Companies are telling employees to stay home. Firms are debating when to shutter the office. Health officials are asking businesses to âdust offâ the pandemic playbook. But for some, the coronavirus contingency plan is built in.
A number of cryptocurrency exchanges have favored dispersed workforces since their launch. In an industry defined by the ideals of decentralization, companies like Binance and Kraken say they have been implementing this playbook for years: Most of their employees already work remotely.
And while firms around the world scramble to develop protocols for what is increasingly likely to become a pandemic, and as capital markets plummet on global investorsâ fears the worst of the coronavirus outbreak is yet to come, these exchanges say they are going about business as usual.
They donât need to shut their headquarters; they donât have headquarters
âThe Binance team works in a decentralized way, with team members scattering in different countries and regions,â said Binance representative Cecilia Zhang.Â
Her exchange is notably fluid when it comes to geography. Itâs not always clear where Binance is based or if it even has a âheadquarters,â in the office park sense. For the last few years Binance had claimed an HQ in Malta, but just last week the Maltese regulator declared that the so-called blockchain island never had a regulated or registered Binance exchange.
Lacking a headquarters becomes an asset, however, when an inexplicable act-of-god-like event such as an epidemic comes to town. Binanceâs Zhang claimed the exchange has ânot been impacted by the coronavirus outbreak.â Its employees have been working remotely and in clusters for over two years.
The Kraken exchange went a step further. Itâs spinning coronavirus into a hiring and publicity opportunity, boasting on Twitter Thursday its decentralized workers are âthrivingâ despite rising international fears.Â
âKrakenâs global collapse and pandemic survival strategy has been in place since our founding in 2011. Our remote-first, decentralized team of 800+ is thriving right now. Join us,â the firm said.Â
At peer-to-peer bitcoin exchange Hodl Hodl, which says it has no head office, âwe donât prepare ourselves actually,â said CEO Max Keidun. âSince day one weâve been fully distributed and remote.â
Not every crypto company has that option. Many remain tied to headquarters and have in recent days rushed to create policies around what could happen if and when coronavirus reaches them.
Coinbase has become the highest-profile company to list a contingency plan, outlining a four-part process where it would shutter offices and have employees work remotely depending on if and how an outbreak might progress in areas where employees live and work.
In China, where the outbreak began, exchanges and blockchain firms have had to cancel networking events, encourage employees to work remotely and delay tech upgrades.
Global Currency Organization (GCO), based in California, is on high alert since a reported case of coronavirus in Sacramento, said David Steinrueck, a representative. The team, which is developing a stablecoin, or cryptocurrency backed by U.S. dollars, is ready to disperse as soon as coronavirus reaches the San Francisco area.Â
âWe are being cautious and actively preparing to move to work from home as soon as that becomes necessary. It certainly seems like it could get worse before it gets better, so we are trying to stay ahead of it and focus on our safety above all,â Steinrueck said.
GCO has canceled all trips to the Asia-Pacific region âuntil further noticeâ and limited even domestic travel, he said.
The blockchain sleuthing firm Chainalysis has similarly nixed all ânon-essentialâ travel outside the U.S., according to spokesperson Maddie Kennedy. The firm has hubs in New York and London, but for the next four weeks, no employees working there will be traveling through the Asia-Pacific area, Europe, the U.K. or Ireland.Â
Chainalysis already had a pandemic response plan, though. Itâs in the process of updating it for COVID-19.Â
âWeâre keeping a close eye on it,â Kennedy said.