Community education does not fund itself. Workshop materials, venue costs, printed handouts, translation efforts, and facilitator preparation all require resources. Bitcoin Dua operates on the principle that good educational infrastructure deserves thoughtful, transparent support.

This page explains how sponsorship works in the context of what we do, what kinds of support make a real difference, and the principles we apply when considering partnerships or contributions.

What Sponsorship Supports

Support directed toward Bitcoin Dua and its associated programmes can fund several practical areas:

Workshop delivery. Running a community learning session involves more than showing up with a slide deck. There are venue arrangements, printed reference cards, device availability for hands-on practice, and sometimes transport costs for facilitators and attendees. In rural areas especially, the logistics of simply getting people into the same room can require planning and funding.

Printed educational materials. Not everyone has reliable internet access. Some of the most effective educational tools we have seen are simple printed checklists, vocabulary cards, and one-page explainers that participants take home. Producing these at scale in multiple local languages is one of the most impactful uses of sponsor support.

Facilitator development. A good workshop facilitator needs more than Bitcoin knowledge. They need the ability to explain complex ideas in simple language, manage group dynamics, and adapt to the knowledge level in the room. Training and supporting facilitators is an ongoing effort.

Youth programme resources. Programmes that pair sport or community activities with financial literacy sessions have different resource needs: equipment, refreshments, programme coordination, and follow-up sessions that keep young people engaged over time.

Content production. Guides, checklists, and resource pages on this site take time to research, write, review, and maintain. Sponsorship can help ensure that the editorial output remains consistent and thorough.

Support Categories

We think about support in three practical tiers:

Educational Materials

This covers the cost of producing, printing, and distributing learning resources. A single print run of workshop handouts for a community session might serve fifty participants. Scaling that across multiple sessions and communities is where consistent support matters most.

Programme Delivery

This covers the operational costs of running workshops, meetups, and structured learning sessions. It includes venue hire, facilitator compensation, participant transport where needed, and the technology required for hands-on practice with wallets and Lightning payments.

Infrastructure and Maintenance

This covers the ongoing work of maintaining the site itself: content updates, guide revisions, new resource development, and the technical work of keeping search, navigation, and structured data in good shape.

Principles for Sponsorship

Bitcoin Dua applies clear principles to any form of support or sponsorship:

No influence over editorial content. Sponsors do not get to shape what we write, which guides we publish, or how we present information. Editorial independence is not negotiable.

No unverified claims. We will not claim a sponsor “powers” our work, that a contribution was larger than it was, or that a partner relationship exists when it does not. Everything published about support is accurate and modest.

No logos or endorsements without substance. We do not display sponsor logos as decoration. If we acknowledge support, it is specific, honest, and proportional to what was actually contributed.

No pressure on participants. Sponsorship must never come with the expectation that workshop participants will be pushed toward a particular product, service, or platform. Education must remain neutral and participant-centred.

Alignment with educational mission. We only consider support from individuals or organisations whose goals align with practical financial education. Support from entities promoting speculation, high-risk financial products, or any form of deceptive marketing is not welcome.

How to Support This Work

If you are interested in supporting Bitcoin education and community learning, the simplest starting point is a conversation. We are happy to discuss what specific programmes need, what support looks like in practice, and how contributions are used.

Visit our contact page to start that conversation. We respond to every genuine enquiry and are transparent about how resources are allocated and what outcomes look like in practice.

For more detail on the kinds of programmes that benefit from community support, see our projects overview and the community meetup playbook for a sense of what a typical structured session involves.