Steve Beauregard is the CEO and founder of GoCoin, a merchant-focused digital currency gateway that offers businesses the ability to accept digital currencies such as BTC, LTC and DOGE.
GoCoin raised $1.5m in funding led by Bitcoin Shop this March to further its goal of expanding the use of digital currencies around the world, and in particular, in emerging markets.
Beauregard recently spoke about his work during the âBitcoin Merchant On-Rampâ panel at Inside Bitcoins NYC on 7th April as part of a discussion that addressed digital marketing techniques, among other topics. There, CoinDesk sat down with Beauregard for a conversation that touched on his companyâs interest in altcoins, its assessment of the international digital currency market and more.
CoinDesk: Thereâs a number of bitcoin companies competing in the merchant space. GoCoin was a bit of a latecomer, as it was founded in July of last year. Why did you believe GoCoin could compete in the space?
Steve Beauregard: I think within a couple of years there will be five to 10 companies like ours. Thereâs plenty of space at this point. Youâre also going to start to see payment processors vertically align with which verticals theyâll serve.
So, like political campaigns are their own angle. Weâve done some political fundraisers with bitcoin. Thereâs specific needs, they need to collect certain information, they need to be able to verify who the donor is, and so thatâs sort of a niche that weâve started to carve out thatâs more specific.
I think that where you focus your sales efforts is where youâre going to have your most success. Weâre looking at international businesses, weâve got ourselves organized as an international company thatâs serving Europe, Southeast Asia and then also the Americas.
Looking beyond digital currencies, which company or companies do you hold up as an ideal for where you want your company to be in the space?
Steve Beauregard: I definitely think of PayPal, thatâs sort of the obvious one. That said, I think that weâve taken more of a laser-focus on serving merchants, weâre not trying to be all things to all people.
I think Coinbase serves many masters if you will. Theyâre taking the wallet, theyâre doing cold storage, theyâre more in my mind a consumer play, and âOh by the way, we also serve merchants.â
We take more of a âHey, weâre going to be high-service for merchants, provide solutions for high-volume online operators.â
Your company has also been one of the more high-profile supports of altcoins, adding LTC and DOGE support. Can you speak to the business case for altcoins and why they make sense as part of GoCoinâs strategy?
Steve Beauregard: I think that whatâs unique about the other coins is the characteristics of the people who own those coins are different than bitcoin. Bitcoin has a very tech roots, but I see dogecoin skews a bit younger.
Litecoin sort of became, the miners that are mining litecoin are the ones that missed out on the early days of bitcoin, and so, thereâs a lot of people who started mining litecoin because they could make a lot more money mining litecoin than mining bitcoin.
They see their money a bit differently, and I think theyâre more willing to transact with litecoin in many cases than they are with bitcoin.
Why do you believe other bitcoin businesses have been hesitant to reach out to or otherwise embrace some of the more prominent altcoin communities?
Steve Beauregard: First of all, some people believe that thereâs already enough education you have to do to get people to understand bitcoin, and when you get into litecoin it becomes sort of dilutive.
I think thatâs one thing, I also think that weâre probably the first company to look at coins as being just another currency and we designed our system from the ground up to be able to bolt on other currencies as we see fit.
So, I think that from our standpoint weâve designed the system in such a way that is very flexible. I doubt that the first movers in the space designed their systems with the same considerations. I think they built their platforms for bitcoin, while they could take on others, i think it would be very disruptive to their existing base.
Do you see bitcoin as the long-term frontrunner in the space?
Steve Beauregard: Iâm agnostic about it. Iâm a believer in digital currencies, and i think that each has a characteristic that gives it value.
I like that litecoin is sort of more fair, you donât need a ton of money to be able to mine litecoin. It doesnât take as much power and as much electricity. Some of the other coins that are proof of stake have interesting characteristics.
Obviously, bitcoin is the gold standard at this point, but I remember Napster.
Speaking about international markets, thereâs been a lot of discussion about how underbanked consumers can benefit from digital currencies. But, thereâs also the awareness that these same individuals might not have the tech-savvy to embrace these solutions. Whatâs your assessment of this gap?
Steve Beauregard: I still think itâs substantial. I donât really worry about remittances per se, but whatâs more interesting to me is the onramp for shoppers.
People who live in Southeast Asia, they canât shop on Western websites because they donât have a credit card. I would like to see these tools get to the point where they can shop on these sites, and that thereâs enough sites that they want to shop on. The tipping point is the onramp of getting coins in their hands.
I think ATMs will make a big dent, the ability to put cash in and get coins and be able to go shop. I think thatâs going to do quite well in Singapore and some of the other more technical countries.
Since your business has a focus on serving Asian markets, can you speak to the situation in this region given the uncertainty with which these regulators are approaching the issue?
Steve Beauregard: Iâll speak more to Singapore. The monetary authority there has been very receptive. Theyâve given the same buyer beware warnings, and the tax regulators have given pretty clear guidance there as well.
I think China is the wild card. Thailandâs interesting since they did a reversal, since theyâre central bank called bitcoin illegal and theyâve since reversed on that.
Some of the other markets, I havenât spent as much time analyzing, since they havenât developed as quickly as I thought they might.
This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
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