to wrap this point up, I mean, if your audience are small business owners and entrepreneurs,
I think, you know, you should be thoughtful about this question.
if we took away the internet from you today, would that be good for your business?
And would that be good for your life?
And I think a few people would say yes, right?
And the Pennsylvania Dutch and the Amish, you know, would say yes.
We don't want the internet.
We don't want cell phones.
We don't want messaging.
You know, we prefer the United States Postal Service and receiving letters and parcels at home.
And that's okay.
But I don't think most people feel that way.
And so I think what you need to do is try and connect innovation and the discussion to what's important in your own life.
And that's why I gave the example of the average American and how much they lose of the value of their biggest asset each time they try and buy and sell it.
Because there's 400 million Americans, 200 million households or something like this.
and they're all suffering from this reality.
And if we can make it better, it's good for all of them.
So if you're going to be abstract and sort of say,
well, I don't want tokenized, you know, property titles,
I want it still to be paper-based,
understand what you're doing is you're hurting every American.
And so when we come to AI, it's sort of the same thing,
which is, you know, I understand the fear
of AI is going to hurt me and my job and my job is going to change or my business is going to
change. But the other side of that coin is we have benefited enormously from data-driven decision-making
in finance and in insurance and retailers have leveraged electronic commerce to make more
products available to us from more places around the world. And all of that has been riding
on big data and big data analytics and algorithmic decision making for a long, long time.
You know, 30, 40 years.
You just didn't know it, and we didn't call it AI.
And it's sort of like spell check.
You know, it's all like, if you want to lose the spell check on your email writing software,
it's okay.
You know, you can just check a dictionary each time you come up with a word that you're not sure how to spell.
The reality is we all.
benefit from spell check and spell check is a is a is a in a subtle way artificial intelligence so
so i am i am i'm very much of the opinion that before you get to macro just think about your
business and the pros and cons and it is possible it is possible that you should be fearful
about the impact of innovation and technology on your business but i think
think in most cases small businesses can benefit, and certainly tech entrepreneurs should be all over this.
Yeah. I mean, some of my friends who run non-tech businesses have, I've seen the largest increases in
productivity and top line revenue growth by implementing AI into those businesses. Like I have a
buddy that owns a landscaping firm, and he had a guy create a simple CRM that,
that fit his business specifically for him.
And, you know, it's all AI driven.
And his guys have it as a little custom app on their phone.
And it's cut.
He said it's cut.
What did he say?
Two hours of every week out of every one of his sales guys
who go out in the field, which he has five of,
he got 10 hours back of their time.
So two hours for each guy simply by using this AI tool
that he said cost him like three grand to have,
you know, somebody spin up and build for him.
Because he just didn't want to take.
the time or maybe have tried vibe coding it, but like the idea is even if you're not a tech
business, I mean, this is, I'm talking to the audience now, not necessarily you, but like even if
you're not a tech business. And in some cases, the non-tech businesses by by leveraging some
of this technology that's now at your fingertips and has become so readily available, you can see
massive improvements in streamlining in places where before they were literally having to write up
proposals on sheets of paper on a clipboard and then they'd have five of them in their truck and
and they'd have to remember to bring them in and get them approved.
And like, just that amount of time back is, what, one or two more appointments a day for five guys.
Now all of a sudden, you know, if you're closing half of those, you just put five more deals on the board that you couldn't have done before simply because you didn't have the time with a fairly simple AI tool investment.
So I look at these things in, I'm very AI optimist.
There's 100% AI optimist.
I probably spend too much time on LinkedIn commenting, yeah, but humans make mistakes too.
that's you know what I mean like my little probably sarcastic response that I shouldn't put out there as much as I do but like every time someone bangs on AI I'm like yeah but the reason the data is terrible is because humans put it in you're just mad at the AI because it's reading the terrible data that the humans put in and now can't regurgitate the perfect answer like I feel like we hold some of these technologies especially early on and it's probably just adoption curve as you said which I think was maybe a fairly logical but I think something that was really a really logical but I think something that was really
really important to be said, is that just an adoption curve standpoint, we're still holding the
technology to too high of a standard versus what we would assume the humans are. We're thinking it
has to be perfect or it's broke. And that doesn't seem like the right way to think about this.
Yeah, but that's great, Ryan. But I just want to again highlight my point of you brought up
landscaping. So you think, I do think it's worth, you know, whoever you are listening to this,
bring it back down to real businesses and real activities and then think it through.
So just give an example, you know, if you play golf, you know how they used to cut the grass.
And up until recently, and in fact still probably on most golf courses, people sit on equipment in the hot sun
and they have to go around and around and around the golf course cutting the grass.
and, you know, it's polluting.
It's not good for the environment.
It's expensive.
And the drivers have to cover up or they get skin cancer and it's, you know, there's a lot of issues.
Today, there's plenty of golf courses that have satellite driven robotic lawn grass cutters cutting the grass.
And not every golf course has implemented that, but many have.
They tend to still do, as you know, the greens and the T's by hand,
but the fairways still have this equipment.
So that's AI, that's AI driven.
It's satellite and AI driven, and it's part of what we call the autonomous digital future.
Those autonomous, semi-autonomous, robotic, grass-cutting devices are there already, right?
This is not theoretical.
And so then as a small business only, you can see that as a threat or an opportunity.
Obviously, if you're John Deere, it was a threat to the manually operated glass cutting equipment you used to sell.
And it was your choice, John Deere, whether you embraced this new world.
Huscavana did, and so they sell lots of Huscavana equipment.
I don't even know who owns Huscavana, but did John Deer do it?
I don't know.
It was a choice.
You know, embrace the future or try and avoid embracing it.
At the level of the guy that sits on the tractor, I think they've been reallocated.
So they're probably still working on the golf course.
They're doing something else.
Hopefully they're making the greens and teas even better.
But some of them may have lost their jobs.
That is a real societal issue that we have to think through, because obviously,
if we're reducing human work everywhere,
then we have to figure out a lot of issues and concerns legitimately so.
But I don't think it's bad that the person isn't going to sit in the baking sun
and get a lot of skin cancers.
You know, that job isn't that great a job, in my opinion.
Now, obviously, some people may love cutting grass all day on a tractor
and they would disagree with me,
But I think societally, we have to ask, are the jobs that we are eliminating the right jobs for humans to be doing?
And it's like the old, and I'll finish here, but it's like the old story of the chimney sweep.
It's all like, you know, little boys used to have to go up chimneys to clean the chimney.
And they all got black lung, and they all died at very early ages.
and we eliminated coal-fired fireplaces,
and that meant all those little boys were out of work,
and we had to find other things for them to do,
and the chimney sweeps were probably very angry about it,
but at the end of the day,
black lung amongst chimney sweeps went to zero,
and I think that was a good thing societally.
So it's a challenge.
This is not easy stuff,
but if you're a small business person, bring it back home.
You know, if you have a landscaping,
business, how do you power up and conversely, what should you stop doing? And maybe there are
entire industries you should be, as a small business owner, you should be actively getting out
of because they won't be necessary in the future, like chimney sweeping. Yeah, I think you,
that's a wonderful point. I know we don't know each other that well. We just met here today, but,
you know, my work in working with companies and particularly mid and smaller size companies is I
teach something called a human optimized model, which is why I'm so incredibly interested in
AI, right? My belief is that in general, humans can do three things better than machines or
AI, which is relationship building, solving complex problems, and selling things based on trust.
I know you can do D to C and that's growing, but, you know, a lot of transactions were still
very trust-based. And, you know, what I try to help these business owners understand is that, to your
point, right, that guy who was spending eight hours a day on a tractor cutting a lawn,
well, now he can go get his hands in the sprinkler system that's broke.
And he can spend time on the projects that are detailed driven and very human expertise
driven and take true like breakdown problem solving at the point of failure and spend
time on these real actual issues that you need someone to do, right?
that guy like you said i i'm much more up in the in the camp of of we're reallocating and
redefining what these roles are i i don't see i think jobs will be lost but we can't think of
them as the humans losing the job just that function is lost the human is still going to have
plenty of places to go where their expertise mechanically or otherwise i think still can be used
and we can actually use for the things that they probably should have been doing more of
to begin with where the where the where the real
labor and real work is versus just sitting on a tractor and driving in straight lines for
eight hours a day. So I think that's a really wonderful point. I'd like to transition a little bit to
the investment piece. And I'm just interested maybe start as broad as you want, but this seems like
an incredibly dynamic time to be investing in companies in particular. And before we went live,
you had talked about this explosion of a value in the economy.
And we just saw SpaceX and Elon becoming a trillionaire and everything.
Like one, maybe is this a fairly unique and interesting time in general?
Like, is that a proper characterization?
And then, you know, regardless of it is or it isn't, you know, where are you starting to,
where are you starting to look?
I mean, I know you have your thesis, but like what's really got your attention?
What do you see coming down the pipe that's got you tuned up?
All right.
So we started talking, trying to help the audience understand some inevitable things about the future, the direction we're heading.
We talked about things like what's tokenization and how do we digitalize value.
We then went down a slightly different path, which is an important path, which is, you know, what's the role of government?
how does government embrace innovation and then societally what are some of the pros and cons and some of the issues of which there are many?
I think it is a good idea to bring it back to sort of investing and wealth creation and value creation.
So I'm glad you just did that.
And we're investors.
So ultimately, the way we think about this, Ryan, and I'm really now first going to answer conceptually and then I'll answer.
empirically, you know, conceptually, what we are doing as investors, as venture investors,
because we're venture investors, is we're trying to get a view, a 10-year view, of some inevitable
changes to the economic landscape that will unlock a lot of wealth creation, a lot of value.
And we typically are thinking about a 10-year time frame as VCs.
Some things happen quicker, some things take longer, but 10 years is sort of about right.
And once we have clarity on some things that we're absolutely sure are going to be happening,
then the next thing is you look up today and you try and figure out what's most broken
where a lot of value is going to start shifting around.
You know, it's going to go from the old to the new.
And then once you have clarity on those two things,
then you look for great entrepreneurs who are really passionate and understand how they can,
stand up a new business or a new opportunity, a new project that is going to move us forward
because they're going to have enormous tailwinds behind them and they're going to be the
beneficiaries of all this moving value. Now, it doesn't mean that established businesses,
I can't do everything I just said, I mean, they could do the same thing. The problem is,
and it always is true, established businesses have a lot of legacy activities, people, process,
versus sunk costs, that make it very hard for them to change.
And so it tends to be true that if you can see something inevitable about the future
and if it's going to dramatically impact a huge profit pool or source of value of today,
most of the shift, most of the value is going to be captured by disruptive new players.
And that's what we invest in, all right?
So that's sort of the way to think about it.
Now, obviously, if you're an entrepreneur, you're loving what I'm saying because you want to be the one that gets backed and builds the new business.
Obviously, if you're a small business owner, this is a challenge because you've got to make choices like should I move and if so, when.
And conversely, I can't abandon what I am already doing and I don't have a lot of capabilities and resources left over to do new things.
So it's very challenging for established businesses, and in particular for established small businesses.
All right.
So that's the concept.
So practically speaking, where are we investing today?
Well, I think we've already covered it.
We're investing heavily in what we call AI in theogenic revolution, the upgrading of global decision making and the digitalization and computerization.
of work and embedded in their intelligence.
This is just huge.
It's not new.
It's 40, 50 years in the making, but it's time has come.
And we're digitalizing intelligence and work as we speak.
So the companies that are at the leading edge of that are very, very, I think, investable,
though their valuations are going sky high incredibly quickly and maybe too high.
The second big thrust for us is we've already talked about is the digitalization of global financial rails and infrastructure.
And it's necessary both so that the traditional financial companies, banks, payment companies, asset managers, insurance companies, trading exchanges and so on can upgrade themselves.
But it's also opening up the opportunity for new to the world players, many of which were in.
investors in with names like Coinbase and Crack and Uphold and Anchorage and Robin Hood and so on to
grow and scale very quickly.
So that's the second big thrust.
And then the third that I would talk a little bit about is the continuing evolution and
upgrading of Internet companies themselves.
You know, if you had a name like Revolut, you're not actually a new.
company. You've been around for a long time. You're an internet-based fintech company. But now,
you're upgrading yourselves, you're embracing blockchain, you're embracing crypto, you're probably
deploying AI tools, and you're also migrating towards this future. So for us, those are the big
three thrusts, AI and the digitalization of intelligence and work. Secondly, digital finance,
including blockchain-enabled digital infrastructure.
And thirdly, the, if you will, the upgrading of the internet players.
And, you know, it's sort of like ink to me was destroyed by Google.
MySpace was destroyed by Facebook.
I don't think we should presume that today's internet companies
won't have new competitors, but there'll be autonomous digital players,
not only internet players, if you see what I'm saying.
I do.
I do.
One of my least favorite mental blocks is the idea that the way the world looks today is the
way it's going to look tomorrow.
And when you find people making decisions based on that thesis, it's very hard to argue with
or argue against.
It tends to be very entrenched idea, but seemingly the world never works out that way.
We're always, it's always turning and spinning, just like you said, we could go through a million examples all the way back through the industrial revolution of the company that kick things off ends up getting innovative upon and you have a new player and then the same thing happens again and again.
And I think it's a, I think it's a really important point just to drill into, which is why I'm spending just this extra second here on it, that we can't take a snapshot of the way the world is today, guys, and believe that this is the way the world is always going to be, right?
And I love that you said that you're looking out 10 years.
I think that's a wonderful timeline.
And, you know, specifically, I'd like to drill into where you see agentic AI and agents in general going,
maybe both from just your personal opinion or your company's opinion on the space in general and the technology in general.
And then maybe from an investment, putting the investment hat on, you know, are you looking at established companies that are integrating agentic AI and using it as a way to improve,
operations consumers are already aware of, but maybe in a more efficient way? Or do you think there's
even more opportunity and new functionality in that space? Yes, fantastic, Ryan. So the answer is all
of, but before, you know, the short answer, but before I get there, I mean, many of the tasks that
we do today that are part of our economy or the businesses that are listening in, those tasks
are complex tasks and the human form factor is not necessarily engineered to be really good at those
tasks. And I think you have to start there. In your business, you probably have human beings doing
things that they are not actually very good at doing. A great example would be to abstract vast
amounts of financial data, crunch it in real time, and come up with financials and
accounts and so on.
You know, it's all like, our brains are pretty good, but that actually isn't something
many of us are really designed for.
And in fact, as we all know, the average American child is not very good at mental mathematics,
even if you ask them something simple like what's, you know, eight times 11, which
shouldn't be too difficult.
By the time you ask them to, you know, look at a business.
in real time and crunch all the data of the P&L for this month and
build a P&L and a balance sheet, it's not something most of us can do in our heads.
And what I just said is obvious, right?
So, you know, we instrumented that a long time ago,
and we created calculators, well, we created abacuses,
and then calculators, and then VisiCalc and Lotus 1, 2, 3, and spreadsheets.
And by now, you know, most businesses probably have some sort of, you know, advanced computing device doing a lot of their books and their financials.
They may still use accountants to do the audit and to balance the books and sign off on them.
Even that, you know, humans are not very good at.
You know, we know that.
Accounting firms are paid a lot of money, but they're not very good at what they do, is the truth.
It takes them a long time and a lot of cost.
etc. So just continue that thought process. What other things do you have humans doing,
human beings doing in your business that we're not actually very well designed to do? And what
devices and workarounds do you have in place to help them do those things? So in your warehouse,
you have people moving heavy pallets and you have to give them tools to help, right? They need
a reach or, you know, loading, I don't even know all the names, but, you know, they have a bunch
of equipment because human beings not very good at lifting pallets, you know, 30 feet up and stacking
them in warehouses, right? So, so then you sort of say, well, why did you want, why do you need
the human there at all, right? If the task is to unload a truck, bring out all the palettes,
move them around a warehouse and store them away,
the human form factor is not good at any of that.
And even the decision of which palate goes where
is really not something humans are very good at.
I mean, we can't, with our eyes, scan a barcode.
So we need a device for that.
And the same with the location in the warehouse.
And so you shouldn't be surprised if we're deploying robotics and equipment,
in warehouses and we're displacing human beings because the human form factor isn't ideal for
many of the tasks that grew up in the Industrial Revolution.
And in fact, many of the jobs we created in the Industrial Revolution were not really very
nice jobs for humans to do, right?
It's sort of, we know that.
We had them one at some time, you know, doing manual labor on massive scale in mills and
in factories and other things that were really bad for the health of the humans.
And we had labor movements and we had to have working condition decisions.
And then eventually we got rid of the mills and the people that had to work in them
and all got tissue in their lungs, just like the miners got all the black lung from the
gold dust.
So why am I starting here?
Because I think that's the way to think about it.
you know, we can get more precise, if you wish, and talk very specifically as you did about
do I see companies using advanced AI agents to drive top-line growth?
Well, of course.
You know, it's all like because are humans very good at trying to identify which of the 400 million
Americans are most likely to want to buy the product?
No, because we can't get ahead around 400 million, let alone build profiles for 400 million,
let alone build profiles for 400 million people
and try and identify the signals that would have us know
if these 10 million of the 400 million are the right ones to take this offer.
Huxi, so don't say it.
And it's not a new thought because MB&A and Capital One
we're trying to figure out how to do better credit card solicitations
with database technology and algorithms, you know, 40 years ago.
So the big difference is this.
Number one, clearly the LLMs have made big data analysis
and algorithmic decision making and machine learning ready for prime time on a scale we could not have imagined.
The second is the agents, which are basically just software,
the agents are able to do work better and better,
and they're beginning to be better than us
at more and more of the work that we do.
And I think the third is we're beginning to figure out
how to use software,
combined with hardware,
to come up with better form factors than the human,
to do tasks that humans are not actually very good at anyhow.
And you put all of that together,
and I don't think there are too many functions in any business
that are not going to be levered up and improved, quicker, cheaper, easier.
And even small businesses can start experimenting.
That's the last point, Ryan, which is this is not something that requires any more billions of dollars to get started.
I remember in the 90s, I was always shocked by, you know, we were beginning to build websites.
and science and razorfish would show up with a single page,
and they said, we'll build your website for $40 million.
And today you can build that website for like nothing.
Yeah, it's a website for nothing.
You know that.
I've got to my website for a couple hundred bucks on Cloud Code.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
So that's what I would want the small business listener to reflect upon,
which is the costs of accessing these.
tools is coming down really, really fast, such that a small business person can, in fact,
leverage AI into their business if they're willing to experiment and give it a go, that the hard part
is actually having people to help you do it. I think if you're the founder or CEO of a small
business, you've got the hardest job in the world already, and many of you are struggling to make ends meet
every day already and now someone's going to drop this whole new thing on top of you and it's it's it's
hard and so you know ryan if that's what you help small business people do then i think that's
really really a valuable thing um and if i was a small business owner right now i would not i think
you do have a choice of when to move so if you're a small business owner you don't necessarily need
to change anything this year but i wouldn't wait for you.
five years. And for some of you, if you move fast, you'll be a big business, not a small
business. So there are good reasons to move quickly, but you have to look at yourself honestly
and sort of say, am I up for this? Do I have the capability? Some of my people need to get
on top of this and do we have the bandwidth and do we have the resources and so on? But the point
is the cost of using an agent in a small business today is very inexpensive. It's not more
longer $40 million just to build a website. Yeah. I mean, I've talked to the audience about this
before, but one of the things that I highly advocate is even if you're not going to make any
changes in your business. And I think you're right. I don't think anyone should rush into this if it's
not their nature. If it's not your nature, I don't think rushing in is the right way. However, I do
highly advocate for people to be playing around, right? At least have a paid chat GPT or a paid
Claude or, you know, like when these tools, like when 4.5 hit, I built like three apps that I
have sent just destroyed. You know, I just deleted them, but I built them to just see like what's
possible. How does it work? I've heard this term MCP. What is that? Like, like, and then do I even
need to know that in my work? Like, you know what I mean? So just just playing around because
there's a new vocabulary that is going to become more and more part of daily discussions,
I think regardless of where you are, from solopreneur to small business to middle market
all the way up to enterprise. And while I completely and utterly agree that rushing in is not
the appropriate move and it isn't like you have to do something today or you're going to go out
of business, I do think it is important to start to at least understand the nomenclature,
some of the use cases, or at least what's possible, because
when these decisions do become more pressing
and you are kind of in a position
where you need to make a move one way or the other,
I feel like if that's when you start to spin up
your knowledge on this stuff,
you're going to be so far behind
and it's almost like you're going to be speaking to someone
who is speaking a different language to you.
And I think that's where a lot of people
got in trouble with the internet in the early days, right?
You had these, you know, internet marketers
and website builders who would come to you
and tell you a website that should have cost a couple
grand cost 10 grand and a lot of small business owners didn't know the difference and they didn't
understand because they didn't know what it took and they didn't know the time. And I do think we can
learn from the early 2000s and the mid 2000s and the both in digital and kind of internet revolution
that at least it's a good F-AFO moment, like play around a little bit, like get in there and
at least see what it does. Right. I mean, we need to have this at our fingertips to at least be able to
speak the language even if we're not using it today. I agree with everything you just said. And I at this
point, I want to talk a little bit about mindset. But before I go there, I'm agreeing with your point,
which is, you know, we're 40 or 50 years into using the internet and pretty much everyone
listening in is actually an expert. You know, you all know how to use, do emails, you all know how to
send messages, you all know how to use Spotify, you all use the internet every day across your
businesses in many, many ways. You're all experts.
But if I asked any of you to explain the coding of TCPIP or HTML or frame relay and how they work,
my bet is almost 90-something percent of you probably don't even know those terms,
or if you've heard them, you couldn't actually explain them.
And that's really important to hang on to.
You can be an expert at leveraging the internet without actually understanding how it works.
And so you can be an expert at applying digital finance in your business and using stable coins
without actually needing to understand what a Merkel route is or what a hash rate is in blockchain.
And the same thing is true in AI.
You can begin to work with agents without understanding the software that sits underneath an agent
that you're going to leverage and use in your business.
So it comes to mindset.
And so here I'm actually going to steal the concept that our AI partner and my daughter, Toulula Lamoa, has put into her new book.
But I think it's very simple.
And I want to spend just one second on it around.
It's very simple.
It's a little matrix.
On one side is goods v.
Bads.
And on the other side is today be the future.
And now you've got four cells, right?
You've got the goods and bads of today.
in the goods of bads of the future.
Most human beings fear that innovation will cost them the goods of today
and will open up bads in the future.
Okay?
And because of that, they live on an axis of fear.
They're living fearfully.
They are fearing that innovation is going to destroy.
my business today and innovation is going to do things in the future that I don't want,
like cost me my job.
Now, the other axis is very interesting because the other axis is that innovation might
actually solve today's problems, the bads, and it might unlock future goods we can't
even imagine yet.
right and that axis is an optimistic asset
axis it's actually the innovators access
uh access um entrepreneurs
operate on that axis they believe that they can
solve the problems of today and as Steve Jobs
famously said they're crazy enough to believe that they can
change the future in a positive direction
and that's the axis of
innovation and positive change and it's a choice and the reality is that your brain is engineered
to make you fearful of uncertainty and it's it's a defensive mechanism we we all have it in our
brains that if we're not sure about something we should be fearful it's called the amygdala
in fact but the other access is the access that opens up opportunity and so as a small
business owner or an entrepreneur, the most important thing right now is to get into that mindset.
You know, believe this webinar, believe that we're going to live in a digital autonomous future
whether you want it or not today and that it will unlock a lot of new-to-the-world opportunities
we can't even imagine. But it will also solve a lot of the businesses you struggle with
every day in your business if you're willing to give it a go. And if you're an entrepreneur,
you'll probably spend most of your time using these technologies to build new businesses we
can't even imagine. If you're a current small business or, or for that matter, large business CEO
or board director, you'll probably use these technologies first and foremost to solve the
biggest problems in your business. And so, just like I said, you know,
black lung in chimney sweeps was the biggest single issue for the little boys of London
who had to go up the chimneys.
They all die.
So solving that problem with innovation was a good thing.
It wasn't a bad thing.
Well, in your business, I don't know what your biggest pain points are.
It could be we can't find new customers.
Or it might be we forget to revisit the customers who bought.
in the past to get them to buy a gain.
Or it might be, it just costs too much to run the warehouse
with all the people that we have in the warehouse.
I don't know what the issues are for you.
My bet is the innovations that we're funding
and that are here already can actually help you
against most of your business challenges.
But it's a mindset issue because if you're going to be fearful,
you're not going to get anything positive done.
And most of the world, unfortunately, sits in that mindset until they don't have a choice.
I think that is a wonderful place to wrap up our conversation because I could not agree with you more.
To your warehouse example, one of the things I think is funny about the people who protest losing these warehouse jobs.
So coming out of the property, casualty insurance space and workers' compensation,
warehouse jobs are one of the most frequently injured positions in all of our workforce.
I mean, these are people who are constantly injured, oftentimes with issues that last throughout
their lives with back-related things, knee-related, shoulder-related.
And ultimately, they're taking pain meds and they're on these things for long periods
of time because, as you said, this is work that we're not designed to lift these heavy things.
So now we have to have a forklift or we have to have a crane and these things fall and people
drops and it's like okay i get that that is a job right and and someone a man or woman makes
their money doing that thing but i think to your point could that person be reallocated to a
position where their their human skills can be used to to higher value and not have them at boxes fall
on their head uh once a year and they have to be on workers comp for a month like you know these are
these are some of the places where when i think we to your point like when we start thinking
optimistically about the future, the world opens up in a way that you've used
dubert a couple of times. It's unimaginable. And I just, I couldn't agree with you more.
With that being said, I know my audience is going to want to go deeper into your world.
Where are the places that they can follow along with what you, your thoughts, your work,
and ultimately go deeper into what you do? Yeah. So, so remembering that we're an investment firm
And we are primarily, you know, venture investors.
That isn't for everyone who's listening in.
If you are an investor and you want to learn more about us,
you just go to fifth era.com and we share a lot of information.
There is information that we share that I think is interesting for everyone to take a look at.
We do newsletters, podcasts, and so on.
You can access them to fifth era.com as well.
But I would not say by any measure that we are the world's leading thought leaders around how this impacts small businesses.
We are, you know, we're backing disruptive, fast-growing AI, digital finance and blockchain companies.
So depending upon who your audience is, we may not be the right people to follow.
We have written some books.
You can find them on Amazon and on Apple.
I think they're good general.
There are books about the coming fifth era and what that may look like.
You're very welcome to take a look and see if they're good for you.
You know, Ryan, I mean, if your audience has a lot of small business people,
my bet is you're more valuable to them than I am
because it's not so much that they need a vision of the future.
It's they need help just getting started.
and that is a very pragmatic exercise.
So I'll stop there.
It's not that I don't want people to follow us,
take our newsletter,
listen to buy our books.
It's just we're an investment firm
and we're designed for investors.
We're not necessarily the best people to hang out with
if you're operating a small business
and you're trying to figure out
how to scale up with these technologies.
Well, I appreciate your humility.
I will say we have plenty of people that do do
a lot of investing in the in the audience but i also think if for nothing else i think an optimistic
view on what's coming is just as powerful and a message of optimism and and where the world is
going is just as powerful as the tactics of getting there because if you're to your point in the
matrix that you described if you're living on the fear uh access it doesn't matter what tactics you use
you're going to always be behind the eight ball you're always going to be finding you obstacles where
the optimistic view of what's coming,
I just don't see a better operating system, right?
I don't think scarcity mindset,
fearful mindset,
I don't think this is the time for that.
It's the opposite.
So I just appreciate the conversation.
I appreciate your time very much.
I have enjoyed it and learned a ton and appreciate you.
And I know the audience will as well.
I wish you nothing but the best.
And guys,
we'll have links to both the books
because I did go through a couple of the books
and to the website and stuff
so just scroll down what you're watching on YouTube
listening wherever you do.
Matthew, this has been an absolute
phenomenal conversation.
For me personally, I appreciate your time
and thank you so much.
Thank you very much, Ron.
