Jeremy Wood Built Cardano Slow and Steady from the Start

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Jeremy Wood
  • Jeremy Wood co-founded IOHK and helped establish Cardano’s academic-first blockchain model after leaving Ethereum.
  • Though he stepped down in 2020, Cardano’s governance and design still reflect Jeremy Wood’s early vision.

In a crypto world often characterized by vocal outbursts and media attention, Jeremy Wood has chosen a quieter path. But it was on that path that he helped shape the foundation of one of the most ambitious blockchain projects in history: Cardano. Not many people know his face, let alone hear his voice at conferences or Twitter Spaces. But without his role, Cardano might never have been born.

Jeremy Wood: From Osaka Classrooms to the Heart of Ethereum

Jeremy Wood is not a genius programmer who has been hacking since he was a child. He is more like someone who slowly entered the crypto world through life experience. After graduating from Indiana University–Purdue, he moved to Osaka in 2008. There, he taught English and designed curriculum. Not a job that sounds “very crypto.” But in the middle of that routine, he began to learn about Bitcoin. Then everything changed.

In 2013, he founded the Bitcoin Kansai community—one of the first places where blockchain thinkers met in Japan. His interest deepened until he came to Ethereum, where he served as operations manager. This is where fate brought him together with Charles Hoskinson. Both had a vision in common: they wanted to make blockchain a system that was not just hype, but had a strong scientific basis.

However, the relationship with Ethereum did not last long. Jeremy and Charles left after they had differences of opinion—especially on how Ethereum would go forward. If the project chose to go the non-profit route, they believed that blockchain should be able to stand on a strong and transparent incentive system.

The Man Behind Cardano’s Academic Backbone

From that separation was founded Input Output Hong Kong (IOHK), now better known as IOG. This is where Jeremy Wood played a key role as Chief Strategy Officer. While Hoskinson was the frontman speaking on stage, Wood was the strategy brain behind the scenes.

He formed research partnerships with universities such as Edinburgh and Tokyo Tech and championed academic standards in blockchain development.

The approach taken was quite strange for some crypto players at the time. While many projects were racing to create short whitepapers and rush ICOs, Cardano wrote academic papers, waited for peer-review, and only then wrote the code. It took longer, but Wood believed this was the best way to build a resilient system.

Some might ask, why bother? Jeremy’s answer is, if we are willing to spend years building an airplane or a bridge with a multi-layered testing process, why should blockchain be built like setting up a makeshift tent?

Despite his enormous role, Jeremy Wood decided to step down as CSO in 2020. He never explained his reasons publicly. Some speculated that he wanted to live a quieter life, away from the increasing pressures of the industry. But what is clear is that to this day he remains an important token holder in the Cardano ecosystem, and the structures he helped build are still in use.

Interestingly, his decision to step down was not the end of his involvement. Many aspects are a direct legacy of Jeremy’s way of thinking—especially in terms of governance and a fair tokenomic model. Cardano is now continuing to develop an on-chain governance system, and much of his approach stems from the initial ideas he formed at the beginning of the project.

While many people are trying to be the “Elon Musk” of the crypto space, Jeremy Wood is proving that you don’t always have to be flashy to make a big difference. Sometimes, the best strategy is to work quietly, but with a clear direction.

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