Why did you switch to daily vs weekly prizes? Since the change, it doesn't feel as exciting. It's not as fun to win 7 cents a day. The changes in the prize structure also makes it seem much less likely to win anything of value. Especially when the weekly totals have been less than they used to be since the change. I loved the idea of winning something and waiting until the end of the week to see. I have only ever bought a couple lotto tickets, but I found the prospect of winning 1,000, 5,000, or 20,000 bucks through yotta thrilling. Of course that did not happen and after looking it up, the chances of wining is even less than lotto. I recently pulled my money from yotta and put it in a high yield savings account where it'll earn at least 2-3% more on average. What motivated the change? And do you think you'll ever be able to offer competitive APY rates or better chances at winning something that matters (not including the products you offer to raise your chances like the bank account and direct deposit and stuff - I'm not going to sign up for more stuff)?
Mucky_Peet2 karma
Why did you switch to daily vs weekly prizes? Since the change, it doesn't feel as exciting. It's not as fun to win 7 cents a day. The changes in the prize structure also makes it seem much less likely to win anything of value. Especially when the weekly totals have been less than they used to be since the change. I loved the idea of winning something and waiting until the end of the week to see. I have only ever bought a couple lotto tickets, but I found the prospect of winning 1,000, 5,000, or 20,000 bucks through yotta thrilling. Of course that did not happen and after looking it up, the chances of wining is even less than lotto. I recently pulled my money from yotta and put it in a high yield savings account where it'll earn at least 2-3% more on average. What motivated the change? And do you think you'll ever be able to offer competitive APY rates or better chances at winning something that matters (not including the products you offer to raise your chances like the bank account and direct deposit and stuff - I'm not going to sign up for more stuff)?
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