In my view, NFTs still have a real future in digital ownership and content creation, but not in the way the market first imagined them. The long-term value is less about speculation and more about verifiable ownership, programmable rights, direct creator-to-audience relationships, and portable digital identity across platforms.
From the finance and operational side, what makes NFTs interesting is that they can turn digital ownership into something trackable and transferable in a way the internet historically has not handled well. For creators, that can mean better control over access, licensing, royalties, community benefits, and proof of authenticity. For businesses, it opens the door to new models around membership, collectibles, ticketing, brand engagement, digital commerce, and rights management.
Where I think the market matured is in realizing that the technology works best when the NFT is tied to a real utility layer. If it is only a collectible with no broader ecosystem or purpose, the value can fade quickly. But when it acts as an access layer, a rights layer, or a record of ownership that can move across systems, it becomes much more durable.
One example I find particularly innovative is Nike’s SWOOSH initiative. What stands out is that it framed NFTs less as a speculative crypto product and more as a digital product and brand infrastructure layer. That approach matters because it points to where this space is likely going which is large consumer brands and platforms using blockchain-based ownership in a way that feels familiar to mainstream users while still enabling provenance, portability, and programmable engagement behind the scenes.
From my experience working around blockchain, finance, and high-growth companies, the biggest winners in this space will likely be projects that make ownership useful, not just visible. The future of NFTs is probably less about hype and more about quietly becoming part of how digital products, communities, and rights are managed.
