Roadmap for Logos Circles
Circles step in where current institutions fall short. They are an avenue for us to compete with legacy structures by implementing parallel governance, culture and institutions, experimenting with scalable solutions that align with Logos’ ideals of freedom and autonomy. By providing tangible value through humanitarian efforts, technological innovation, and community building, Circles reinforce both the movement’s narrative and members’ sense of purpose.
This roadmap outlines how Circles can grow over the next five years, from foundational education and small local initiatives to regional networks, economic development, and a fully self-sustaining global structure. It shows how each phase builds on the last, creating a virtuous cycle of trust, impact, and influence that positions Logos as a credible parallel institution capable of supporting political, technological, and economic initiatives worldwide.
Establish Ideological Foundations
Publish educational content: mission, vision, symbols, and shared culture.
Create manuals, guides, and playbooks for leadership training and grassroots organising.
Run pilot initiatives with partners to generate success stories and proof of concept.
Recruit & Train
Use success stories and case studies to drive recruitment campaigns.
Train organiser-volunteers with documentation, mentorship, and 1-on-1 guidance.
Launch local meetups to onboard members and grow networks.
Develop leaders who train leaders, creating exponential growth.
Deepen Community Engagement
Amplify communications, case studies, and organic content from the community.
Celebrate success stories across Circles to inspire others.
Use local wins (e.g., fixing a park, successful app, tech workshops) to prove value.
Shift meetups from just social to community-building activities.
Build Organisational Structures
Launch a public database of volunteers (Movement alias, contact, location).
Build and lanuch an internal CRM for volunteers to organise.
Adopt the Snowflake model for Circles: small autonomous groups with distributed leadership.
Build a graphical map of the network showing active Circles, roles, and open spots.
As Circles multiply, develop regional, national, and specialised nodes.
Build Social Capital
Establish Circles as trusted local institutions with real influence.
Position Logos as a parallel governance system outperforming failing states.
Leverage legitimacy for political, cultural, and economic initiatives.
Economic Development & Microfinance
Launch grant programs to incentivise and reward action.
Build funding pipelines: donations, grants, coalition partners.
Develop blockchain-based microloans for trusted Circle members.
Treat the network as a developing country investing in its citizens.
Adaptability & Innovation
Mobilise Circles for campaigns, lobbying, fundraising, or tech deployments.
Experiment with new technologies and governance tools.
Continue evolving with feedback, keeping Circles resilient and relevant.
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