The first circle - agenda
Agenda (2 Hours)
1. Welcome Drinks and Snacks – 20 min
Enjoy locally sourced snacks and drinks as we gather. This is a chance to meet other participants and settle in before the session begins.
2. Personal Introductions and Stories – 20 min
Participants share short introductions and stories to build trust and connection.
Discussion Guide:
Circle Steward shares first to set the tone.
Each participant shares their personal journey, motivation, and connection to the community or blockchain.
Seek common themes and shared values to form a cohesive group identity.
3. Introduction to Logos – 15 min
A concise overview of Logos, its mission, and how the Circle contributes to the broader vision.
Key Points:
Distribute the Logos brochure for reference.
If you have a projector available, show a short presentation to accompany your explanation.
Tell the Logos story: what Logos is, how it functions, and why it exists.
Explain the campaign strategy: building technology that strengthens communities and supports decentralised governance.
Introduce the Circle structure using the snowflake model.
Q&A: brief open discussion for clarifying questions.
4. Focus on Local Issues – 45 min
Discussion on current and emerging challenges in the community and how the Circle can act.
Activities:
Identify key community challenges and potential “winnable issues.”
Explore how the Logos technology stack (Nomos, Codex, Waku) can support coordination and action.
5. Farewell and Next Steps – 20 min
Summarise key takeaways and decisions.
Share roadmap for involvement, upcoming meetings, and communication channels.
Close with informal networking and encouragement to take the first steps.
Try not to have the exit period feel rushed; allow everyone time for relationship building.
Total Duration: 2 hours
Ensure you've familiarised yourself with the principles of running effective Circles.
FAQs you may receive
Do Circles have to work on technical or “winnable” issues?
No. In fact, they are encouraged not to.
Circles work best when they focus on what is easiest to organise and most meaningful locally — not necessarily what is technical or complex.
Start with:
Something people already care about
Something achievable in a short time frame
Something that builds momentum and trust
Winnable issues are a tool, not a requirement. The goal is to activate people power first, then scale complexity over time.
Why organise activism around Circles?
Circles are part of a broader global movement designed to help local groups become more effective and connected.
By organising through Circles, you gain access to:
A global network of other organisers and communities
Support from Logos core contributors
Regular open office hours and guidance
Light funding support for meetings and activations
Shared templates, tools, and playbooks
Opportunities to learn from other Circles worldwide
Help with fundraising and ecosystem connections
Circles are designed to reduce isolation and increase coordination between local groups working on similar problems.
Can we work with similar groups already solving the same issue?
Yes, and you are strongly encouraged to.
Circles should not duplicate existing work. If there are local organisations, initiatives, or community groups already working on a similar issue, the goal is to connect, collaborate, and amplify.
In many cases, the most effective Circle action is to:
Partner with organisations that already have domain expertise
Support or extend work they are already doing
Help them achieve specific goals that align with your Circle’s focus
Fill gaps they cannot easily cover (coordination, tooling, outreach, funding, etc.)
If alignment exists, Circles can act as a coordination layer that strengthens existing efforts, rather than building parallel systems from scratch.
Is the Logos tech stack in production?
Parts of the stack are already live, while others are in active development.
Logos Messaging is currently in production
Blockchain and Storage messaging infrastructure are in testnet
Mainnet launch is expected in Q2 2027
Is the Logos blockchain EVM compatible?
The Logos blockchain can support EVM-equivalent execution indirectly through its architecture.
EVM-compatible environments run within Sovereign Zones, which process transactions and then interact with the base layer. This allows Ethereum-style execution environments without requiring full EVM execution at the base layer.
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