{"id":5039,"date":"2020-04-03T11:20:27","date_gmt":"2020-04-03T15:20:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cointelegraph.com\/magazine\/?p=5039"},"modified":"2020-04-09T13:48:35","modified_gmt":"2020-04-09T17:48:35","slug":"journeys-in-blockchain-yoni-assia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cointelegraph.com\/magazine\/2020\/04\/03\/journeys-in-blockchain-yoni-assia","title":{"rendered":"Journeys in Blockchain: Yoni Assia of eToro"},"content":{"rendered":"
Back in school, we all knew Yoni Assia. Or at least, a<\/i> Yoni Assia.<\/strong><\/p>\n It\u2019s not hard to remember that kid.<\/span><\/p>\n Gum-strewn desks. Wobbly chairs. The funky odor of your adolescent classmates. A chalkboard\u2026 those terrible inspirational posters… lockers stuffed with old lunches.<\/span><\/p>\n Recall a particular detail from school: that one kid, with the smart mouth. He rarely listens, but he\u2019s always talking. He bugs the teachers constantly. And the fact that he aces tests without really trying? That gets right under their skin.<\/span><\/p>\n Yoni Assia \u2014 <\/span>that <\/span><\/i>kid in the past \u2014 is the CEO of eToro today.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cI got in a lot of trouble,\u201d admits Assia. \u201cI wasn\u2019t an easy kid at school but I had very good grades, so for teachers that was even more challenging.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Assia admits that this sometimes worked to his benefit. \u201cSome teachers would even give me a pass from coming to class. They\u2019d say, if I can get good grades on the test without being in class, maybe it\u2019s better both for me and the class.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Often, Assia was simply bored. \u201cI fell asleep in electronics and the teacher had a tendency to throw a marker at me… He would ask me a question when I woke up. What really annoyed him was not that I fell asleep, but that when I woke up, I would be able to give an answer.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n To keep Assia appropriately occupied his parents gave him a computer. Assia was deeply enamored of the connectivity the internet offered, spending countless hours surfing bulletin boards, downloading the latest Simpsons episode, and talking to people all over the world.<\/span><\/p>\n In his early teens Assia started learning about programming with software called \u201cMagic\u201d, provided by his father, who was the CEO of the publicly traded company. He would make simple programs for his parents, like a task automator for his mother\u2019s law office. Paired with the many family conversations he shared with his father and grandfather about capital markets, Assia was busily building a unique blend of skills that would contribute to his future.<\/span><\/p>\n Reflecting on the influence of his grandfather, Assia shares, \u201cI took from him a lot of my interests in capital markets and finance: a very analytical person, looking at everything from a banker\u2019s perspective.\u201d Assia explains his father also played a key role in helping him learn about markets and technology. \u201cI do feel lucky to have been born to a family of entrepreneurs.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Long before eToro existed, Assia was obsessed with trading. He recalls trading stocks during the dot com bubble at a young age, \u201cThat was very exciting, sort of like the crypto bubble era, or like what we\u2019re seeing now with markets reaching all-time highs and then collapsing. You can learn a lot from that process.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Following high school, Assia joined the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) as a programmer in the technology unit of the Intelligence Corps. During his service, Assia says, he studied for his Bachelor\u2019s degree in computer sciences and management \u2014 and then he clams up.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cI can\u2019t talk too much about what I did in the IDF obviously, because I was in the Intelligence Corps. I could tell you, but then I\u2019d have to kill you.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n I decide not to pursue this line of questioning.<\/span><\/p>\n Emerging from the IDF, Assia became the head of technology for a company specializing in video capture platforms. It built small-factor computers that worked with cameras set to record the action at rollercoaster rides all over Europe and North America. The captured video was sent via WiFi to a booth where DVDs of the footage could be sold to riders.<\/span><\/p>\n But the markets continued to attract his attention. It was like a giant game, he says, where things are constantly on the move.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Yoni\u2019s brother Ronen pointed out that the user-experience for traders was poor. Antiquated trading interfaces consisted of a collection of boring graphs and complicated spreadsheets. The brothers brainstormed how to simplify access to global markets and make the experience more enjoyable,\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n eToro was born.<\/span><\/p>\n The brothers began building a unique trading interface by considering the kinds of platforms that enjoyed mass appeal. Taking a cue from social media apps like Facebook and Twitter, the brothers designed the experience with connectivity and gamification in mind.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Embedded chat would allow users to see each other and compare trades on the platform. One function of the new platform called Open Book \u201cshowed user trades in a big stream so you could see what everybody is trading and talk to each other about trades.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n This eventually expanded to a service called copy-trading. \u201cThe concept of copy-trading is if you don\u2019t necessarily know how to trade, you could just find the top traders and copy them automatically.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n The timing was right for the unique concept, and the company scaled rapidly during 2008-2009. \u201cIn 2008, we already had $5.5 million revenue. In 2009 we had $17.5 million revenue. That enabled us to cross the chasm of the financial crisis and prepare ourselves for raising more funds and scaling further.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Today, Assia says, eToro has grown to serve about 13 million users from more than 140 countries, with the platform available in 24 languages. “There\u2019s always something happening in the markets. That\u2019s what drives me personally. I love capital markets and crypto markets, as well.”<\/span><\/p>\nGive him something to do!<\/span><\/h4>\n
Nothing to see here<\/span><\/h4>\n
Building a user experience<\/span><\/h4>\n
About that Bitcoin thing…<\/span><\/h4>\n