July 3, 2026

Why Ethereum’s Churn is Normal and the Chinese Bamboo Tree Analogy

Why Ethereum’s Churn is Normal and the Chinese Bamboo Tree Analogy

Why Ethereum’s Churn is Normal and the Chinese Bamboo Tree Analogy

Ethereum has attracted the world’s largest decentralized applications ecosystem behind it, with an estimated number of participating developers in the range of 250,000–350,000. This growth has been nothing but spectacular from a global and diversified reach perspective, only five years after its launch.

At this footprint magnitude, it is not surprising that Ethereum encounters some attrition from developers or projects for a variety of reasons. In startup terminology, the rate of attrition is called “churn”, and it simply refers to the % of users that leave. If a company wants to continue increasing the adoption of its products, its usage growth rate must exceed its churn rate. In human resources, this is also called “employee attrition”, and for mid-to-large companies, up 5–10% attrition rate is considered generally acceptable.

With this background in mind, let’s examine Ethereum’s churn and its significance (or lack of), both from a quantitative and qualitative perspectives.

At the quantitative level, Ethereum’s churn is apparently insignificant, just because its ecosystem continues to grow at quite healthy growth rates that are much higher than the reported churn along the way. Less than two years ago, the Ethereum ecosystem was estimated at about 100,000 developers. Today’s 250,000–350,000 numbers are a clear indication of net growth. At the most recent ETH Boston hackathon event that took place Sept 6–8 2019, 13% of the attendees were new to Ethereum, and another 21% were beginners, together being indicators that a lot more developers are coming to Ethereum than those who are allegedly leaving it. To get a sense of the continued growth of the Ethereum developers ecosystem, just follow ETH Global to track the impressive attendance and participation numbers at these events around the world. As I wrote previously, Ethereum meetups, hackathons and ETH Global events are the envy of other aspiring blockchains in that space.

It is not surprising that, according to Techstars, 95% of the blockchain projects applying to their program are building on Ethereum.

From a qualitative perspective, we tend to hear comments similar to this:

“Developers are immediately seduced by ETH promises, but they leave after a few months, at least those who actually tried to build on it. The projects that work run into trouble. It’s great for prototyping but not commercial release.”

However, one must examine the real reasons and motivations behind these anecdotal occurrences. Despite a few publicized cases, such as those enumerated by this misleading article (The Unbundling of Ethereum), this is not a pattern, but rather normal attrition from those that didn’t find Ethereum to be suitable for them.

As it turns out, not only the number of projects that left Ethereum is relatively small, most of them share a common thread: not being a fit for what Ethereum is very good at.

The fact is,- many projects used Ethereum’s ERC-20 token generation feature as the lynchpin of their genesis, without thinking further too much about whether they would be able to actually develop on Ethereum. Generating an ERC-20 token is a very low-barrier type of activity, and succeeding in it doesn’t mean that you have either figured out or committed to developing on the Ethereum platform.

Some other projects wanted to treat Ethereum like a database and record every single transaction on it. If you treated Ethereum like a database, you would have run into processing issues that only databases are optimized for.

Several projects didn’t really require the underlying decentralization infrastructure features of Ethereum. Decentralization comes at a price of course, specifically as transaction processing speed is compromised in favor of maintaining the sustainable economic security of the blockchain.

Other projects didn’t know how to use Ethereum’s scalability to their advantage. Namely, you needed to become quite familiar with Layer 2 scalability options in order to grow your applications on Ethereum.

Another segment of projects ultimately wanted to be on a separate chain they owned, so they could derive their own economic benefits, so Ethereum couldn’t provide that option to them.

Even for those projects that left it (or will leave it), Ethereum has most probably given them good benefits whether it was to generate the economic token, develop a prototype, or issue non-fungible assets on it. And for developers, it allowed them to gain their first experiences in decentralized applications development based on cryptographic blockchains, whether they were able to prototype something or not.

The proverbial product-to-market fit process is inescapable for any product, technology, protocol, solution or movement. While Ethereum’s use cases and sweet spots are still evolving, and being refined as more of them get uncovered, we already know what Ethereum is really good at:

  1. Easy developer on-boarding into crypto
  2. Generation of new tokens to raise money and/or embed token functionality
  3. An efficient medium of value exchange
  4. Native creation of non-fungible assets
  5. Pegging real-world/existing assets on its blockchain
  6. Base layer for stablecoins
  7. Operational platform for thousands of dApps
  8. Omnipresence in the enterprise via dozens of forks and implementations (e.g. J.P. Morgan’s Quorum)
  9. Platform for Decentralized Finance solutions
  10. An Open Finance infrastructure (read Bankless)
  11. Platform for decentralized governance (based on smart contracts and voting structures)
  12. Where financial products are being re-invented (e.g. Santander’s $20M Ethereum Bond)
  13. A store of value asset (ETH)
  14. A financial settlement network
  15. Where most of the DAO innovation is taking place

Generally, Ethereum is an excellent platform for managing relationships that can be (entirely) mediated by a universally trusted and openly decentralized blockchain that enforces the logic behind these connections.

Finally, when it comes to Ethereum’s most criticized weakness, its transaction processing speed, one needs to factor the existing Layer 2 capabilities that expand Ethereum’s transactional throughput beyond its on-chain’s limit of 15 TPS. Fast forward a few months from now, after Ethereum’s next hard fork, the Ethereum chain could reach up to 4,000 transactions/second via ZK roll-ups, shadow chains and chain witnesses. And once stateless clients are implemented, it will unlock a lot of built-in latency as clients will not be required to store large state data, instead they would just have to verify Merkle branches.

More and more, Ethereum is at the center of a re-definition of the web programming stack, as I previously noted that Ethereum’s stack is one of its biggest strengths.

Ethereum’s criticism is often associated with a criticism of the Ethereum Foundation, its more visible artifact. However, just focusing on the EF is wrong because they are only co-ordinating perhaps 10% of what is actually going on within the broader Ethereum ecosystem. The rest happens on its own. When Ethereum got started, its Foundation was the key entity that was responsible for initially developing most of its core functionality. However, gradually, the Ethereum ecosystem started to grow around its Foundation to the point where the current estimated activity ratio is 10/90 in favor of a vastly decentralized ecosystem of contributors, influencers, developers, investors, research groups, companies, projects, and a variety of diverse stakeholders.

The end result has been, as Albert Ni of the Ethereum Foundation put it aptly: “independent flourishing within a massive, diverse ecosystem, as one of Ethereum’s superpowers”.

Published at Sun, 15 Sep 2019 13:39:50 +0000

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By trendingtopics on 2019-03-27 08:41:23
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