Sramana Mitra: This has been an interesting conversation. Do you want to give me a range of how large a company you’ve built with CashStar and probing into the unmet needs of the gift card industry? David Stone: We raised $28 million to date, which in the state of Maine is incredible. Most of the
Sramana Mitra: What about loyalty? We’ve talked a lot about the process of gift giving. Would you talk about loyalty? You said you’ve also worked quite a bit on the intersection of loyalty and payments. David Stone: Yes, there are obviously a ton of players in the loyalty space, and a lot of interesting companies
Sramana Mitra: What about returns? In the previous use case, you said you were in a Gap, saw a pink sweater, and decided to give that as a gift to a friend. Let’s say the friend receives that pink sweater and decides she wants a different color. How is that handled in your system? David
Sramana Mitra: So, you’ve been following the payments industry and the digital loyalty industry quite closely. David Stone: Right, and it’s that intersection that is my sweet spot: the digital consumer, how people pay and build loyalty, and how they give gifts and reward, and the confluence of those circles. And let me just say
Whether you love them or hate them, gift cards have found a place for themselves in our society. Employers use them as rewards and consumers give them to friends and family members for birthdays, graduations, even weddings, especially when they don’t know exactly what to buy. CashStar, based in Portland, Maine, has come up with