OpenRevenue Scout Guidelines

This page outlines how the OpenRevenue Scout Program operates and what is expected from participants.

Scouts are expected to follow these guidelines when participating in the program.


Important:
Before starting outreach, OpenRevenue Scouts are expected to review the OpenRevenue website and fully understand the mission and objectives of the project. Scouts should only begin outreach once they are comfortable explaining the concept clearly and responsibly.


OpenRevenue Mission

OpenRevenue aims to create an alternative funding model using crypto trading activity. We create a crypto token for each participant and automatically direct the generated trading fees to them. This process runs transparently on the blockchain. The goal is to turn trading activity into a community driven funding mechanism.


OpenRevenue Candidates

OpenRevenue participants may include content creators, artists, independent researchers, open-source developers, environmental or reforestation projects, indie game developers, fitness or longevity creators, local community leaders, fundraisers (especially for environmental or animal causes), creators whose monetization has been restricted on platforms such as X or YouTube, startups, and other mission driven builders.

Participants should have at least 5,000 followers or subscribers on one of the following platforms: X, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, or Facebook.

The account or community should also demonstrate active engagement from followers through posts, comments, or interactions.

Candidates with a strong narrative, mission, or community identity should be considered high quality leads, even if their audience size is relatively smaller.


Geographic Restrictions

At this stage, OpenRevenue is focused on participants based in the United States, Canada, European Union, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and South Korea.
Scouts should only conduct outreach to candidates in these regions.


OpenRevenue Scout Role

Scouts are responsible for finding and reaching out to potential candidates and introducing them to the OpenRevenue model.

Your goal is to bring high potential participants, not large numbers of weak leads.

OpenRevenue will handle the final onboarding, but by the time a participant is introduced, they should already understand the concept and be open to using OpenRevenue.


Participant Expectations

Before being introduced to the founder, participants should understand and be comfortable with the OpenRevenue model.

Participants are expected to publicly acknowledge their participation (for example, by sharing a post or including the token’s contract address in their bio), although active promotion is not strictly required.

Scouts should not introduce participants who are unwilling to meet this expectation.


Lead Quality

Scouts should filter weak leads before introducing them.

Follower count is not the only factor, candidates with a strong narrative or engaged community may also be a strong fit.

Guiding principle:

Fewer strong participants are better than many weak ones.

OpenRevenue reserves the right to stop working with scouts who consistently bring low quality or unqualified leads.


Outreach

Scouts may focus on specific niches (meme pages, pet pages, niche communities, creator networks, etc.) to reduce overlap and improve targeting.


Communication

Scouts must communicate honestly and responsibly when explaining OpenRevenue.

Scouts must not misrepresent OpenRevenue in any way.

You may explain that participating in OpenRevenue does not require upfront financial investment from the participant. However, scouts must not promise guaranteed income or financial success. Participants should understand that funding outcomes depend on community interest and trading activity, and results are not guaranteed.

If detailed questions arise, scouts should introduce the participant to the OpenRevenue founder for further discussion.


Lead Introduction

When a participant shows serious interest, the scout should:

• share screenshots of the conversation
• introduce the participant to the OpenRevenue founder

The founder will handle final discussions and onboarding.


Onboarding

Onboarding may be scheduled. OpenRevenue typically launches one token at a time, so launches may occur a few days after agreement.


Lead Attribution

A participant introduction is considered valid only when the scout shares the initial outreach conversation and introduces the participant to OpenRevenue.
OpenRevenue reserves the right to determine whether a lead qualifies as a valid introduction.
Only introductions that directly result in a successful onboarding will qualify for the scout reward.


Self-Referral and Authenticity

Scouts may not introduce accounts they own, control, or are directly affiliated with.

All participants must be independent and verifiable individuals or communities with an authentic audience.

OpenRevenue reserves the right to request additional verification and reject any participant suspected of being controlled, created, or influenced by the scout.

Rewards will not be paid for self-referrals or manipulated accounts.


Reward

If a participant you introduce successfully launches through OpenRevenue, you will receive:

$500 worth of USDC

Payment will be sent within 24 hours after the participant is onboarded.

Rewards are only paid for participants who successfully complete onboarding and launch through OpenRevenue.

Additional bonuses may be granted at OpenRevenue’s discretion for exceptional participants with strong audience size, engagement, or overall impact.


Coordination

Scouts and OpenRevenue will typically have a weekly check-in to review outreach and potential leads.


Principles

The scout network operates on transparency, integrity, and commitment.

OpenRevenue reserves the right to remove any scout from the program at its discretion. 

By participating as an OpenRevenue Scout, you confirm that you have read, understood, and agree to follow these guidelines.