I’ve been contemplating governance lately as we internally discuss how @ZenithFdn will organize across its broad range of institutional and Web3 clients. This article struck me and I think we can learn a thing or two. The core idea: dynasty politics and meritocracy can both undermine healthy governance, one through nepotism, the other through narrow, often self-serving definitions of “merit” that recreate elite capture. This resonates for Zenith right now We never intended to become a political party, but the governance challenges we know we will also face in serving both traditional institutional clients and Web3-native organizations are strikingly parallel and what drove me to thread this. Our goal is to simply to ensure our network’s continuity and resilience as we’re a lean team whose time is precious and should only be pointed towards growth. As such, how do we create credibly neutral yet value-aligned mechanisms for network participants to govern Zenith in our stead? On the institutional side, we see organizations wrestling with succession, investor influence, and the quiet creep of “who you know” networks. On the Web3 side, we encounter token-weighted voting, early-adopter concentration, and governance designs that can inadvertently create new forms of entrenched power, sometimes called “plutocracy by another name.” Pure dynasty-style thinking shows up as: ➜ Over-reliance on a small founding group or inner circle for key decisions ➜ Informal succession that favors familiarity over capability ➜ Cultural resistance to outsiders who challenge the established way Pure meritocracy shows up as: ➜ Narrow, easily gamed metrics that favor certain KPIs, marketing metrics, or narrative profiles ➜ Systems that undervalue context, PMF, or collaborative contributions ➜ In Web3, defaults to “those with the most tokens decide,” which can recreate wealth-based dynasties Neither extreme serves long-term resilience when clients need both deep expertise and broad legitimacy. This is what we’re reflecting on at Zenith and the article advises for a more nuanced path. Some principles guiding our internal discussions: 1. Transparent, contestable criteria ➜ Clearly define what good leadership and decision-making mean in each context, and keep the standards visible and revisable publicly. 2. Built-in renewal mechanisms ➜ Term limits, role rotation, structured succession, and regular governance reviews to prevent both dynastic lock-in and meritocratic stagnation. 3. Hybrid participation models ➜ Blend expertise with broader stakeholder voice, external advisory councils in traditional settings, quadratic voting or reputation systems in Web3. 4. Active bias auditing ➜ Regularly check whether our “merit” frameworks are filtering for unwanted homogeneity in governance roles, coordination frameworks, and proposals. 5. Accountability loops that close ➜ Strong feedback, transparent logs, and real consequences to keep any elite from becoming insulated, even within our own ranks. The goal is governance that stays adaptive, legitimate to diverse stakeholders, and delivers sustained value with the flexibility to serve both traditional financial institutions and decentralized protocols. I’m not claiming we’ve cracked it, but @GArentoft is a subject-matter-expert in DAO governance across the last decade guiding our thought process. We’re still actively discussing and the Web3 landscape keeps evolving. But this framing has sharpened the questions we’re asking ourselves: How do we build structures that resist both the comfort of our own decision making familiarity and the simplicity of narrow metrics, and find true voices of reason (our own “philosopher kings”)? To anyone out there with experiences in corporate governance, DAO design, or hybrid organizations… have you seen models that navigate between dynastic capture and meritocratic exclusion? I’d genuinely value the perspective. Link to the article: Zth.
PublishedMon, June 22, 2026
Sourcevia @HeslinKim ↗
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