PlenaProof Issuer Pilot Kit

Make one real institution a narrow, credible issuer.

The first issuer should not be asked to adopt everything. The pilot kit offers one controlled workflow: a defined receipt type, a small cohort, a review path, public-safe verification, and a simple outcome report.

Pilot design

A serious issuer wants clarity, liability boundaries, workload limits, and a visible benefit.

1

Choose one issuer

Registrar, NGO trustee, publisher, church office, employer, legal-aid office, or human-services agency.

2

Choose one use case

Credential status, service occurrence, authorship provenance, records intake, staff review, or beneficiary evidence.

3

Choose one cohort

Start with 5–25 records, not the whole institution.

4

Issue one receipt type

Use one VRX-1 receipt family with clear public limits and private evidence boundaries.

30-day pilot path

1

Week 1 — Scoping

Identify use case, issuer authority, records owner, privacy boundary, reviewer role, and pilot success metric.

2

Week 2 — Evidence binder

Build the binder template, claim map, sample receipt, and verification-result mockup.

3

Week 3 — Pilot issuance

Issue sample or controlled receipts for the small cohort. Keep strong claims off until legal and technical checks are done.

4

Week 4 — Review report

Summarize friction, time saved, evidence quality, refusal rate, user clarity, and next production requirements.

Pilot deliverables

DeliverableWhat it containsWhy it sells
Issuer profileName, role, authority, contact, workflow scope, pilot status.Creates a visible adoption signal.
Evidence binderClaim map, source inventory, reviewer notes, refusal/correction route.Gives staff a repeatable operating file.
Sample VRX-1 receiptReceipt ID, issuer, claim, scope limit, verification URL.Makes the abstract protocol tangible.
Public verification resultNarrow public summary with privacy boundary.Shows the end-user experience.
Pilot reportOutcome, objections, risks, next technical steps, price path.Creates a follow-up conversation.