The history of cryptography is a story of adoption. At first, crypto was purely a retail play. It was the bootstrap era.
Anonymous founders. White papers and dreams. Bitcointalk Discussions. Discords and telegrams. If you wanted to participate, you had to live on Twitter/X and dig through governance forums and GitHub repositories at 2 a.m.
Fun time. Important era. But from an institutional perspective, it’s essentially uninvestable.
Then came the second phase: the scale-up era.
Professionalized exchanges. Custody has been resolved. DeFi protocols like Uniswap and Aave have found product-market fit. Onchain companies have started to look less like toys and more like businesses. Podcasts, newsletters, conferences and research have given the industry a real narrative layer.
This opened the door to the first serious capital.
Today, we are entering a new phase: the institutional era.
Stripe has a channel. Robinhood has a channel. Banks issue stablecoins. Prediction markets integrate with major media outlets. Actual revenue and cash flow accumulate on-chain.
And the marginal buyer is evolving.
For most of the last decade, flows came from two places: retail and crypto businesses. Now the next dollar comes from liquid token funds, multi-asset hedge funds, asset managers, macro boutiques, family offices and, ultimately, pensions and endowments.
Institutions want to buy our tokens.
We still make it far too difficult for them.
The institutional gap
If you’re sitting in a fund and trying to build a serious Solana allocation, you run into the same problems over and over again:
- Everything is fragmented. Data, documents, dashboards, governance, research, Twitter feeds. Fifteen tabs open. No canonical place to manage an ecosystem or token.
- You don’t trust the numbers. Public aggregators are often incorrect or inconsistent. The labels change. Definitions change. One bad entry flows through your model or IC memo and the idea dies.
- Nothing is written in your language. Most of the materials are designed for crypto natives. Not for investment committees who think about revenue, retention, unit economics, risk, users, cash flow and execution.
It’s not a problem of talent or interest. It’s an information problem.
Lightspeed IR Overview
Today, Blockworks is partnering with the Solana Foundation to launch IR speed of lightan investor relations platform designed for professional investors and token issuers.
We start with Solana because they sit at the intersection of crypto nativity and institutional relevance. They have real users, real apps, real revenue, and a cracked founder ecosystem. The story is there: it just needs to be delivered in a way that institutions can guarantee it.
Lightspeed IR is a closed professional environment for:
- Liquid token funds
- Institutional allocators and asset managers
- Family offices
- Solana ecosystem teams and large token holders
What you get in one place:
- High fidelity on-chain data on the Solana network and cutting-edge applications, powered by Blockworks data infrastructure
- Institutional research that transforms raw channel activity into simple, fundamental frameworks and IC-ready memos
- Ecosystem Intelligence and IR Workflow for roadmap updates, KPI packs, governance changes, token events and direct communication between teams and dispatchers
If you manage a fund, Lightspeed IR becomes your Solana starting point.
If you build on Solana, it becomes your investor hub.
In a world of noise, Lightspeed IR is the signal.
We are launching in the first quarter.
Fill out this form to be the first to know when it goes live.
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