CoinMarketCap and CoinGecko profiles help users find token contracts, markets, supply data, project links, and basic descriptions in familiar places. They are often treated as a quick marketing task, but most of the work is data preparation. The project must reconcile information spread across contracts, explorers, exchanges, websites, token documents, and treasury records.
Each platform controls its own criteria, forms, review process, categorization, and timeline, which may change. A submission service can organize evidence and communicate through official routes. It cannot guarantee approval, ranking, a particular display, or processing time. The durable advantage is a clean source of truth the project can maintain after registration.
Create a master token fact sheet
Record project and token names, symbol, network, contract addresses, decimals, total and maximum supply behavior, circulating supply methodology, allocations, vesting, treasury addresses, bridges, official markets, launch date, and relevant explorer links. Assign an owner to each figure and note when it was last verified.
Compare the fact sheet with the website, whitepaper, explorer, exchange pages, DEX pools, press releases, and prior submissions. Resolve differences before applying. Repeatedly changing supply numbers without explanation can slow review and confuse users even after a profile is live.
- Token identity, networks, contracts, and explorers
- Supply definitions, calculations, allocations, and vesting
- Verified exchange or DEX market links
- Official website, documentation, social, and community links
- Logo and brand assets in requested formats
- Public evidence supporting material claims
Explain circulating supply transparently
Document which wallets and allocations count toward circulation and why. Identify locked, vested, treasury, team, foundation, ecosystem, and burned amounts as relevant to the token model. Provide addresses and calculation notes where the platform requests them. Make the method reproducible enough for an independent reviewer to follow.
Update the source when vesting, burns, bridges, migrations, or treasury actions materially change the figure. Do not use a desired display number as the starting point. Supply data should reflect the token's actual structure and the platform's current definitions.
Verify markets and liquidity
List only live, official markets with correct pairs and URLs. Confirm contract identity across networks and distinguish native, bridged, and wrapped representations. For DEX markets, provide the correct pool and relevant explorer or analytics links. For CEX markets, ensure the venue's page is public and token identity is unambiguous.
A market created by an unrelated party may not be appropriate evidence. If duplicate or fraudulent profiles exist, collect clear proof and use official correction routes rather than engaging impersonators who offer paid shortcuts.
Prepare concise project information
Write a factual description of the product, user, current functionality, token role, and official organization. Avoid rankings, investment language, price predictions, or partnerships that cannot be verified. Link to working product and documentation. Use consistent terminology across English and Korean owned channels.
Supply clean logos and social links controlled by the project. Secure accounts with appropriate access management and keep a record of who can request updates. A live profile that points to an abandoned or compromised channel creates more risk than no profile.
Use official submission and communication routes
Check the platform's current forms and instructions at the time of submission. Save the submitted version, ticket or reference, date, and supporting files. Respond consistently if reviewers request clarification. Avoid simultaneous applications from multiple representatives, which can create conflicting information and make ownership unclear.
Be cautious with anyone claiming guaranteed approval, ranking, or private access. Verify communications against official platform channels. A legitimate coordinator should be able to describe the preparation and follow-up work without claiming control over the platform.
Assign post-registration maintenance
After a profile goes live, verify every field and link. Monitor contract migrations, new networks, supply changes, market additions, website moves, rebrands, and social account changes. Maintain a change log and submit updates through official routes when necessary. Coordinate major corrections with community communications so users understand what changed.
BlockPlanet lists CoinMarketCap and CoinGecko profile submissions as negotiable services. The scope may include data audit, asset preparation, submission, clarification, and update support. Confirm deliverables and platform status at inquiry time. A profile submission is distinct from exchange listing and does not guarantee approval, ranking, price, or market access.
Talk to BlockPlanet
Planning your next move in Korea?
Tell us where your project stands. We will help you turn local marketing, community, PR, and operations into a practical plan.
Frequently asked questions
Can an agency guarantee CoinMarketCap or CoinGecko approval?
No. Each platform controls its current criteria and review. An agency can prepare accurate data, submit through official routes, and coordinate follow-up.
What causes token profile delays?
Incomplete or inconsistent contracts, supply data, markets, links, ownership evidence, or duplicate submissions can create questions. Exact reasons and timelines remain platform-specific.
Are token profiles the same as exchange listings?
No. Data-platform profiles and trading-venue listings are separate processes with different owners, criteria, and outcomes.