dabdab

See someone good?
Dab ’em.

A device and a wallet that give hospitality workers their tips back. One tap. One hundred per cent theirs.

One product, two halves

A device and a wallet.

The disc is what people see and tap. The wallet is where the money lands and lives. Together they make a tip something you own, not something you wait for.

The device

A small disc worn above your badge. Your name on the back, in your hand. No screen, no app for the person thanking you. They tap their phone, and that’s it. The only colour on it is the colour you choose.

The wallet

Every tip lands in your own wallet the moment it’s given. Keep all of it. Spend it straight away with your dab card, or move it to your bank. Your money, your account, no employer in the middle.

How it works

Three taps to thanked.

01

They tap

Someone wants to thank you. They tap their phone to your dab. No app to download, no awkward screen to read.

02

It lands

They choose an amount and pay. The tip drops into your wallet instantly. You keep one hundred per cent — the small fee is paid by them, not you.

03

You spend

Tap your dab card at the shop on the way home, or send it to your bank. It was yours the second it landed.

The wallet

Watch every tip land.

Your tips arrive in real time, each one with a name and a thank-you. Send, receive and spend — all from an app that’s yours.

dab app home screen showing your balance and a live list of incoming tips

Your balance, tip by tip

Why it matters

You own the device, the wallet, the relationship and the record. Cashless took your tips away. This gives them back.

Colour belongs to the wearer

dab stays black and white.
You bring the colour.

Wear it your way — on a lanyard, a clip, a magnet or a band. The disc is yours: your name, your colour, your choice. Everywhere else, dab is quiet on purpose, so the person wearing it is the thing you notice.

Choose how you wear it
dab device worn on a lanyard
dab device worn with a clip

A person you choose to thank.

A worker wearing a dab is a person, not a sign asking for money. That difference is the whole idea — dignity, not charity. Tipping, before a touchscreen made it weird.

Find your way in

Three ways to dab.