ICOs: Then And Now

4King Media
3 min readMar 7, 2019

--

Image source: Tag World Exchange.

Let’s explore the history and landscape of ICOs, as they went from an unknown concept to a booming industry raising billions of dollars.

What Is An ICO?

A great place to start: an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) is essentially crowdfunding for cryptocurrency. A startup will present a project in the form of a White Paper and then will initiate a “token sale” where investors can buy blockchain powered tokens to fund the project, in the hopes that they will later pull big returns once the project has launched. ICOs generally last a few weeks or months, whereafter the company will use the capital to fund building their project. An ICO is a phase in the business lifecycle, between infancy and launch, executed to gain capital.

The First ICOs

First mentioned in a White Paper by JR Willet in 2012, the first ICO wasn’t launched until 2013. MasterCoin (now called Omni, and also launched by JR Willet) ran for nine months and raised $2 million. Their idea: to create a new protocol layer (Mastercoin) on top of the Bitcoin blockchain for users to be able to create and use new digital currencies without the need for advanced technical skills.

Another first-wave ICO to launch was Ethereum, by a young Russian-Canadian programmer in 2014. The ICO lasted approximately two months and raised $16 million. Their idea was to create an open source platform to write and distribute decentralized apps. You’ve probably heard of them, they consistently rank in the top three cryptocurrency highest market capitalizations?

The ICO Boom

In 2016, the cryptosphere saw 64 campaigns bringing in $103 million, but it wasn’t until 2017 that startups really took advantage of this relatively simple crowdfunding initiative. There was no pitching-your-business to tables of investors, and you could accumulate millions of dollars in seconds, if you were lucky (as was the case with Brave who raised $35 million in 30 seconds).

In 2017 the craze caught on. The beginning of the year saw seven ICOs on the scene, collectively raising an estimated $28 million. By the end of the year, a total of 875 ICOs had launched raising an estimated total of $6.2 billion.

The Dark Side of ICOs

With this incredible industry growth came a darker side: scams and security law violation. Many investors saw their money lost to fictitious companies or failed projects. It is estimated that almost half of the ICOs launched in 2017 had failed by February 2018. On the bright side, that did not seem to deter too many investors, as by June 2018 a record $7 billion had been raised in 6 months.

Biggest ICOs in History

Below is a list of the top ICO’s in terms of funds raised.

ICO Name | Amount raised

1. Filecoin [Futures] | $257 million

2. Tezos | $232 million

3. EOS | $180 million

4. SIRIN LABS Token | $157.9 million

5. Bancor | $153 million

6. Status | $108 million

7. QASH | $105 million

8. Aragon | $73 million

9. Bankex | $70.6 million

10. TRON | $70 million

It’s not often one can say that an industry experienced their best year every year since 2013. That is indeed the case for ICOs, as they continue to launch by the boatload and grow the field, offering investors an early opportunity to get involved with new and exciting initiatives they may otherwise not have had exposure to.

--

--

4King Media

4King is the media powerhouse behind Casino Marketing, Affiliate Management and Blockchain Marketing. We’re all in, are you?