Scaffold Grants Stack
89%
average score over 3 application evaluations
A versatile SDK grants tool enabling customization and experimentation of grant programs and funding mechanisms, supporting UI design, impact reporting, and accountability for innovative capital allocation.

Civikit is an SDK grants stack tool built on Scaffold-ETH-2, designed to facilitate the customization and experimentation of grant programs and funding mechanisms for various organizational structures and entities. This flexible framework allows users to easily develop and tailor their grant stacks to meet specific needs, whether for direct grants or more complex funding models like quadratic funding. The tool supports a wide range of customization options, including UI design, impact reporting, and accountability mechanisms, making it an ideal solution for organizations looking to innovate in capital allocation and funding strategies. Through its comprehensive and user-friendly interface, Civikit empowers organizations to explore and implement novel funding mechanisms, fostering a culture of experimentation and innovation in the grants ecosystem.

Scaffold Grants Stack History

People donating to Scaffold Grants Stack, also donated to

Volunteered as a Discord/Telegram moderator for Gitcoin, fighting POAP farmers, assisting the community, and proposed a grant review tool for Gitcoin's impact assessment.
A swap and perpetual DEX offering secure, liquid trading for various blue-chip crypto assets.
Developing Change Credits, a new transparent and efficient composable financial instrument aimed at democratizing impact investing and providing sustainable funding for small social enterprises and community organizations.
Designing composable financial tools for a transparent, community-driven impact economy using "Change Credits" to financialize positive externalities, with plans to launch a marketplace and minter in May 2024 for impact tokens.
Engage the Koh Phangan community in regenerative finance and sustainability through events, NFTs for environmental initiatives, cleanups, and educational outreach, while planning a recycling project, Re:Plast, to convert plastic waste into valuable products.