Designing token utility is one of the highest-risk parts of a Web3 project.
You are expected to define how value flows, how stakeholders participate, and how the token supports the product.
At the same time, you need a model that legal, technical, and investment teams can review without finding obvious gaps.
Most founders handle this work in documents and spreadsheets.
That is where problems start.
Introducing Token Utility Planner

Inside VentureVerse, we have 50+ mini apps that aims to solve different problems for founders and startups.
Token Utility Planner helps you map, score, and validate token utility against stakeholder needs, industry standard templates, patterns, and your project context to give you clarity and produce a utility model that is defensible and aligned with your product.
What’s the main bottleneck for token utility?
A token only works when its mechanics support the product, yet most teams design utility without a structured framework or systematic stakeholder evaluation.
The core issue is the lack of coherence between intrinsic token utility and the underlying tokenomics structure.
As a result, misaligned incentives and design gaps only surface during audits or fundraising.
Why do founders need a system like this?
Token Utility Planner brings utility design and tokenomics into one coherent workflow instead of fragmented documents and inconsistent processes.
Founders get a clear view of how each stakeholder interacts with the token and can validate whether the mechanics align with their product.
This reduces heavy work, surfaces risks early, and makes the utility model easier to explain and refine as the project evolves.
Inside the OS
Here’s a breakdown of how the product guides you through the design process.
Establish Project Context

You begin by defining the core details of your project. This includes your product stage, market focus, technical stack, token supply and vesting, and your team’s background.
This context allows the system to evaluate your token model based on how your product actually works and whether your utilities match your objectives.
Build the Utility Matrix

You map each stakeholder group and the utilities they receive across governance, access, payments, rewards, staking, and more.
This exposes imbalances, unused utilities, unclear mechanics, and incentives that do not align with the product. The matrix becomes the central structure for your entire token model.
If you’re unsure how to fill this section, there are 10+ pre-filled templates to guide you.

See Scoring and Risk Detection

As the matrix fills, the system scores your design and runs coverage checks. It highlights gaps, overloaded utilities, and red flags such as reward-heavy models, weak holding incentives, or undefined treasury roles.
This provides early visibility into issues before audits, partners, or investors review your model.
Apply Actions

You receive targeted next steps to fix missing utilities, resolve red flags, and clarify unclear mechanics.
Once your model is strong enough, the system can generate whitepaper-ready descriptions, internal documentation, or investor briefs directly from your utility matrix.
What a Strong Utility Model Enables
When the mechanics are clear, consistent, and evaluated against your product, you avoid redesigns and remove uncertainty across technical, legal, and investment workflows.
A strong model enables:
Faster partner and ecosystem alignment because incentives are explicit
Shorter audit timelines due to fewer structural gaps
Clear narratives that investors can review without requesting revisions
Stable mechanics that scale as user activity increases
The Token Utility Planner is one part of the OS. Each tool in VentureVerse removes manual work, standardizes evaluation, and produces clear outputs founders can act on.
We want to build an AI-powered infrastructure that improves execution quality, reduces rework, and accelerates readiness across every layer.
Stronger systems create faster, more predictable progress. The Venture OS is being built to give you that advantage.
Join the waitlist for early access.
