Help Build an Online Community

Closed
EGIPH
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Gordon Glaze
CEO
(1)
3
Project
Academic experience
100 hours per learner
Learner
Canada
Intermediate level

Project scope

Categories
Workplace culture Advertising Talent recruitment Volunteer organizing Community engagement
Skills
No skills listed
Details

Students will be tasked with growing the online community of our company's flagship project "HAP". This project aims to generate new methods to create synthetic medicines via natural (non-GMO) plants. We want to create a community as a source for ideas and resources for creating these medicines. There will be pre-outlined roles in the community that users can play. For a full overview of our community model, visit the link on our website: https://hap.bio/hap-culture/.

The student will be responsible for doing outreach and advertising to attract people who are interested in HAP's goals and can contribute as one of the roles outlined on the website. This includes creating visualizations that can be shared on social media to raise awareness and intrigue about the project.

Deliverables
  • Create visualizations to share on social media
  • do outreach and advertising to recruit new community members
  • Maintain/improve member engagement
Mentorship
  • We will provide the website and the community platform app
  • We will provide guidance on who we are looking for in the community
  • We will have periodic one on one meetings with the student to help the student stay on track and provide guidance and insight, the student will provide updates on how their project is going
  • Where applicable, we will provide advertising funding for student to utilize paid advertisement streams
  • If student does not already have access, we will provide graphic design software

About the company

Company
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
2 - 10 employees
Hospital, health, wellness & medical, Science, Technology

Our company is engaged in mapping out a new branch of botany called natural enzyme promiscuity (or 'silent metabolism' - see resource file). This is the way plants react when introduced to exogenous chemicals.