Apr 26, 2024

In Making Web3 Work, we're interviewing Web3 builders and leaders to unpack their journey and showcase their path to impact.

In this interview, Billy Bicket speaks with Miriam Gitonga and Golda Velez of LinkedTrust to understand how they're using Web3 technology to help prove the impact of nonprofits and beyond. Discover how they approached fundraising, grants, partnerships, business models, and blending decentralized technology with available infrastructure.

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We also excerpted some highlights from the full interview. These short clips are perfect for sharing the conversation’s insights with your network.

CLIP: Discovering Potential Web3 Business Models [Making Web3 Work]

Explore how Golda Velez of LinkedTrust has been navigating building a Web3 business model in this Making Web3 Work interview series. This space is still new, and it doesn't have the traditional venture capital models that traditional startup do. If you're out there looking to make an impact with decentralized technology, Golda will highlight how to get creative.

CLIP: Work-Weighted Equity Sharing with LinkedTrust [Making Web3 Work]

How do you engage your employees, not only with equity, but offering a work-weighted, gamified way of governance around how to spend profits? Golda and the team at LinkedTrust have been exploring this in their Web3 startup and share the model in this Making Web3 Work interview series.

CLIP: How to Get Funding for Web3 Projects [Making Web3 Work with LinkedTrust]

Golda Velez is the an angel investor and co-founder of LinkedTrust, and while it has been partly self-funded, they've explored many other avenues. Hear their story in this Making Web3 Work interview and discover new ways to think about funding your impact-driven project.

CLIP: The Inspiration Behind LinkedTrust with Gitonga [Making Web3 Work]

Miriam Gitonga tells us about the experiences she had volunteering in Kibera, and how she was able to tangibly see the impact she made on the lives of young women there in a short amount of time. Knowing there is 500 other nonprofits focused on serving this area - was their impact and money actually going to serve people?