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Turning a impact ecosystem into a structured digital product

IndustryEducation, social impact, Web3
ScopeProduct strategy, UX, frontend, backend, integrations
StatusIn progress

Overview

Impactoverse is a dual-platform digital ecosystem designed to connect education, technology, and social impact.

The work spanned two linked products: Art for Impact, an NFT marketplace where users can buy, gift, and contribute digital assets to support social causes, and World of Impact, a gamified learning platform focused on the Sustainable Development Goals.

Because the ecosystem combined multiple products, audiences, and technologies, the challenge was bigger than delivery alone. It required strong product structure, coordinated planning, and a phased path to implementation.

Tison supported that effort across product specification, UX, technical architecture, development, integrations, and sprint delivery.

The Challenge

Impactoverse was ambitious by design.

It brought together two connected platforms, social impact and education goals, fiat and crypto transactions, identity verification, blockchain integrations, dashboard experiences, and staged delivery across multiple phases.

Without strong structure, a project like this can easily become fragmented. The challenge was to turn a broad vision into something users could understand, teams could build, and stakeholders could deliver with confidence over time.

The Opportunity

This was not just about building features.

The real opportunity was to create order across a complex ecosystem. Defining how the products fit together, what needed to happen first, and how the experience could remain coherent across learning, contribution, payment, and Web3 flows.

Tison helped turn that complexity into a clearer product and delivery structure.

What was delivered

Tison contributed across the full product lifecycle, helping define and deliver the ecosystem through multiple workstreams.

01

Full product specification and technical architecture documentation

02

UX research, user story mapping, and sprint planning

03

Frontend development across both platforms

04

Backend refactoring and API development

05

Database migration from MongoDB to Supabase

06

Stripe integration for fiat transactions

07

Blockchain and wallet connectivity work

08

QA testing and bug tracking

Core Capabilities

Art for Impact marketplace

Support for the user experience around buying, gifting, and contributing digital assets tied to social causes

World of Impact learning platform

Product support for a gamified learning environment centered on the Sustainable Development Goals.

Authentication and core user flows

Foundational flows were established early to make the platforms usable and coherent from the start.

Campaign creation and contribution journeys

User journeys for campaign participation and contribution were shaped as part of the phased delivery.

Dashboard, membership, and profile experiences

The work extended into dashboard design, membership pages, and profile management experiences across the ecosystem.

Website redesign support

A focused redesign phase helped improve the presentation and usability of the broader product experience.

Technology Stack

Frontend

Next.js, React, TailwindCSS, Material UI, ShadCN

Backend

Express.js, Node.js

Database

MongoDB to Supabase migration

Blockchain / Web3

Polygon, Solidity (ERC721), ThirdWeb, Coinbase Smart Wallets

Payments

Stripe, Coinbase

Cloud

AWS, Microsoft Azure

Identity

Earth ID for KYC and age verification

Related client-side tools

Unity and Blender were used by the client’s gaming team for the 3D and game-related parts of the broader ecosystem

Outcome

Tison helped turn Impactoverse from a complex vision into a more structured and executable digital ecosys

The work brought clarity to the product direction, improved coordination across multiple workstreams, supported implementation across frontend, backend, payments, and Web3 systems, and helped the client move forward with a more realistic and quality-focused delivery model.

Rather than treating the ecosystem as one overwhelming build, the project was shaped into phases that made progress clearer and execution more dependable.