Next Mission Digital Readiness
Portfolio, personal brand, or early venture landing pages with domain setup, hosting guidance, SEO basics, contact workflows, account security, and handoff training.
Veteran transition and digital readiness
Next Mission Digital helps transitioning service members, recently separated veterans, disabled veterans, and veteran-serving organizations build practical websites, brands, safer accounts, workflows, automations, and digital skills.
The launch stays focused: readiness support, digital-defense education, and practical help for veteran-serving organizations.
Portfolio, personal brand, or early venture landing pages with domain setup, hosting guidance, SEO basics, contact workflows, account security, and handoff training.
Workshops on passwords, MFA, phishing, scams, fake recruiters, account recovery, AI fraud, and digital trust.
Website repair, intake forms, volunteer signups, donation workflows, scheduling, basic automation, backups, and staff training.
Capacity-dependent support for disabled veterans who need digital help with independence, communication, remote work, or safer access.
Many veterans have the drive, story, and service mindset to start a brand, career path, nonprofit project, or small business idea, but they get stuck on the digital setup. Next Mission Digital turns that setup into a guided, secure, repeatable process.
This project itself was developed with an automated, AI-assisted workflow. That becomes part of the teaching model: veterans do not just receive a website; they learn how modern digital work is changing and what skills matter next.
Eligibility is based on transition status, veteran status, disability-related digital access needs, or veteran-serving organizational work.
Branch names are used descriptively to identify military-connected communities served. Next Mission Digital is not endorsed by the Department of Defense, the VA, or any military branch.
Founder-led by lived experience
Next Mission Digital is being built from firsthand experience with military transition, disability, technology, automation, and the gap between having a mission and having the digital tools to move it forward.
Adam's professional background, LinkedIn experience, and project history should be added here once the final profile details are reviewed. The founder story should connect service, technical execution, automation, AI implementation, and the ability to teach the next generation of veterans practical digital skills.
This process was designed and developed through an AI-assisted, highly automated workflow. That is part of the point: veterans should be able to learn how AI, automation, secure websites, and digital systems are changing work, entrepreneurship, nonprofit service, and community leadership.
The goal is not just launching pages. The goal is safer accounts, stronger transition readiness, better access, and more durable veteran-serving capacity.
These answers are written for early applicants, referral partners, advisors, fiscal sponsors, and funders while Next Mission Digital prepares its pilot.
The pilot is for transitioning active-duty, Guard, or Reserve service members, recently separated veterans, disabled veterans, and small veteran-serving organizations. Business or brand launch support is focused on pre-launch or first-year efforts with limited revenue and limited ability to pay for comparable support.
Yes, when it fits the program rules. The support is education-based and capped: website or landing page help, brand clarity, hosting, SEO basics, forms, automation, AI training, security basics, and handoff. It is not unlimited agency work or a guarantee of customers, revenue, traffic, or ranking.
For the launch pilot, priority is for pre-launch or first-year businesses, brands, service projects, or early ventures with under $10,000 in gross revenue. Established businesses may be referred elsewhere unless a sponsor or independent review confirms a clear educational, transition, disability-access, or public-benefit reason.
Standard program support generally expects an honorable or general-under-honorable discharge, unless the applicant is currently serving. Other statuses may be reviewed case by case for limited education, safety training, or referrals. Business or brand launch support has stricter review.
We focus on practical sites: personal brand pages, portfolios, resume sites, early business landing pages, service project pages, and small veteran-serving organization sites. The goal is a secure, understandable foundation that can be handed off, maintained, and improved over time.
When funding and capacity allow, the project may provide hosting guidance, subsidized hosting, basic monitoring, updates, troubleshooting, and limited maintenance during an approved support period. Long-term free hosting or indefinite maintenance is not guaranteed.
We teach practical AI use for resumes, LinkedIn summaries, bios, website copy, service descriptions, proposals, planning, checklists, and outreach. We also teach how to review AI output, protect sensitive information, and recognize AI-enabled scams or fake opportunities.
We can help create simple workflows for contact forms, intake, scheduling, follow-ups, reminders, spreadsheets, basic reporting, document collection, and communication. The goal is to save time without creating systems that are too expensive or difficult to maintain.
We choose tools based on the participant's actual needs, budget, comfort level, security, privacy, and ability to maintain the system. We prefer free, low-cost, open-source, secure, export-friendly, or lower-friction tools when they fit the job.
Yes. A big part of the work is helping veterans avoid expensive platforms, unnecessary add-ons, duplicated subscriptions, and locked-in tools before they understand what they truly need. The aim is to help participants do more with less.
We provide cybersecurity basics: MFA, password manager guidance, account recovery, backups, safer forms, scam awareness, phishing education, and AI-fraud awareness. We do not guarantee that any website, account, or system will be fully secure.
Yes. Small veteran-serving nonprofits, VSOs, peer-support groups, and community organizations may qualify for website repair, intake forms, volunteer signups, donation workflows, scheduling, basic automation, security basics, backups, and staff training.
No. Branch names are used descriptively to identify military-connected communities served. Next Mission Digital is not endorsed by the Department of Defense, the VA, or any military branch.
Next Mission Digital is preparing fiscal sponsorship and nonprofit formation materials. Donation links and tax-deductible language will not be added until a fiscal sponsor or nonprofit authority approves the exact process and wording.
Next Mission Digital is preparing fiscal sponsor and grant-ready packages. Early support helps fund domains, hosting, open-source tools, security basics, guided builds, workshops, and continued assistance for veterans getting online quickly and safely.
Helps cover domain, security, or workshop materials.
Helps sponsor one Digital Defense Lab participant.
Helps fund a full Digital Transition Kit.
Helps launch a Next Mission Digital Readiness cohort.
Start a conversation
This first version is a placeholder form for planning. Connect it to an approved email, CRM, or fiscal sponsor process before public launch.