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Home Press Release The Day Nigerian Businesses Stopped Sending Wallet Addresses (Thanks to Breet)
Press Release

The Day Nigerian Businesses Stopped Sending Wallet Addresses (Thanks to Breet)

  • by Guest Post
  • 2025-08-16
  • 0 Comments
  • 1 minute read
  • 499 Views
  • 10 months ago
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The Day Nigerian Businesses Stopped Sending Wallet Addresses (Thanks to Breet)

In the Nigerian business environment, one small discovery can change the way you work forever. For several business owners we spoke to, that discovery came in the form of a button inside the Breet app: “Invoicing.”

If you’ve ever sent a crypto wallet address to a client, you know it’s not the most elegant process. A jumble of letters and numbers, easy to mistype, and not exactly confidence-inspiring.

Some Nigerian businesses decided enough was enough. They switched to Breet’s Invoicing feature, and the experience changed everything.

Now, instead of pasting an address, they simply create an invoice in seconds: enter a title, description, amount in USD, optional email, and validity period. The invoice can be shared directly, and the client gets multiple cryptocurrency payment options.

Once paid, the business sees it instantly in their dashboard, along with detailed analytics that track total invoices, amounts received, and expired requests. Invoices can be downloaded, edited, or reactivated, and partial payments are automatically managed.

“I’ve had fewer payment errors and more repeat clients because they trust the process,” said fashion brand owner in Abuja.- Chidubem Chukwumah 

Chidubem Chukwumah, an Abuja-based fashion brand owner, had faced this challenge for years. Many of her customers, especially corporate clients ordering uniforms or branded wear, preferred to pay in crypto. But each time, she had to send her wallet address over WhatsApp or email, hoping they would copy it correctly. A mistake in copying the correct walet address once happened, and the crypto was sent to the wrong address. That was the breaking point for her.

The turning point came when she noticed the Invoicing feature in the Breet app. Curious, she decided to try it for a bulk order payment from a Lagos client.

In seconds, she created a bitcoin invoice and entered the title, description, amount in USD, the client’s email, and set a five-day validity period. The invoice link was sent, and by the next morning, payment in Bitcoin was confirmed, without a single message exchange about wallet addresses.

It’s clear, Breet Invoicing is a quiet revolution in how Nigerian businesses get paid and it does this by making payments, faster, and more professional.

Disclaimer: The information provided is not trading advice, Bitcoinworld.co.in holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

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Articles published under the Guest Post byline are contributions by external authors - including industry founders, executives, analysts, researchers, and other subject-matter experts - who write for BitcoinWorld in their personal or professional capacity. The views, opinions, and analyses expressed are the contributor's own and do not necessarily reflect those of BitcoinWorld, its editorial team, or its parent company. Submissions are reviewed for relevance, clarity, and adherence to house style, but are not independently fact-checked as original news reporting. To pitch a guest contribution, please reach our editorial team via the Contact page.
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