Many bounty programs use entries (= stakes) instead of setting a specific number of tokens for each and every task.
For example, if I have a 35% stake, I should get 35% of tokens in the bounty pool.
Now, for every comment I make I will get 10 stakes, and for every time I share, 20 stakes. During the bounty campaign I commented twice and shared 4 posts. In total, I have 100 stakes (20 for commenting and 80 for sharing).Once the ICO/TGE is over, the bounty manager will calculate how many tokens my stakes are worth. In other words, what my part of the bounty pool is.
To know how many tokens each stake is worth, we need to apply the numbers to this equation: Number of tokens in the pool divided by the number of stakes in total.
If I was the only participant, then the total number of stakes is 100 (my stakes). And as we said, there are 1000 tokens in the pool. 1000 tokens divided into 100 stakes is 10. That means that every stake is worth 100 tokens.
In our example, If I own 100 stakes and each of them worth 10 tokens, then I have 1000 tokens! Yay.But what if another person joins the party and he also shared 5 posts? In that case he also gets 100 stakes.
So, now the total number of stakes is 200 (my 100 + his 100). Now, this will be our calculation: 1000 tokens in the pool divided by 200 stakes, which means each stake is worth 5 tokens.Now how many tokens do I have? 100 stakes times 5 tokens = 500 tokens!
This article was written by the Emissary Guild team, to help and explain how bounty distribution works. Got any questions? Think something is not clear enough? Let us know in the comments!