Thoughtworks research signals caution to businesses exploring Web 3.0 

Thoughtworks research signals caution to businesses exploring Web 3.0 

Thoughtworks, a global technology consultancy that integrates strategy, design and engineering to drive digital innovation, has released Looking Glass, a guide to the critical technology-driven shifts set to shape business in 2023 and beyond. Based on Thoughtworks’ unique approach to delivering cutting-edge innovation to businesses before new technologies reach mass adoption, this report offers industry leaders recommendations on how to best compete and become disruptors themselves. 

For many, Web 3.0 is virtually synonymous with cryptocurrencies, NFTs and other blockchain technology. Yet Web 3.0 is best understood as a collection of building blocks that could serve as the foundation for a more distributed future of the Internet. As governments and organisations adopt concepts such as decentralised identity, businesses should carefully evaluate Web 3.0 technologies through the lens of tangible value for customers, to be ready for potential brand and commercial opportunities. 

“For many businesses, the biggest Web 3.0 opportunities are likely to emerge around reducing friction and digitalisation,” said Dr Rebecca Parsons, Chief Technology Officer at Thoughtworks. “For some, Web 3.0 has become synonymous with volatility and ‘get rich quick’ schemes. If the security and privacy aspects of blockchain are realised, the gain in distributed identity and greater end-user control could open up new ways for businesses to maintain customer data privacy while earning customer trust and loyalty in Web 3.0.” 

The six lenses in today’s Looking Glass report are: 

  • Accelerating sustainability: Despite the urgency, sustainability is not yet ‘business as usual’ for many organisations. 
  • Platforms as products: Platforms need ongoing attention and to evolve and adapt in response to developer feedback and the changing business landscape. 
  • Evaluating Web 3.0: Avoid getting dazzled by the hype and focus on what Web 3.0 offers that are directly relevant to your business. 
  • Partnering with AI: Innovations in ML and AI are ‘trickling down’ and becoming even more accessible, more embedded in the business and more productive. 
  • Making the Metaverse: Other fast-advancing technologies including VR/AR/XR, voice, gesture and facial recognition, are already ‘here’ and likely to be more immediately relevant to businesses in a way the Metaverse — at least for now — is not. 
  • Hostile tech: Balancing threats to security and consumer privacy with evolving regulations and simply doing the right thing will be critical to remaining competitive and fostering customer loyalty. 
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