Idea 16 · Mint, a working name
Generate branded visual assets from a prompt, and a photo of yourself if you like: sticker packs, coupons, even NFTs with their own QR codes. Share them where people already chat, and charge for them.
A scripted demo. One prompt, three assets, each with a price tag, ready to share or sell.
Stickers are the most-used creative asset in messaging, and almost nobody earns from making them.
Brands want to be in people's conversations, but a branded pack is a slow, expensive agency job.
GenAI can make these assets, messaging distributes them, wallets can charge for them. Nobody has connected the three.
"Otter in a bucket hat, ten expressions", or a shop's coupon, or a limited drop. Add a photo of yourself to star in it.
Free, £0.99, or custom. It can carry a unique QR: a coupon to redeem, an NFT to claim, a link.
People use and share them where they already chat, and you earn per pack, minus a commission.
The viral core, shared in WhatsApp and others.
A shareable code a shop or brand hands out.
A limited drop, each with its own claimable code.
The point is anything worth sharing, and worth selling.
Physical and print. Order printed stickers, or a sticker that carries a payment or claim QR to put on a product, a stall or a flyer.
Anti-phishing is a hard rule, not a feature: payment and claim QRs are signed and verified and always show their real destination, so this cannot be turned into a phishing factory.
One Asian messenger's sticker store does $270 million a year.
GenAI, chat distribution and a payment rail exist separately; connecting them is the product.
What you make is shared in the chats you already use, and every share is an advert for making your own.
Branded packs and coupons are a cheap way for brands and agencies to be in people's chats.
Commission per sale. Premium generation credits, branded-pack and coupon tools for brands and agencies, and a margin on printing and fulfilment.
No: prompt, pick, publish. Artists can upload too.
You own your packs; buyers get a licence to use them.
The same reason they pay for emotes everywhere else: identity is cheap and priceless.
Yes: they are signed, verified, and always show their real destination. We refuse to be a phishing factory.
Made in a prompt, shared in a chat, sold for 99p.
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