Monica Millares: [00:00:00] Hello, Christian. Welcome to the show. I'm really looking forward to our chat today.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Hello, Monica. Likewise. It's a pleasure to be here and to be your guest and looking forward to a nice exchange of information.

Monica Millares: Thank you. And I'm really looking forward to this because like you and I met in money 2020 basically, and it was one of those random meetups during one of the after money 2020 events where you were meeting a lot of people this the other and we just we're, I remember it that how I met you, like we were chatting and then you had.

Something different in your, badge and you had these wooden cards. And I was like, what is that? And basically that's how we met. And you were like, Oh yeah. So basically we create these wood cards. And in that moment I was hooked and that's it. And I was like, Hey, we need you in the podcast. So really looking forward to know more about you and to know more about [00:01:00] your vision.

To know more about the good card and yeah, to learn about it.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yeah, thanks. Yes. I also recall that and encounter as a real pleasant one. It was really nice. We were all in a really relaxed mood and the fair was gone. And so everybody was taking care of himself. And in fact, yes, it was just fun to to, showcase you that card.

And in fact, like I. I have one here as well. It is always the same reaction which really gives me a real good gut feeling with that product, which we have recently brought into the market. So even those people who have been working in the business for more than 20, 25, 30 years, once we approach them with our plastic free wood card with the timber card they get it in their hands [00:02:00] and they have this.

Immediate effect of a real nice touch and feel experience. So you can really look into their eyes and see their glance and say, Hey, wow, I cannot believe this is this is just wood and no plastic inside and no plastic coating. And. This is a payment card. True. Yeah. So it matches the international paying system requirements.

And I can only say, yes, in fact, that is true. And we are excited to hand it out to you. And the people say, okay, thank you. Can I keep it? And I will get back to you. And this is a real strong motivation to to, go on and to now. Yeah. Enter the market with this new product. It's

Monica Millares: amazing. And I can't wait to hear everything about it before we go into the converse full conversation.

I have three quick questions for you so that we get to know you as Christian rather than as the fintecher that you are more like Christian [00:03:00] So what is your best productivity habit?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): My best productivity habit is to switch off anything that disturbs me or that can disturb me. So really taking the time to focus on what is ahead next and As we are all living in a daily working routine where every time, every second something pops up, like I'm attending at least three chat services.

I have my emails. I have two email accounts at the moment, which I have to keep an eye. And then there are those written lists with tasks that you put yourself in the morning and in the evening, you always notice. There's only two or three marks behind a number of 10.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): I think at the time where I feel, okay, this is the clear priority and I have to deliver this by then.

This eases my efficiency because then I can really, [00:04:00] with good reasons, switch out everything and then I'm getting really efficient. I like that.

Monica Millares: And what is your definition of success?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): My definition of success, the definition is of my personal success is to have a good feeling in what I'm selling and what I'm telling and what I'm doing.

And if this on top is pleasant to my counterpart to the other side, so either I deliver. A good product or I deliver a good mood or a good feeling. We have good conversation. We have a common ground and we separate with both sides a good feeling of agreement. Then I think it's a good success because.

Oh, only a business where both sides leave the table with a good feeling in the end is a good business. So I know it's hard to achieve it all the time. Every time it's never a 50 50 wealth well feeling balance, [00:05:00] but. Overall, I must say, I'm trying to work on that, that, yeah, setting up a long term relationship is something which I consider as a success.

Monica Millares: Cool. And how did you go about it? What's your secret to being successful?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): I personally try to be as authentic as possible. So I'm a pretty, let's say, emotional and gut driven person. I, try to not to hide too much things from myself against the other one. And, yes, I think this is appreciated and the openness and at least the feeling, which I hope to create that I'm not playing any hidden games is something that may is one of my successes.

Monica Millares: Yeah. And I think you define authenticity in a very nice way. It's yeah, you're just being hidden agendas [00:06:00] it's,

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): yeah. Of course, sometimes you have to do to play tactics. Of course, if you want to achieve something, you sometimes the best. Example is of course, price negotiations.

It's, always, you are entering like into a bazaar and of course you have to sometimes put on a poker face or something, but in the end if, you do it on a calculable way so that the other person knows more or less, what kind of person is sitting in front of her or to him, then I think it's something which contributes to, as I said, a long term relationship.

Yeah.

Monica Millares: And then if we, I found this fascinating about you as well. If like your business, it's basically wood cards, but what many people may not know about you is that you have a PhD and yeah, and you study trees and I love that. I'm like, Oh, he has a PhD on trees. That's amazing. So you like studying, [00:07:00] so what's your, favorite book?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Oh, my favorite book, in fact, Oh, wow, this is a difficult questions. I honestly, I haven't read a book since quite a while because I'm very busy family job. So in the evening, reading a book and most often with after half a page, because then my eyes shut down. But in fact I like biographies.

About persons that are cool. For example I, just got a Christmas present. I got a, I had a, I got a biography of the Foo Fighters had, like Dave Grove, who I consider also a very authentic and a very well passionate person, a real. Enjoying live person and this is what I've really, I like it's taking those persons who are really successful, who really have [00:08:00] addressed a big audience and at the same time they, don't lose the touch to the ground and they really, yeah.

Really well know where they are standing. And this is also what drives me. Yes, I might be a PhD and I might something be relatively successful with my current career, but I very well know where my roots are and where I'm really. Settled and I think this is always important that you keep this inside and it happens really easily that you get distracted from it.

You have many business trips, you have many new persons like clapping your shoulder and pulling you this or that way. But if you have some really solid ground and this is my family, then yes, go and center. Yes, you're going center and then you can also perform better.

Monica Millares: Awesome. Great advice for everyone.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): No, no advice. Just telling about my own experience.

Monica Millares: [00:09:00] No, but I think it's important to basically what you're saying. It's no, who you are. Don't let success come to your head. Yeah, remember to center because it's important. Yes, exactly. Okay. So let's talk about your business. What has been the role of purpose in your life, in your business?

FinTech,

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): the role of purpose. So you mean like a purpose driven action, which I, try to do. So yeah, as you said, I'm not only a PhD in timber, so I'm a natural born wood lover. From my childhood on, I was always doing something with wood in the workshop of my father.

I was just assembling cars or ships or wooden guns or whatever was interesting at that time [00:10:00] to have. And I made a cabinet maker apprenticeship. I studied wood science and technology, and I went to Switzerland for a PhD. I worked in the wood adhesives industry for 10 years, and since two and a half years, I'm doing this startup thing about this new card here.

And when I look back to that career, I think it, it was always wood as a purpose, wood, which is in the center of my Activity, because I truly believe that this material is a real fascinating one. It regrows just by photosynthesis. So you don't have to put any human energy into that material, be it for using it in a timber building or For in a bank card or whatever, and it's a biodegradable material.

It does not [00:11:00] leave any carbon footprint traces. Yeah. So it's a relatively short carbon footprint cycle and it's a beautiful material and giving this to people, be it in a big house or be it in form of such a card. It always comes back with a positive swing. People mostly like wood. It's a very.

positive material. It feels good. It smells nice. You have a big variety of different wood species. Everything, every wood species is a little bit different than the other one. And this is my, purpose. And now bringing this material into something where Nobody ever thought before it would really work and as SwissWoodSolutions and DegenexSolutions, Copecto, Raiffeisen, all those companies which have worked in the past years on this project now have really created something new, a strong symbol that not [00:12:00] only a banking card, which has ever since been made out of plastic, can be really, let's say, replaced by a material biodegradable, but there are many other Articles in our daily lives, which can be transformed into something more sustainable.

And this is my, let's say, purpose.

Monica Millares: I can, see that in your eyes and how you speak. It's like you really mean it, which I thought that, how, yeah, it's like, how did you, Can you tell us about Copecto? Like, how did you go about? Hey, let's create this card. How did the idea come up?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): So the idea of this, timber cart was born already in mid 2019. In Switzerland, like Swiss wood solutions is a startup company that had, has been founded 2016 and had [00:13:00] developed a technology. By which it could densify normal maple wood into something like this. And if you see the ratio, it's really densification by the factor of 2 to 3 and at the same weight.

And so it's just, it's a densification procedure. However, it's so stable that you don't have any springback effect and that the material. It's really solid and really scratch resistant and so on. And this material was originally taken for the use in violins as fingerboards as a replacement for tropical ebony wood, which is a, I would say a problem that you cannot overuse the tropical forests.

And it's difficult to get good qualities. at reasonable prices and quantities. So the, let's say music industry is pretty open to [00:14:00] tropical material alternatives. And this was showcased to the Swiss television. So we had a pretty nice broadcasting in the evening program of Switzerland. And it occurred that one of the, let's say visitors of that show was a member of the Zürcher Kantonalbank.

And they approached us the next day and called, Hey, what you showed there with this solid wood, can you also do this with a banking card? And we said, not we, I was not there in this company, but my colleagues said, okay, yes let's take that challenge and let's. Try to do the same, what we do here with solid wood, with veneers, so very thin sliced solid wood, and it showed that it works.

So the first prototypes were made by end of 2019 as a payment card. And some of those cards are still in the wallets of my colleagues. So since then, they have been in functional work [00:15:00] and it took us then three years to bring that product into market maturity. Including this industrialization process, because if you want to sell this product, of course, it needs to be produced in high quantities and constant quality and at reasonable price.

Yes, and so we partnered up with the German DigiNex solution. Which is the, central provider of cards and materials for the German co operative banks, so called Genossenschaftsbanken, and they found Swiss Wood Solutions, a pretty cool, innovative and sustainable company, so there was a major investment into our shares and on top, they said, come on, let's go for a partnership company, which is now Copecto.

And [00:16:00] the card case, the business case of the cards has now been carved out of the Swiss wood solutions as this is the business model, create a business case. And then. at a certain degree of maturity, carve it out and put it as a standalone company into the market. And this is what happened in beginning of June.

Since then we are a standalone company in Germany, a GmbH and in foundation still, so all the official administration work takes a while, but, I'm the designated CEO there and once the company has been fully founded, I will be in charge.

Monica Millares: Amazing. So who are your clients and which problem are you solving with this card?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Basically, our clients are throughout the full value chain of those [00:17:00] cards. So as as many of our visitors know, banking cards are a multiple value chain product from the raw material until the customer hold it in his hand. And so we have two main approaches. So first of all, our main sales intention is into the B2B business.

So we are addressing the big card manufacturers and card issuers, of the world where we really want to. Sell them this card body, be it like with an implanted with an implanted chip or the magnetic stripe or whatever. So that they can take it and put it into their global sales channels.

So this is 1 intention. And of course, we also talk to banks and we also try to. Marketing do marketing activities [00:18:00] into the end user because only if you and I and your neighbor are going to the bank and knock doors and ask, Hey, I have seen that at my neighbor. And my neighbor also has one.

Why don't I get one? I want to sustainably could you please. Get into your supply chain and ask your card provider why he doesn't have it yet in his program or in his portfolio. So this is, we are trying to, be visible in different levels of the value chain.

Monica Millares: That is very smart because exactly if consumers start demanding the card that I think we are, because like when the customers are becoming more.

Conscious about the impact of the environment as such. Yes, I think customers will soon will start [00:19:00] asking for more and more sustainable products within financial services. So

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): you're exactly and. Yeah just to, add, so what we observe is that, that like the big banks and also the big schemes, they all have sustainability programs launch.

So for example, MasterCard made it public that they are not going to use any virgin PVC anymore from 2028 anymore in their cards. And so there's already a lot of. Restructuring in the material supply chain ongoing and so be it recycled PVC or ocean bound plastic or PLA, which is a natural starch based card.

This is. All really good and we really support these activities and we are just offering [00:20:00] another alternative, which is really plastic free and not inverting anything, which is on a, let's say, petrol or artificial starch basis, but it's really it's wood and paper in this card. And this is a, hitting the nail on its head.

It's something which really raises the interest of, let's say the, card business. And this is what, yeah, gives us quite some, I would say, back tire wind at the

Monica Millares: moment. Yes. Can you tell us about the size of the problem? So these cards, they look innocent. Yeah. Yeah. It not this one, the other cards, the plastic cards, they look like, Oh, it's just a plastic card.

I have five or three or I don't know how many, but then they all become waste eventually. Do you have any numbers behind like the impact that these waste created by plastic [00:21:00] cards is creating in the world?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yeah there are studies available on the Internet, and I could provide you some links there, where there are statistics that there are billions of tons of plastic waste that have been produced since the invention of plastic, and that about only the 80, no, about only 10 percent of these quantities are regularly recycled.

Another 10%, roughly, is incinerated. And about 80 percent of these plastic quantities are put somewhere. They are just I don't know, brought into let's say landfills or they are just entered into rivers or into the oceans or whatever. Everybody who is reading newspapers should have gone aware [00:22:00] that the, plastic amount in the nature is increasing.

And of course, the quantity of plastic cards worldwide, about six Billion plastic cards in the payment industry are annually, provided, which equals about the weight of 150 Boeing 747. It's a big number. Yeah. So 150 Boeing 747 only of you. Banking cards made of mostly of plastic, however, if you compare this amount to, let's say, the packaging industry, food packaging, and so on, it's a relatively small amount, but this is, as I said, it's a strong symbol.

We have something here, which even if it lands in a landfill, it's not burned or recycled. It will decompose earlier or later, so it will not [00:23:00] stay in the nature for about 400 years until it takes to decompose a PVC card, but this is gone after, I don't know, two or three years. Oh, wow. Because this is really.

Yes, as if you would rip off a branch from your tree and put it on the soil or in the soil, in the forest. This is pretty much what happens to this card. Of course, and this is clear. We have to always bring this. There is there is a magnetic stripe on the back. Still required regulatory mandatory.

There is the standard banking chip, of course, and there is the copper wire antenna inside. Those let's say those, necessary features they have to be in there, but this only makes about 5 percent of the full cartway. So 95 percent is paper, wood, [00:24:00] and a biodegradable adhesive.

Biodegradable

Monica Millares: adhesive as well.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yes, of course. Yes. You have to put a biodegradable adhesive that after a short while, the several layers of the card start to delaminate and open the surface for the attack of the microorganisms. In the end, you must expose the material to the microorganisms in the soil.

And this is bacteria and fungi, wood decaying fungi.

Monica Millares: That is cool. That is the type of conversations that we don't have in the office, right? Everybody's just Oh, cool. Yeah. We need to print the cards and how many cards and the card design. But very few people are thinking about yeah. And the biodegradable cards, because then basically we own well.

Many of us know that this card has many layers, like all the banking cards are made out of layers. But now you're saying, [00:25:00] yeah, there's a few layers in here, but the adhesive that puts it together. It's so cool that it even works out with nature so that nature can do its job. Basically absorb this back into the

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): soil.

Yes. It's a natural fertilizer to your flower pot.

Monica Millares: It's yeah we'll just plant fertilizer.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): By the way, also one, one of those reasons why we, try to really avoid any color printing on the car because the inks commonly used. Are inks, which are not biodegradable and there's no such material available.

So that's why we really prefer to do this laser engraving and to really have something which is not adding any chemicals to the wood surface, but it's just carving out the, and that it's also possible to laser engrave. QR [00:26:00] codes. So really

Monica Millares: fine. Cool. So basically all the banks who start using these, all the fintechs issuers that start using these card, all of them could be the same color, e.

g. the good color. It's a personalized card as well, because there's no two equal cards because of the process. But then my logo. Could never be like the blue or the yellow or the white or the black or the red, it always be engraved.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yes. This is what, this is our, let's say, first choice. Of course, if customers really want to have their logo or their, I don't know, security labels in.

In a in a color print, we of course try to make this possible together with our personalization companies. Then this is always the case. A customer is king, but in the end, it's also a nice [00:27:00] conversation that you can bring into the customer's mind that would do, wouldn't you reconsider your wish to put a color logo on it if you could make it even more sustainable.

And well, and. Make it in a different approach and this is something where you see the creativity starts working and people say, okay, we, we don't need to put color, we can take it out.

Monica Millares: Because you even have the contactless engraving here. It is cool.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yes. Even that. Yeah.

Monica Millares: Even that. Like how about the Scheme logos?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): No problem. They just provide us a vector file and we can include it. Engraving. Cool. The, yes the, Scheme logos, of course they are they, have to stick to their rules and they are providing the requirements. But what we have seen in the metal [00:28:00] cards, there is flexibility and there are metal cards out in the market where the scheme logos are laser engraved and are put on the card as a hologram.

And so this is something ongoing discussions. We are in, conversation with the big schemes and we see flexibility and openness to further develop their requirements. And this is really a positive signal. Yes, it is.

Monica Millares: I love that. It's a whoop for the industry working together. That's a yeah.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yeah.

And it's what you want. If you want to develop your business as a joint combination of many different players, then of course. Everybody has to do the next step and to adopt to the next development and also the, standards, like all of those testing standards, of the cards, there are ISO [00:29:00] and CQM requirements, and some of them simply do not fit to the system.

characteristics of our wood car. For example, if you just take a small example, if you take a normal plastic car and you bend it over, This is so everybody can do it really easily with this card. And with this card, no, no way, there's no

Monica Millares: way it doesn't

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): bend. It is really a stiff card. However we did measurements here and there is a standard test where you have to achieve a deflection of 15 millimeters, for a cycle of, I don't know, 400 or a thousand cycles, whatever.

And to achieve this deflection, you have to apply a force that is eight to 10 times higher than you would have to apply for a plastic card, but the card still survives. So if, I would do this now with a lot of host, it [00:30:00] would not break. After the 15 minutes, so it goes back and goes out again. And but now in the whole certification procedure, of course, this is something where we have to explain and where we have to convince and in the end also where we expect that the testing standards and the testing requirements.

Are further developed towards this new product, of course, like it was done with the metal cards a few years ago. They also entered the market were very new and try to, bend over a metal card in this way. You will also have your, issues here.

Monica Millares: Yeah, definitely. What are the challenges?

What are the challenges that you have in creating this type of

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): product? Can you please repeat the connection was shortly disinterrupted?

Monica Millares: Yes. What are the challenges that you have when it comes to manufacturing the product or selling the product?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): [00:31:00] When the manufacturing process, is done into an industrial scale, we, of course.

Have several, I wouldn't say, yeah it's no issues. It's challenges as, like the standards assembly process of the different sheets layers into, before it goes into the big lamination presses, it's pretty standard and the supply chain is available. You can get your foil with a magnet stripe, magnetic stripe already applied in the right pattern or you have your, I don't know, your antenna inlay.

On a reasonable substrate in the right design you have your hot stamping technology and corresponding hot stamps with the adhesive suitable for the plastic surfaces. Everything is. Available now, when we come with a new substrate and say, [00:32:00] okay, guys, now we don't take plastic sheets, but we take the near and of course, the magnetic stripe must stick on the back of the car and be really positioned in the right way and shall work.

Yeah it's, a relevant. Yeah, it's a smooth surface, but it's not as smooth as glossy as the plastic surface. So this is something where we have to talk to the. producers of the magnetic stripes. We have had a lot of conversations to suppliers of the inlays with the antenna, because as a standard product in the pavement industry, everything is done on, PET, PVC, polycarbonate, whatever.

So we had to say, okay, could you please try to do your antennas on a biodegradable material, for example, on paper or wood. And then you're getting into details because like normal, a big company only starts going into an [00:33:00] innovation when the business case is well enough behind. And so it's the classical hen and chicken, no, not hen, it's the classical egg and chicken topic.

So the business case, of course. Now is a relatively small case against the billions of cards from the plastic industry. So we have to convince companies and at this time, it was really helpful and we wouldn't be at this point of development. If we hadn't run into digging next solutions and the life I spoke about, because they were really convinced of this product and they were.

So pragmatic and also willing to invest not only into Swiss wood solutions, but also into their own machinery that within a relatively short period of time, we were able to produce a [00:34:00] first pilot product, which has been in the market now since September. Yes. So this is, and we don't have any complaints out of it.

And so by this. We are now creating more visibility. We are creating references. We are building up a little heritage. And, we are now trying to, of course, convince not only customers to go into more pilot projects, but also to convince the supply chain, the companies for those different components to adopt their materiality and bring it into our requirements.

It's a real new product. We are the only company currently offering this, so there's no other company able to produce it.

It's a patent protected, procedure and it's also something of added value for the [00:35:00] business of our customers because they can really. Tell to their customers and to their value chain. Hey, look, this is really something with us without plastic. And this is made out of sustainably managed forest wood.

And if you also want, we can do this out of wood in your region. North American producers or Malaysian producers, they don't have to go and take the material from Europe, but they can go into their own sustainably managed. Forests get the wood and then of course, with some cycles of technical optimization, woodcuts can be made out of that wood as well.

Monica Millares: That is cool because I was about to ask that like currently you manufactured these in Germany or Switzerland, I'm assuming. Yeah, but then exactly. If I'm on a business based in Asia or Latam, [00:36:00] then can I work with you? Or how, where, did your customers live?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yeah. Currently the cards are made out of Swiss wood or European wood.

So maple from really from the Swiss mountains. Yeah.

Monica Millares: I'm like, I'm going to keep this like really well,

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): almost like gold unique. And, but the idea behind is to really use the regional resources to really contribute to the value chain of the forestry and of the sawmills and of the veneer produces around the corner.

And the 2nd thing is to really keep. Down the transportation distance. So what we do not want, and this is our intrinsic motivation of Swiss wood solutions is not to cut the wood at 1 part of the world and fly it around the globe to make, [00:37:00] pens, but I don't know, whatever product part of it. So you really can use the wood from your regional forest.

And so with our modification procedure, we can really At mechanical properties, physical properties, and also, let's say properties from the aesthetic appearance, which are outstanding. And once we go into international markets, we will of course, try to identify partner companies that we would provide the production license.

So this is really, Copecto is the. The unique holder of the license and is the let's say provider of sub licenses for production. The 1st sub licensing production license was issued to the life in Germany. And, but, of course, if there are [00:38:00] companies out there in US or in Asia, let's talk business here.

Let's see what we can do and. The earlier, the better.

Monica Millares: Yes. I love that. And you have a really good product as such. And like you said, it's a unique, no one else is doing this in the world, which is amazing. And it's sustainable. And even you thought about the, Hey, we manufacture currently this in Europe.

Swiss, Swiss good. But then if I were to fly these all the way to Brazil, then it's not sustainable anymore, or all the way to Singapore or Malaysia or Thailand. It's not stable. Sustainable anymore, but then it's, you even thought about the, okay, how can we manufacture this product regional with regional good.

That is super cool. So I have a successful product, a successful business. These cannot be done with, without amazing people and [00:39:00] amazing leadership. Of course. What's your leadership style, like how do you inspire people to, to do great job like this

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): one? So I really try to provide the people the, let's say the.

the fascination about what they are doing. So I'm fascinated about what I do. So I try to really transport this into everybody working close to me and with me or under me. And, to really identify the, skills of the person is always important. So you always have to see, okay, what are the, let's say the potentials and the, let's say the boundaries of, the.

person development, but then to, once you have really [00:40:00] identified this or think you have identified you, I'm really open to let this persons or the teams work in their own intrinsic motivation and ask for a result, but do not Just give the way to it, but really leave it open. I would say I'm a relatively strong result driven person.

I have my quality requirements, of course, and I sometimes also time requirements, which is sometimes necessary. But to me, it does not matter when or how the people are working on their task. It's just that the Result in the end is matching to what we need to bring the business a step further. And the second thing is that I'm a strong believer of, let's say the team approach.

Of course, each team or each organization needs [00:41:00] some kind of organizational structure and sometimes also a little bit of a kind of a hierarchy, but which does not mean that we are not a team, which is really, and I mean it. So I'm also, doing the dishes in our kitchen. Yeah. And so it's yeah, it's not, only because I'm, the CEO, the boss does not mean that I can also get clear the table of old cups with coffee in, And, this is the way I like I, and I personally, I, as I'm, a cabinet maker if there's something to be done in the workshop, I also put myself at night shift there and help to do something there.

And I think this, this kind of role model. Approach is, something which, yeah, maybe is something considered a positive [00:42:00] side for myself. But in the end, you should ask my colleagues and employees.

Monica Millares: What is it real to work with Christian?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yes.

Monica Millares: Cool. It's been an amazing conversation before we go. If there was one thing that you could change in the FinTech industry, such that it would make the lives of customers, members of staff and shareholders better, what could it be?

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): If I could do something there, that's a good question. I would say, yes I know it's, it sounds a little bit, I would say socialistic or maybe idealistic. But, of course, I'm driving, or we are all driving commercial businesses, which are aiming at, I would say, maximization of profit. This is [00:43:00] the, let's say, capitalistic system we are all working in. If I'm thinking about my own activities and the responsibilities I have, of course, I have to provide some gain in turnover and some benefits out of it. Otherwise, it does not work. But now, under the impression of this, let's say, climate crisis we are all relatively directly heeding into, I think it would be a good benefit if every individual is really reconsidering, is this what I'm doing really necessary?

And do I really have to push? Yeah, to squeeze the last droplet out of the lemon, or is it also sufficient if I only get three droplets out of that lemon and leave the rest to us. It's let's say, finding the right balance between. Of course, a [00:44:00] profit driven business that in the end, try to be a bit more cautious about the resources we all only have this also means.

Maybe I don't have to fly to a meeting, but I can take the train, even it takes two hours or three hours longer. But by this I can reduce my personal carbon footprint, for example. And, yes, always what I really try to balance out is this continuous way of further and further optimization.

It, I think it is not good for our, future. If everybody's only trying to optimize everything until the maximum, there must be some reasonable level where you say, okay, stop, that's enough. We all have sufficient, this is my, moment

Monica Millares: because you know what, [00:45:00] there's many, not many, but there's some founders, some founding teams, some management team that it's yeah, we need to drive, to make this like the next multi billion dollar company.

And exactly exploit, exploit to get there. And what they're saying, it's

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Yes. And I understand that motivation. We are working in a money business, of course. Money is really creating some kind of desire to get even more. This is, of course, I, there is a, let's say human reflects and always gaining more wealth.

Yes. Maybe a little bit less. Would help us all and it would still suffice to, to have a good living. Yeah. I'm pretty sure.

Monica Millares: Yes. [00:46:00] That is very good food for thought. And I think I'm going to leave it there so that we all think about that. So Christian, thank you so much. It's been a pleasure having you in the show.

I wish you. All the success that you and the Timber card want and deserve. If we were to find you and, Copecto and know more about the product, where

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): can we find you? You can find us on the internet visit, copecto. com or visit timbercard. com. We have a first landing page there, which of course still needs to be more engaged.

We need more content there and we're working on that. And you will find me on different occasions. So I'm traveling to the next money 2020. In Las Vegas. Yeah. And in the meantime, I will be a [00:47:00] trust tech in Paris, 2023. November, we will have our own booth there. So we were really cordially welcome to show by and get a nice touch and feel experience again, bring your friends.

And yeah, as wise, I'm available as, every businessman by mobile and email. And if you want to meet me in person, you either come to Switzerland for a nice hiking trip or a swim in the Lake Lucerne or in Germany at the location of digging neck solutions in, Wiesbaden, which is close to Frankfurt.

Monica Millares: That's amazing. Christian, it's been a pleasure. Thank you, everyone. See you next week.

Christian Lehringer (Copecto): Ciao. Ciao. Thank you very much to you. And yeah, looking forward to meeting again. Bye.

Monica Millares: Bye. Bye. Thank you.