Eric Johnson has worked in Nevadaโ€™s cannabis industry as a budtender and now works for the marijuana delivery service BlackbirdGo. He and co-worker Joey Johnson (no relation) are starting a new business called WeEdu. Their end goal is to develop a point-of-sale system that allows budtenders to teach their clients about the cannabis products they have available and the different effects of each. For now, the pair is producing a series of online blog posts labeled like college courses that cover cannabis basics from โ€œWeEdu 110: What To Expect In A Dispensaryโ€ to โ€œWeEdu 207: Sublinguals and Suppositories.โ€ Theyโ€™re available on the BlackbirdGo website: www.blackbirdgo.com/discover.

How did the idea for WeEdu come about?

Back when we were actually budtending, they called us lead budtenders. โ€ฆ The idea is basically automating the process of being the best budtender you could be. Thatโ€™s something we took upon ourselves when we were budtending. Thereโ€™s training programs in place, but itโ€™s really a lot. And if you do fall in love with it, itโ€™s a lot learning on your own. โ€ฆ Back when it was all still medical, so we called people โ€œpatients.โ€ So it was โ€œpatient recognition.โ€ So, you know, if you have a little old lady who walks through the door whoโ€™s never seen cannabis before, you have to figure out what she does know and what she doesnโ€™t know and try to lead her, eventually, to what product is going to be best for her. Thatโ€™s where the idea came fromโ€”taking that experience and getting all of those resources in one place โ€ฆ and creating, basically, a search engine to help the budtenders.

So youโ€™re teaching them what they want. Would, say, someone with anxiety use this to arrive at what she wants?

Yeah, you and your budtender could just type โ€œanxietyโ€ in there, and it will pop up with all of the products that a) you maybe would want to stay away from, and b) using a few more inputs like, โ€œsomething to sleepโ€ โ€ฆ would also help you look for things you want.

Online it starts with 100- and 200-level courses that cover using cannabis, but then the 300-level is โ€œWhat is THC?โ€ Youโ€™re intercepting current users, so is that why it addresses teaching use before the science basics?

Weโ€™re trying to go more into the top-of-the-line science thatโ€™s coming out and trying to gather all of that and putting it on the frontlines. That was kind of the first one, so weโ€™re going to go into CBD. Thereโ€™s also CBG, which not a lot of people know about โ€ฆ and CBN and then all of the terpenes, too. โ€ฆ But weโ€™re all learning together. Weโ€™re not saying we have all of the answers. We canโ€™t say that yet because no one does. Thatโ€™s the way that all came down, with pot as a Schedule I drugโ€”and so there hasnโ€™t been all of these legitimate studies done.

Seems like there are a lot of goals here.

Yeah, itโ€™s kind of a โ€œwhat, how, whyโ€ thing. So what we do is educate. How we do it is with the build-in to the point-of-sale system. Why we do it, basically, is โ€ฆ anger at how itโ€™s been held down throughout all of these years. I really see the medicinal value in it. I saw it every day working as a budtender. Iโ€™ve seen people that it really, really increased their quality of life.

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