Foundation-6: Credit the Account of an Institution in the Pyramid
Foundation-6 Credit the Account of an Institution in the Pyramid
Funds circulate in a pyramid in the form of credit, accounted in the currency chosen by the pyramid during its creation. the credit is created when the administration records an entry of funds into the account of a member institution. institutions send their funds directly to the pyramid administration, following the process decided by the pyramid.
The figures displayed on ntembu represent the funds that the administrators swear on their honor to have received and secured in financial institutions. They are ultimately used to finance and execute the services and projects to which members of member institutions have subscribed and contributed.
The procedure for entering funds into a pyramid is as follows
1- The COEUR administrator (Heart) logs in to ntembu and accesses the pyramid.
2- In the vertical menu, select MANAGEMENT, then the REQUEST TRANSACTION tab. Finally, click the NEW REFILL button.
3- Fill out the transaction request form:
- 1) Select the beneficiary institution from the list.
- 2) Provide proof that the institution has deposited the corresponding funds.
- 3) Specify the name of the funds transfer provider.
- 4) Indicate the amount to be credited to the institution's account, and click RUN.
4- And there you go!
The transaction request is submitted for approval by the EYES administrator (YEUX). The request is visible by clicking ACTION > DETAIL.
5- AND THAT'S IT!! The details of the submitted transaction request are accessible to administrators.
- Only the EYES Administrator can process it at this stage (approve/reject).
- If rejected, the request will go to ARBITRATION, and only the MOUTH administrator can process it.
- The decision of the MOUTH Administrator **is final **(approve/reject).
- il approved, the fund will be created and appear in the account of the institution credited.
All transactions taking place in a pyramid are visible by the administration
Let's build pyramids… again!