Hey
@W1ZSPR3
thanks for continuing the discussion here:
What will you do with the 20,000 cards and how will you select who these go to as well as determine the amount they might spend beforehand?
Those cards will be distributed via fintech, merchants & e-commerce distributors (CocoWallet already signed an LoI, and you can find more in the proposal document), as a part of our program, we require them to onboard users with the needed characteristics, the spending is based on market data from average income from remittances recipients, freelancers and daily people with % of capture in the card. You can find more information with data sources in our spreadsheet, There you will find 3 scenarios, low (+3M USD), medium (+6M USD), high (+10M USD, where I prefer to sit to make this project ambitious and set my high standard).
For instance, do you have a waiting list of prequalified customers in the buckets you have specified (remittances, freelancers, community/crypto/fx savers)?
Short answer, no, as you mentioned we are B2B2C, we have advanced conversations with the mentioned startups, and initial conversation with a bank, as fellow YCombinator alumni I want to focus on sales over the next months, and translate the engineering hat to the team, then I can use my powerful network of YC for startups that are addressable with our solution, we provide them the card + infra + on/off ramps, in exchange we receive its value in AssetHub.
You mentioned your strategy was B2B2C, and I assume that means you're not going B2C. Does that mean you're relying on your partner organizations to supply customers who have an average of $500/month capture card spend? How does this work? Have they vetted this estimation and do they have a strong belief that they will be able to acquire customers with this average card spend?
As I mentioned before, the $10M USD goal is achievable. It’s interesting how the community wants to make my job easier. To provide a better understanding of the risks and opportunities, I created three scenarios where any member can review and set their own expectations. Regarding the partnerships, we can define the requirements for the selected users. In terms of user acquisition, these partners already have the users, but many of those users don’t have a physical debit card, as it’s expensive to provide one. That’s why we offer it as a grant, with the requirement to hold value on Kusama and use our infrastructure.
How many of the cards are going to the "street distribution to low end people" in Colombia, if any? What would you expect to be the average spend for that program, as well as the impact for them of having this product?
For me, this is my favorite part of the program because it could have a huge impact in marginalized areas of Colombia. Providing a card connected to an on-chain account will help people receive donations without intermediaries and spend that money wherever they want. you can find information of how many of those cards will be distributed in our volumes projection.