Portrait setting representing a crypto community organizer at a live event
Community Organizer and Event Producer

Kelley Weaver

The person behind some of the most active in-person crypto community events in the country, and a consistent voice for making those spaces welcoming to everyone who walks through the door.

About Kelley Weaver

Kelley Weaver built her reputation in crypto by doing the kind of work that rarely gets attention on social media but directly shapes how people experience the industry for the first time. As a community organizer and event producer, she spent years creating in-person spaces where newcomers, seasoned traders, developers, and investors could sit in the same room and have honest conversations about what was actually happening in blockchain. That sounds simple. It is not.

Running a recurring community event in crypto requires navigating volatile sponsor interest, unpredictable attendance tied to market sentiment, venue logistics, speaker management, and the constant challenge of keeping content accessible without dumbing it down. Weaver handled all of this through her involvement with CryptoMondays, a global meetup network that she helped grow into one of the more visible grassroots organizations in the space.

CryptoMondays chapters operate in cities around the world. The format typically combines short presentations, panel discussions, and open networking. What distinguished Weaver's approach was a deliberate emphasis on inclusion. She actively recruited women speakers and panelists, reached out to people who were not already embedded in crypto Twitter culture, and structured events so that a first-time attendee would feel just as welcome as someone who had been trading since 2013.

Perspective and Expertise

Weaver's expertise sits at the intersection of event production and community development, two disciplines that are frequently undervalued in an industry obsessed with protocol launches and token price charts. Her perspective matters because in-person community events served as a critical onboarding channel during the years when crypto adoption was still heavily dependent on word of mouth and trust built through face-to-face interaction.

Between 2017 and 2020, meetups like CryptoMondays functioned as the front door for thousands of people entering the crypto ecosystem. Not everyone came in through Reddit or YouTube. Many people walked into a local event, listened to a real person explain what Bitcoin was, asked questions that felt too basic for an online forum, and left with enough understanding to take the next step. Weaver understood that dynamic and designed events around it.

Her focus on women in crypto was not performative. She organized events specifically centered on the contributions and perspectives of women in blockchain at a time when most crypto meetups were overwhelmingly male. The record-breaking event that became the basis of her Crypto Token Talk appearance was one example. She brought together a group of women who were active in different areas of the industry and put them in front of an audience that was large enough to prove the demand for that kind of programming.

What Weaver brought to the conversation on Crypto Token Talk was operational honesty. She talked about the mechanics of building community. The things that work. The things that do not. The fatigue that sets in after months of volunteer-run events. The tension between growing attendance and maintaining the quality of the experience. These are not glamorous topics, but they are the foundation on which everything else in the ecosystem depends.

Community organizers like Weaver rarely get the same recognition as founders or investors, but their contribution to the ecosystem is structural. Without people willing to put in the logistics work, crypto remains a niche online subculture. With them, it becomes something that real people encounter in their actual cities, in rooms with other real people. That is a fundamentally different kind of adoption.

Episodes on Crypto Token Talk

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