We just launched a new home for our community — read why.
Faith in Tech
Updates

2025-07-06

Why we built a home for Faith in Tech

For a while now we've been coordinating meetups the way most communities do: group chats, email threads, LinkedIn posts, and a lot of manual back-and-forth. It worked. People showed up, connections were made, and the community grew.

But it never felt like a real home. Every time we announced a new event, it lived somewhere different. RSVPs got scattered. There was no central place to find out what was happening, who was coming, or how to start something new in your city.

So we built one.


What's here now

This platform is purpose-built for Faith in Tech — for local chapters and the people who run them. Organizers can create and manage events. Members can RSVP, propose meetup ideas, and stay in the loop with email notifications that respect your inbox.

If you've wanted to start a chapter in your city, there's now a clear path to do that too. You can apply directly from the site and we'll get you set up.


A few things we care about

We built this ourselves because we wanted to control the values baked into it. A few things that shaped the decisions:

  • Your data is yours. We will never sell it. You can export everything or delete your account at any time. The Transparency page shows exactly what we collect and why.
  • No engagement manipulation. There are no feeds, no likes, no algorithmic nudges. Just events and the people who show up for them.
  • Open source friendly. The code behind this platform is something we hope to make fully public as it matures. We want to build trust by being legible.

What's next

This is a soft launch. We're starting with the Chattanooga chapter and a small group of early members who've been part of this community from the beginning. We'll grow from there.

If you have feedback, ideas, or just want to say hello — reach out. This is a community project and that means it should reflect the people in it.

— Mike Conrad, Faith in Tech