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Stage 2

Now it’s not just for individuals—it works for the things they build together.

Kwipoo has grown from a personal and casual group tool into something that small, social-benefit focused organizations and communities can actually run on.

It’s no longer just for tracking your stuff or planning trips with friends—it now supports real-world operations. Community kitchens, tool libraries, artist collectives, small repair shops, local non-profits—groups that actually do things—can use Kwipoo to manage their shared inventory, coordinate services, and keep track of what’s flowing in and out.

They don’t need a Frankenstein stack of enterprise software, spreadsheets, and duct-taped systems anymore. Kwipoo gives them just enough structure to stay on top of things without becoming a full-time admin job.

People in these orgs aren’t spending all day in meetings about systems. They’re just using one that works.

And because it’s grounded in the same shared primitives—things, places, people, services, events—it’s easy for individuals and groups to connect. You can lend your gear to a neighbor, donate extra stock to a local org, or help a friend’s small business—all without needing 5 systems or reinventing the wheel.

It’s still early, but at this stage, small collectives and businesses are starting to operate in a flow state—less energy spent on overhead, more going into the work they actually care about.