Partner with us

You shouldn't have to build everything from scratch.

Whether you want to host one of our existing programs or bring an idea to life inside your community, partnership with WellWoven means you don't carry it alone.

Three ways to partner

Run a turnkey program. Join our referral network. Or build something new with us.

Turnkey

Option 1

Host a turnkey WellWoven program

Drop a tested, evidence-based cohort — like Wells of Recovery — into your existing small-group or ministry structure. One upfront, affordable cost covers the full curriculum, facilitator training, participant materials, and launch support. Built for groups that don't have the time or staff to design a program from scratch.

Referral network

Option 2

Join our access-to-care & referral network

For clinicians, counselors, recovery programs, and community organizations who want to be part of a trusted network of professional support. We connect cohort participants and partner ministries to vetted providers when someone needs more than a small group can offer.

Option 3

Bring us your community's idea

You see a need no one else does. We help shape that vision into a sustainable program — with research, design support, and funding support based on available resources.

Two partners shaking hands across a table during a planning meeting — a moment of agreement and collaboration

How partnership works

Four steps from first conversation to a launched cohort.

  1. Step 01

    A conversation

    We meet your team where they are and listen for the people you're already serving.

  2. Step 02

    A shared plan

    Together we choose a program — or co-design one — that fits your context and capacity.

  3. Step 03

    A supported launch

    We provide curriculum, facilitator training, materials, and funding support based on the resources available.

  4. Step 04

    Ongoing partnership

    Cohort supervision, outcomes tracking, and a network of peer partners to keep momentum.

Ready to talk?

Tell us about your community.

A 30-minute conversation is the best place to start. No pitch, no pressure — just listening.