pull down to refresh

I'd avoid suggesting apps, especially if they require KYC. That's inconsistent with the bitcoin ethos. My suggestion is to simply focus on the SATSCARD onboarding; the receiver will figure out how to spend, or how to fund, the bitcoin in it whenever ready for it.

I put together a printable tri-fold for you, but that I'll actually use in the coming weeks. It has a dedicated space for placing the SATSCARD and another middle space for writing some good wishes notes for the receiver. You can check more detail and source file here #1339714

a "SATASCARD" is only an "N" away from being
a "SANTASCARD;" πŸ˜…πŸ˜…πŸ˜…

reply

This is very pretty, unfortunately does not align with the bounty instructions. It seems our ideas on intro level bitcoin savers (not users) are different.

reply

Thanks for the feedback! I understand we have different approaches, so let me explain the reasoning behind mineβ€”I think it might actually better serve your "intro level saver" goal.

Consider this scenario:

  1. Person A gets your detailed guide β†’ feels obligated to follow 10+ steps β†’ gets stuck on River KYC β†’ frustrated, card sits unused
  2. Person B gets focused SATSCARD intro β†’ understands they own Bitcoin β†’ explores at their own pace when motivated β†’ successful onboarding

If you need funding instructions, I can create a separate supplementary sheet for "When you're ready to add more Bitcoin" that covers funding options without KYC requirements (BTMs, peer-to-peer, etc.). But cramming that into a gift introduction, I think it just creates cognitive overload. Better to gift the card already loaded, no?

reply