Bitcoin doesn’t need another Michael Saylor, it needs someone else.

Bitcoin doesn’t need another Michael Saylor, it needs someone else.

By Konrad Fitzpatrick · 2/9/2026

Five years ago, Michael Saylor was heralded by many as the best thing for Bitcoin. As the premier ‘Bitcoin influencer’ of the last half-decade, he heightened mainstream acceptance, understanding, and accessibility. However, the purchase pattern of Bitcoin is changing, arguably in the wrong direction. While corporate treasuries have accumulated over 1,000,000 BTC, the number of individual Bitcoin wallets with balances has fallen by nearly 50%. We need someone as influential as Michael Saylor, but for a different cohort. I call this hypothetical new influencer Mitchell Maylor, and here’s how he will take Bitcoin adoption to the next level.

Quick Recap In 2020, Michael Saylor transformed the Bitcoin conversation. Since then, he has impacted the space in three main ways:

  • Perspective Shift: Saylor helped many understand why Bitcoin is useful and valuable. He focused on preserving capital over long periods (100+ years), the fallibility of custodians, and Bitcoin’s CAGR becoming the new capital benchmark. He famously described cash as a "melting ice cube" while Bitcoin’s scarcity is imperishable.

  • Widespread Access: By purchasing a massive amount of BTC, MicroStrategy (MSTR) evolved from a software company into a Bitcoin instrument. This allowed investors to gain exposure through traditional stockbrokers and tax-advantaged accounts, arguably paving the way for the Bitcoin ETFs that dominated in 2024 and 2025.

  • The Treasury Playbook: Saylor executed a "speculative attack" on the USD by purchasing BTC via cheap credit and convertible loans. As the price of Bitcoin rises, the stock follows, increasing the company’s ability to repeat the cycle.

The Problem with the Saylor Effect Despite his success, Saylor’s approach has created new challenges:

  • MSTR’s Bitcoin is held in third-party custody, creating a massive "honeypot" risk.

  • Shareholders miss out on the sovereignty benefits of self-custody.

  • MSTR’s Bitcoin is often purchased OTC (Over-the-Counter), which doesn't immediately impact public order books or drive "Number Go Up" (NGU) marketing.

  • Less Bitcoin is ending up in the hands of "normies", the everyday people who need it most to protect against hyperinflation and asset seizures.

Lessons for Mitchell Maylor During Saylor’s rise, three other financial waves showed how influence can capture the social consciousness:

  1. WallStreetBets (WSB): Showed that everyday folks could leverage group purchasing power to topple hedge fund positions.

  2. NFTs: Proved that people could be influenced to value digital scarcity, even if the underlying assets were questionable.

  3. DeFi: Attracted users through high yields and "unit bias", the psychological appeal of owning millions of low-priced tokens. Many people mistakenly think Bitcoin is "too expensive" because they don't realize they can buy thousands of Satoshis for $100.

Mitchell Maylor will take these lessons from WSB, NFTs, and DeFi and apply them to the Millennial, Gen Z, and Gen Alpha cohorts. While Saylor convinced the financially savvy to buy MSTR and ETFs, Mitchell Maylor will influence everyday people to pull their Bitcoin into self-custody. He understands that while the elites are accumulating Bitcoin, they don't need it as desperately as the middle class does. By packaging the idea of Bitcoin in a receptive, modern way, Maylor will usher in a new wave of true sovereign adoption.

KF
Konrad Fitzpatrick

Konrad has been a Bitcoin Analyst since 2018 leveraging an economics background to deliver unique insights on Bitcoin, product, bitcoin mining, and macro-economics.