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OpenKol monetizes access and workflow, not outcomes. The one rule: scoring stays deterministic and independent. Paying users can get more usage and deeper tooling — but never “better scores.”

1) Freemium core

Designed for low-friction onboarding. Includes:
  • a daily lookup cap for guests and free users
  • public analysis pages and shareable previews
  • basic profile views and medal filtering
Goal: users hit the “aha” moment fast.

2) Pro subscriptions (individuals)

For power users who verify calls daily. Planned features:
  • higher or unlimited lookups
  • deeper history per KOL/token
  • advanced filters (medal thresholds, risk flags, liquidity bands)
  • alerts and watchlists (e.g., “notify me when a tracked KOL posts a new call”)

3) Team plans (projects, agencies, DAOs)

For organizations running campaigns or vetting promoters. Planned features:
  • multi-seat workspaces
  • campaign tracking + reporting
  • exports (CSV / sheets) for internal reviews
  • partner shortlists based on verified performance

4) API access (developers and data partners)

For dashboards, terminals, and analytics partners. Planned features:
  • API keys + usage tiers (quota-based)
  • call-level data (scores, ROI context, risk flags)
  • profile metrics and leaderboards
  • bulk export for research partners

5) Sponsored placements (optional, strictly separated)

Sponsored exposure may be offered only under these constraints:
  • clearly labeled as sponsored
  • never changes scoring inputs, weights, or results
  • never overrides ranking logic in “top” lists unless explicitly shown as ads
If it threatens trust, it’s not worth it.

Optional: token alignment (if applicable)

If OpenKol introduces a token, this page should explicitly explain:
  • what the token is used for (utility)
  • how demand is created (sinks)
  • what value accrual exists (if any)
  • emissions, vesting, and unlock schedule
Ambiguous “token vibes” reduce trust — clarity increases it.

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