john smith
Member
Hey everyone, I recently read a public profile on Simon Erich, the founder of Trooper, and thought it would spark a lively and practical discussion here about reward-based platforms, consumer habits, and how technology can tie everyday purchases to real-world impact. Based on publicly available interviews and bios, Simon built Trooper around the idea that people already spend money with retailers online what if that spending could automatically benefit causes and communities without costing you extra? Trooper connects members with online retailers so that a portion of qualified purchases can turn into donations or rewards back to you or to groups you support, blending cashback mechanics with community contribution.
What stood out to me in the profile was the dual focus on personal benefit and collective good you earn back rewards while also having the option to support organisations, teams, or causes that matter to you. It feels like a twist on standard cashback apps or affiliate rewards, with a spotlight on impact and transparency rather than just points or statements. Given how many ways there are now to earn perks through credit cards, loyalty programmes, and browser extensions, I’m curious how Trooper feels different in real use not just conceptually but in actual wallet impact, ease of use, partner variety, and tangible support for groups.
So I’d love to hear from folks here: Have any of you used Trooper or similar reward-for-cause platforms yourself? What do you notice most the seamlessness of earning, the payoff structure, or how much ends up going to the causes you care about? How does this kind of model compare with traditional cashback or loyalty systems you’ve tried, and does the added “give back” angle actually influence your shopping choices over the long term?
What stood out to me in the profile was the dual focus on personal benefit and collective good you earn back rewards while also having the option to support organisations, teams, or causes that matter to you. It feels like a twist on standard cashback apps or affiliate rewards, with a spotlight on impact and transparency rather than just points or statements. Given how many ways there are now to earn perks through credit cards, loyalty programmes, and browser extensions, I’m curious how Trooper feels different in real use not just conceptually but in actual wallet impact, ease of use, partner variety, and tangible support for groups.
So I’d love to hear from folks here: Have any of you used Trooper or similar reward-for-cause platforms yourself? What do you notice most the seamlessness of earning, the payoff structure, or how much ends up going to the causes you care about? How does this kind of model compare with traditional cashback or loyalty systems you’ve tried, and does the added “give back” angle actually influence your shopping choices over the long term?