A community-built registry of who can do what across NCR — engineers, electricians, designers, tutors, tailors, founders. Searchable by an AI that understands intent, backed by verification that isn't self-claimed.
Every profile moves through the same four steps before it's searchable — this is what separates a registry entry from a listing.
Add your skills, services, products, or knowledge — whatever you can offer the community, in plain language. No resume formatting required.
Upload existing certificates, or build a track record on the platform itself — completed jobs, peer ratings, and community vouching all feed into your record.
The assistant reads your profile into structured competencies, so a search for "needs a tutor for Class 10 Math, evenings" finds you even if you never used those exact words.
Residents, local businesses, and — over time — institutions and skill missions can find and verify you directly through the directory.
The registry doesn't separate "professional" from "informal" — a verified skill is a verified skill, regardless of sector.
Any directory can collect listings. What makes this infrastructure is a competency record that other people, and eventually other systems, can rely on.
Certificates, licenses, and degrees are checked against issuing bodies where possible, and flagged clearly when self-reported.
Every completed job or sale through the directory adds a real, time-stamped endorsement — not a generic five-star review.
RWAs, local institutions, and existing verified members can vouch for a new entry, the way a neighbourhood already does informally.
Domestic workers, tradespeople, and artisans whose competency has no formal record anywhere — this gives them one.
Find verified help nearby without relying on word-of-mouth alone or unvetted aggregator apps.
Seed and vouch for the first verified profiles in your sector, and get a clearer picture of the talent already living there.
List your services and solutions alongside a verifiable track record, not just a portfolio link.
A future integration point — a registry that government and NGO skill missions could query rather than rebuild.
Search by verified competency instead of self-written resumes, with a record that updates as people keep working.