Community Learning
Professional associations, industry groups, and learning communities need infrastructure that supports both structured curriculum and organic collaboration.
The challenge
Communities have diverse members with different expertise levels and learning goals. Generic platforms force a one-size-fits-all approach.
- Members range from beginners to domain experts
- Community-generated content needs curation and structure
- Monetisation and sustainability require flexible models
How ikigize helps
Build a community campus where members can both learn and teach. The dual-role system means experts contribute courses while still learning from peers. The token model provides sustainable economics.
Dual roles
Members are both learners and teachers — contributing expertise and gaining new skills.
Community curation
The Library and Learning Graph help surface the best community-created content.
Flexible access
Open, invite-only, or conditional campuses — choose what fits your community.
Sustainable model
Token economics keep the core free while premium features scale with usage.
Example scenario
A professional association for UX designers creates a community campus. Senior members teach courses on accessibility and research methods. Junior members learn structured paths while contributing resources they discover. Monthly sessions bring the community together for workshops. The Learning Graph maps the community's collective expertise across UX topics.