Directory, events, memberships, a weekly digest, and the AI that keeps it alive between meetups. Built around your locality, not a Discord server.
WhatsApp groups
12 different groups, none complete. Half the events never get posted. New arrivals don't know which groups exist.
Instagram stories
Events announced in stories that disappear in 24 hours. If you missed it, it never happened.
Word of mouth
Works perfectly — until it doesn't. New visitors, seasonal residents, and anyone outside the inner circle gets left out.
The community already exists. The information already exists. What's missing is the infrastructure to hold it — one place everyone checks.
Not a social network. Not a marketplace. A community utility — the digital infrastructure for a place that already exists in the physical world.
What's happening today, this week, this month. Updated daily. Searchable by type, location, date. One place everyone checks.
Every practitioner, business, restaurant, venue, and service — categorized, searchable, maintained. The community's yellow pages.
Housing, work, rides, items for sale, services offered. The things communities actually need — without scrolling through group chat chaos.
A weekly email with the best events, new listings, and community updates. People subscribe once and stay informed.
Bilingual from day one.
If your community speaks two languages, the platform speaks both. Native content in each language — not a translation toggle.
Facilitators in your area. Events this week. The local utility people open before they make plans — instead of scrolling facebook groups they're embarrassed to be in.
Facilitators
Ana Reyes
Sound healing · ES/EN
Jordan Mata
Cacao circle · ES
Kira López
Yoga · breathwork · EN
Events · 12 this week
Tue
6
Wed
7
Thu
8
Fri
9
Sat
10
Directory · events · in your language · for the place that's already there.
Facebook groups are free. They also leak — your members, your relationships, your reach. Mighty Networks, Discord, WhatsApp groups all share the same problem. Here's what those platforms can't do:
Let you own the member list — Meta owns it, Discord owns it, the platform decides who sees what
Show every post — algorithmic feeds bury anything that doesn't generate engagement
Run real event RSVPs that connect to a calendar your members already use
Hold a facilitator directory, a language toggle, a location filter — none are native
Stay ad-free — the platform monetizes by selling your members' attention
Survive a platform purge — people delete Facebook every six months and your community goes with them
Free isn't free when the platform owns the relationship. Build on land you own.
A small coastal town with dozens of practitioners, venues, and events happening every night — and no central place to find any of it. Visitors relied on word of mouth. Locals posted on scattered WhatsApp groups. Business owners had no affordable way to be found online.
A bilingual community platform: event listings updated daily, practitioner and business directory, classifieds, and a weekly digest — in English and Spanish. Now the go-to source for what's happening in town. Used by locals and visitors alike.
Facebook groups are feeds. Information scrolls past and disappears. There's no directory, no event calendar, no categorization. Finding last week's post about the yoga class requires scrolling through memes and arguments.
Facebook owns the data. Your community's members, their activity, their connections — it's Facebook's data, not yours. They decide what gets shown and what doesn't. Their algorithm, not your priorities.
A utility is different from a social network. People don't want to "engage" with community content. They want to find the osteopath, check tonight's events, and see if anyone's renting a room. That's a utility — searchable, organized, up-to-date.
Your community owns the platform. Code, data, domain — yours, from day one.
Book a callWhere the community lives now, what's missing, what people would check every day if it existed. I'll read it and sketch the architecture.
No cost. No pitch. Just a conversation about what your community needs.