As Bitcoin DeFi grows, the focus is subtly changing from getting into it to how it's organized. Early Bitcoin DeFi was mainly about connecting: getting Bitcoin into systems where it could be used. But the next step is about something more difficult—making Bitcoin-based income something people can hold without constantly dealing with the underlying complexity.
@Lorenzo Protocol #LorenzoProtocol
This is where Lorenzo’s approach becomes understandable. Instead of trying to be "just another place to earn," it presents itself as a way to manage assets on the blockchain: a system that combines strategies, risk limits, and income rules into reusable investment options. In practice, this means users can have an experience closer to what people in traditional markets already know—owning a share of a strategy—instead of managing many positions across different platforms.
That change is important because Bitcoin holders are often more careful. They want income, but they also want to understand: what creates profits, what can go wrong, what the potential losses are, and how to get out during market swings. If Bitcoin DeFi is to grow beyond a small group of expert users, it needs systems that make strategies clear, transferable, and manageable—not just profitable.
Lorenzo’s long-term plan is straightforward: when Bitcoin becomes a useful asset on the blockchain, the successful ones won't just be places for trading. They will be the systems that turn complex processes into simple products.



