Smart Contract Auditor Lets Go 80% of Staff in Crypto Winter Cutbacks

After an initial boom, smart contract auditing firm Hosho went from from 37 employees to seven after business slowed in 2018.

AccessTimeIconFeb 1, 2019 at 1:30 p.m. UTC
Updated Sep 13, 2021 at 8:51 a.m. UTC
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Hosho was founded under the premise it could safely sell smart contract shovels in a tokenized gold rush – in fact, the company's name itself means "security" in Japanese,

"We thought we were going to go to the moon and audit lots of ICOs," Hartej Sawhney, co-founder and president of the company told CoinDesk in a phone call.

Founded in July 2017 and headquartered in Las Vegas, Hosho rode the wave of token sales, expanding quickly and building its brand with a high-profile conference. But by that point, crypto winter had already begun to hit, with prices across major cryptocurrencies dropping, in some cases, 90 percent from their 2017 values.

So, despite the fact that the company now claims to have audited more smart contracts than anyone else in the world during its 17-month run, business slowed abruptly and the firm went from 37 employees to seven in a sweep of late-2018 layoffs.

"It was painful personally. I've never had to let go of that many people," Sawhney said.

The leadership believed with a very small team of their leading technical employees and a new service offering in penetration testing, they could keep the business going until the industry came back.

The death of the robust ICO market with its plethora of new smart contracts was the main cause of Hosho's contraction, according to Sawhney. It had an easy business as long as those kept going, but then the music stopped and business became much, much harder.

Said Sawhney:

"We realized that the most important thing to us was to stay alive."

Echoing some of the themes BlockEx spoke to when acknowledging its staff drawdowns, Sawhney noted that some of the decisions it's made, while responsible, have now made surviving crypto winter more difficult.

For example, believing it could build the business on revenue, Hosho did not take venture funding. Arguing that good smart contract auditing at this stage still requires a sophisticated human element, it also didn't do an ICO.

"There's no reason to do ICOs if you're auditing smart contracts," Sawhney said.

Winds blow

As Sawhney tells it, things started taking a turn for the worse in the market around June or July, when "all of a sudden, we were seeing a lot less smart contracts to audit."

Looking back, the signs that the industry had over-inflated were there. "The level of immaturity in this space in the first half of 2018 was very high," he said.

Sawhney described auditing smart contracts that hadn't even met the very basics of a project's stated intention, such as advertising one token supply on a project's website but listing another in its smart contract.

He ascribed this to negligence rather than maliciousness. Some teams he saw had clearly cut and pasted from another team's smart contract without changing very much at all.

But other companies were prepared to take an unethical course, offering Hosho a large cut of their token emission if they would give their smart contracts a clean bill of health. As a U.S.-based company overseen by U.S. regulators, however, Hosho declined the business.

"We were told very scammy things," he said.

One other sign that a freeze had taken hold: it wasn't able to fill a conference featuring Andreas Antonopoulos.

Its conference, HoshoCon, only sold about 350 tickets for an event on blockchain security that ran from October 9 to 11 last year. In the end, it felt empty because the company ran it in one of the big Las Vegas convention spaces.

"HoshoCon was a success in my eyes," Sawhney told us, saying losses there weren't instrumental in the staffing cuts that came the next month. He added:

"The money that we lost isn't money that we lost if we do it again, and we're going to do it again."

Shrink staff, expand services

Looking back, Sawhney sees a lot of things that they could have done differently during the boom.

"I would hire slower," he said. "We got a little bit excited about going to the moon in this industry."

He also would have hired broader. He let his staff convince him that their whole team needed to be based in the U.S., which makes for a very expensive team. Today, he's very much focused on expanding the technical team in Ukraine.

Lastly, he doesn't regret taking part of Hosho's payments in crypto, but he would have exited more of it into fiat. Early on, they paid all their bills in their fiat income and held the crypto. He said:

"If ethereum is at $1,000 you feel like you're a hedge fund. If ethereum is $200, you feel you should liquidate some of your ethereum to pay the bills."

Still, Hosho sees a path to recovery. Its experience has allowed it to run leaner with more automated tools for its smart contract and protocol audits. "We are much faster than we were ever before," he said.

But the company is not staying solely in that lane. Much of Hosho's team has white-hat security services experiences and it's selling those as well, to crypto firms or anyone who needs them.

"Today we have cryptocurrency exchanges losing two to $2.5 million per day," he said, a point that Ledger's CEO has emphasized on this site.

"A lot of these things can be avoided with regular penetration testing." So, the company is spending a lot of time educating founders in crypto about best practices from other industries.

"We are really focused on expanding our presence into Asia," he said, a place where he says there is much less competition for security talent and more blockchain growth.

The point is to keep the company afloat and its reputation strong until the overall industry comes back. He said:

"Basically it's a game to stay alive."

Hosho co-founder Hartej Sawhney image via Hosho/Facebook

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