Future of Finance: EY’s Brody on why tech history shows ‘there can be only one winning blockchain’
Fortune · Courtesy of EY

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Welcome to Future of Finance, where Fortune asks prominent people at major companies about their jobs, how their firm fits into the crypto ecosystem, and what this all means for how we use money.

The following is from a recent conversation with Paul Brody, the global blockchain leader at EY and author of the upcoming Ethereum for Business: A plain-English guide to doing business on the world’s largest blockchain.

Brody is a member of the Enterprise Ethereum Alliance, a CoinDesk contributor, and has done stints at IBM and McKinsey. He also has a soft spot for Swedish Fish.

(This interview has been edited for length and clarity.)

So you’re writing an Ethereum book?

I’m getting there. I started in December. I wrote like 10 chapters, and it was really, really tough. And now, there’s, like, six chapters left? The format of the book is how Ethereum works and why—why public blockchains are so important for business—specifically why they’re more important than private blockchains—business use cases, procurement, supply chain management, tokenization, carbon footprint, and why it takes so long for enterprises to adopt technology.

When you were at IBM you did some Internet of Things stuff, and some other projects that were cutting edge. Is this sort of a pattern for you, where you want to do the “cool new thing”? Is that just what’s most appealing to you?

The thing is, I am very driven by intellectual curiosity. I don’t necessarily go after every single new thing, but when I find a thing that’s really, really important, I go after it. When I was in college—I’m dating myself here—I was like, “Wireless! Wireless is the thing!” I went to work as a summer job at the first mobile network operator in Africa, in Nigeria, and I took an entire year off to work for them before I came back and went to work at McKinsey, where I can remember just telling colleagues, “Mobile data, you’ve got to invest in mobile data.”

The best perk of being a VP at IBM was you had access to IBM research. And I had a couple of amazing products, and before I did the one that got me into crypto, I did another one, which was immensely fun, around 3D printing. A lot of people do these corporate white papers—they just do a survey, they present it like it’s subjective data that nine out of 10 executives think that not burning down the planet is a good idea—they present it as if it’s factual data, and it’s not really. What I love to do is get a couple layers below that, and what's really fun is, for instance, we’d ask, “Okay, 3D printing will transform manufacturing, but how will it transform manufacturing?”