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Greenpill

Building a global regenerative network through community strategy, developer programs, public learning, and partnerships

  • Community Building
  • Ecosystem Strategy
  • Technical Program Leadership
  • Developer Relations
  • Workshop Facilitation
  • Partnership Development
Greenpilled book spread describing regenerative cryptoeconomics, public goods funding, and coordination as the foundation for the network.

Problem

Greenpill is trying to solve a coordination problem that shows up across public goods, regenerative crypto, and local impact work. People have energy, skills, and shared values, but they are spread across cultures, time zones, funding systems, technical complexity, and local contexts. The network gives that energy a shared identity and a place to gather, learn, build trust, find collaborators, and turn ideas into useful work.

Greenpill Garden entry section with low pressure paths to subscribe, join the public conversation, take the Regen Assessment, or book a steward call.

Architecture

The architecture is human first. Chapters ground the work in place. Guilds like the Dev Guild give builders a focused home. Stewards create rhythm through syncs, review, and shared decision making. Monthly calls, workshops, podcasts, books, field notes, and public resources move knowledge across the network. The website, live map, and Garden act as public orientation layers, helping people find the network, understand where they fit, and make chapter and steward work more legible, verifiable, and easier to support.

That network architecture also feeds into Green Goods, where the field tools focus more directly on accessible impact reporting and funding while helping chapters and stewards make their work legible and verifiable.

Greenpill Network monthly community call slide with Afolabi Aiyeloja visible beside the presentation.

Development

I first came into Greenpill from the developer side, looking for people to build with around WEFA. I quickly realized there was more to learn inside a shared identity than I could by keeping everything as my own project. As the Dev Guild grew, my role expanded into community and ecosystem leadership. I lead product and tooling direction, contributor pathways, community calls, workshops, partnerships, and the public story around what the Dev Guild and wider network are building.

Afolabi Aiyeloja and Amio on a Greenpill Dev Guild call presenting Tech and Sun, a solar powered hub project for builders and communities.

Learnings

Greenpill has taught me what it really means to build community across cultures, time zones, and limited resources. That is a different kind of work than building solo or joining a team with an established culture and rhythm. Trust has to be earned slowly. Communication has to make room for different contexts. The human moments matter, like bringing people together at ETHDenver 2025 for Greenpill House, cooking meals, learning from one another, and remembering that the network is not only tools and calls. It is relationships. This work has stretched me from an engineer and individual contributor into a team builder, community builder, and steward where the network needs one.