The product loses money not during the launch, but after it, when the user goes elsewhere to get the missing asset, a better rate, fiat currency, or proper support.
An exchange API can work exactly as intended from a technical perspective while underperforming commercially. The integration may return quotes and process transactions, yet revenue still escapes whenever users abandon the flow or complete the same action elsewhere.
This makes post-launch performance more important than the size of the initial feature list. Product and finance teams need to identify where transaction intent disappears, how often it happens, and whether users return after a problem.
Four loss points account for much of the leakage.
Missing assets send ready-to-transact users elsewhere
A user who opens a swap screen usually arrives with a specific asset and network in mind. If the requested route is unavailable, the user has little reason to remain inside the product. Another exchange captures the transaction fee and may also become the user’s preferred service for future activity.
Every missing token, network, or pair creates an opportunity for a competing product to establish a new habit. Coverage also needs to follow user demand across stablecoins, newer ecosystems, L2 networks, and long-tail assets rather than focusing entirely on the largest cryptocurrencies.
ChangeNOW’s business API supports more than 1,500 coins across over 110 networks, while its exchange covers more than 2.25 million pairs. All supported assets are inter-exchangeable, allowing users to move between different tokens and chains within one exchange flow.
Such a breadth helps wallets, payment apps, exchanges, and portfolio products retain more of the demand they have already attracted.
The fiat barrier loses users before the first swap
Many potential customers reach a crypto product without already holding the asset needed for a swap. If they must leave the app to buy crypto, the external provider can capture the purchase and the exchange activity that follows.
An embedded fiat ramp keeps the entry point close to the swap experience. It allows a user to purchase crypto and continue toward the intended transaction within the same product, which is especially important for wallets, fintech apps, and services designed for newer users.
However, a high number of users beginning an on-ramp means little if they abandon payment or fail to return to the swap afterward. As such, payment-method availability, geographic coverage, completion time, and continuity between the two flows determine how much demand becomes revenue.
Worse rates and slow execution reduce completed volume
A weak rate, slow response, unexpected recalculation, or failed route gives the user time and reason to compare alternatives.
Moreover, liquidity depth affects the price and reliability of the swap itself. Access to several liquidity sources can improve route availability and reduce dependence on a single venue, particularly during volatile markets or when a pair trades less frequently.
This is why ChangeNOW sources assets from centralized and decentralized exchanges and supports both fixed-rate and standard-rate swaps. Fixed rates provide price certainty during execution, while standard rates follow current market conditions. The company reports 99.99% availability and a 350 ms API response time for its business API.
When choosing providers for their stack, teams should monitor how many users accept a quote, where they abandon the flow, how often a route fails, and whether execution remains competitive during periods of heavy demand.
Failed transactions turn revenue into support costs
Some transactions require help even when the underlying service remains available. Wrong-network deposits, duplicated transactions, missing memos, delayed swaps, and unusual transaction behavior can all move a user from a revenue-generating flow into a manual support process.
The immediate cost comes from investigation and resolution. The larger loss, however, appears when a stressful experience convinces the user to stop transacting. Fast recovery can preserve both the current transaction and the customer relationship, while slow or unclear support increases staffing costs and weakens repeat activity.
ChangeNOW provides 24/7 support, a personal manager, and assistance with recoverable exchange issues. Services like these help partners resolve transaction problems before users leave for good.
Measure losses through user outcomes
A focused post-launch review can replace a long feature checklist with five commercial measures:
- The share of asset or network searches ending without an available route;
- Quote-to-completion conversion and drop-off after the rate appears;
- Fiat purchase completion and the share of buyers who continue to a swap;
- Transaction exception rates, recovery success, and average resolution time;
- Repeat activity after a failed transaction or support case.
These measures show whether the integration keeps demand within the product and help teams identify whether the main source of loss lies in coverage, pricing, entry, execution, or recovery before adding more features.
Final thoughts
A successful API integration retains the user’s intent from the first asset search through execution and any support needed afterward. Missing assets, poor rates, fiat friction, and weak transaction recovery each remove revenue at a different point, so they require separate measurement.
ChangeNOW’s combination of extensive asset coverage, aggregated liquidity, fiat access, rate options, and recovery support addresses all four loss points. The exchange is, therefore, a useful case study in crypto business best practices.
Its value to a partner ultimately depends on the commercial outcomes the integration produces: more completed transactions, fewer abandoned flows, lower recovery costs, and more users who return.
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