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Kraken 360 pre-TGE playbook Part 2: the 5-step execution window

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Kraken 360 exists for this moment. It extends Kraken’s institutional infrastructure to protocol teams — coordinating custody, staking, liquidity, compliance, token management and distribution in one integrated platform. The result: cleaner launches, stronger treasury controls, and a more stable foundation for long-term institutional participation.

This post breaks down the five execution areas that determine whether your TGE goes smoothly — and what it takes to get each one right.

1. Understand the difference between minting and your TGE — then plan accordingly

Minting and a token generation event are not the same milestone, and conflating the two is one of the most common execution mistakes.

Minting is when your tokens come into existence and is typically a private event, coordinated between the protocol team and a qualified custodian, often months before any public activity. TGE is when tokens are revealed and distributed to stakeholders, and the token becomes publicly accessible.

After a private mint, many teams work with an independent, third-party token valuation firm to establish fair market value and assist in providing restricted token awards to team members. This valuation needs to reflect a true pre-market, illiquid fair market value and most structures require a 90+ day cool-off period before any public launch. Missing this step can create downstream tax exposure for your team as well as complicate investor distributions.

Key questions to answer before your private mint:

  • Is your qualified custodian ready to receive tokens at genesis?

  • Have you finalized allocation structure across all stakeholder categories?

  • Is legal and tax counsel aligned on issuance mechanics and grant structure?

  • Have you engaged a reputable firm for an independent post-mint token valuation?

Kraken 360 coordinates all of your infrastructure needs so your mint and TGE is a controlled, sequenced event, not a scramble.

2. Exchange readiness: how listings actually work

Getting listed on a major exchange is not a function of momentum or community size. It is a compliance and operations process with real timelines and real consequences for teams that arrive unprepared. Most underestimate listing timelines by two to three months.

What exchange teams will ask for:

  • Audited smart contract with public report

  • Token legal opinion or classification memo

  • Wallet integration documentation

  • Market maker agreement(s) confirmed

  • Institutional distribution plan and lockup enforcement evidence

  • PR and communications plan aligned with listing announcement

If your technical documentation, compliance materials, or liquidity arrangements aren’t in order when you enter the process, you wait. Kraken 360 includes exchange integration as part of its launch infrastructure — with direct coordination across Kraken’s listing process from day one.

3. Market makers: structure the relationship before you need it

Liquidity doesn’t appear because demand exists. On day one, your token needs active market making or it will face wide spreads and volatility that damages long-term credibility before you’ve had a chance to build it.

What to confirm before TGE:

  • At least one primary market maker with an inventory commitment for launch day

  • Spread and depth obligations specified in writing

  • Loan/retainer structure reviewed by legal counsel

  • Coordination between market maker, exchange, and custodian confirmed

Founder stories about launch-day liquidity failures almost always trace back to agreements that weren’t specific enough, confirmed too late, or poorly coordinated with the exchange timeline. Kraken 360 maintains relationships with regulated, institutional-grade market participants and helps teams structure these arrangements as part of an integrated launch plan.

4. Communications: you’re in public view now

Once your token exists — even privately — your communications posture changes. A single errant statement from a founder or executive before TGE can create regulatory exposure and undermine investor confidence before the token ever reaches a public market.

A disciplined communications strategy for the execution phase should cover:

  • A strict internal policy on what can and cannot be said about the token publicly — by leadership, team members, and advisors — before TGE

  • Targeted communications to key stakeholders (investors, large allocatees) covering custody arrangements, staking access timelines, and distribution logistics

  • A coordinated partner and exchange announcement sequence, not ad hoc disclosures

  • A day-of launch checklist: blog, social, PR, community channels (Discord, Telegram), and a staffing plan for inbound questions

Treat communications as infrastructure. The protocols that execute cleanly on launch day have rehearsed the message as thoroughly as the launch mechanics.

5. Lockup enforcement and audits: credibility you can’t retrofit

Part 1 covered how to enforce lockups at the infrastructure level through qualified custody or audited smart contracts. Here’s why the stakes of getting it wrong go beyond operations.

Inconsistent lockup enforcement is a trust and regulatory signal. If any insiders such as employees, advisors or investors operate under different vesting timelines or if enforcement is unclear, it can create unpredictable incentives and possibly trigger regulatory scrutiny around whether the token reflects a coordinated distribution designed to benefit insiders. Regulators and institutional investors both notice.

The same principle applies to security audits. An audit is a public commitment with standards:

  • Engage early. Audit backlogs are real. Top firms have multi-month queues. If you’re waiting until two months before TGE to start, you’re already late.

  • Verify remediation. All high and critical severity findings must be resolved and verified by the auditor before you proceed. Don’t launch with open issues.

  • Publish the report. A final audit report published alongside your token contract is one of the clearest credibility signals available to a protocol. Withholding it creates suspicion.

  • Communicate findings to your community. How you talk about your audit — what was found, how it was addressed, what it means for protocol security — signals the maturity of your team. Transparency here builds long-term trust.

Kraken 360 helps teams coordinate the compliance, distribution, and custody layers that support both lockup enforcement and audit-aligned launch timelines — so credibility is built in from the start, not retrofitted after the fact.

The execution window is finite — use it deliberately

Custody integration, exchange readiness, market maker coordination, infrastructure and investor onboarding all run in parallel and depend on each other. This is where Kraken 360’s power is derived. By combining and consolidating these execution layers into a single, coordinated stack, protocol teams reduce their operational dependencies and launch with confidence.

Part 3 will cover what comes next: TGE and TVL growth support.

Explore Kraken 360

Geographic restrictions apply.

Custody services are provided by Payward Financial, Inc. or Payward Europe Solutions, Ltd, as applicable. Payward Financial, Inc. d/b/a Kraken Financial is not an FDIC-insured bank and deposits are neither insured by nor subject to the protections of the FDIC. Payward Europe Solutions Limited, trading as Kraken, is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland.

The post appeared first on Kraken Blog.

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