A DAO — decentralized autonomous organization — is a group that runs itself through code and collective voting rather than a boss or board. Instead of a CEO making decisions, token holders propose and vote, and a smart contract carries out the result. It is one of crypto’s boldest experiments in coordination.
Rules in code, decisions by vote
A DAO’s core rules — how funds are spent, how proposals pass — live in smart contracts that everyone can read. Members hold governance tokens that act like votes. Want to fund a project or change a parameter? Submit a proposal; if the vote passes the threshold, the code executes it automatically. No back rooms, no signatures required.
What DAOs actually do
- Run protocols: many DeFi projects are governed by DAOs
- Manage treasuries: pooled funds spent by member vote
- Coordinate communities: from investment clubs to grant programs to social groups
The appeal
DAOs promise transparency (the rules and treasury are on-chain), global participation (anyone with tokens can join), and resistance to capture by any single insider. For internet-native communities spread across the world, that is a genuinely new way to organise and own something together.
Where they struggle
DAOs face real challenges: voter apathy (few members actually vote), the risk that large token holders dominate (“whale” control), slow decision-making, and murky legal status in most countries. Governance is hard even with good code. The model is promising but still maturing.
The bottom line
A DAO replaces executives with transparent code and token-holder votes, letting a global community own and steer an organisation together. It is powerful for coordination but wrestles with participation and power concentration. To understand the engine underneath, read What Is a Smart Contract?