Biomes for Better
At GROZOME, we believe healthy soil is the foundation of a healthy community. That’s why we created Biomes for Better—our social purpose program dedicated to supporting the gardens and gardeners who nourish people in need.
Our Commitment
For every GROZOME product sold in a community, we commit to:
- One-for-One Product Match: For every purchase, we donate GROZOME to local community gardens and nonprofits providing fresh, healthy food to underserved families.
- Event & Education Sponsorships: We partner with local organizations to host garden days, workshops, and fundraisers focused on soil health and sustainable growing.
- Monetary Support: A portion of sales in each region goes directly to support local garden projects, ensuring resources stay in the community where they’re needed most.
Why It Matters
- Food Security: Many communities face limited access to fresh, healthy produce. Community gardens close that gap.
- Soil Health: Regenerative practices not only grow better food—they restore soil biodiversity for generations to come.
- Education: Teaching the next generation how to grow nutrient-dense food builds resilience and self-reliance.
How We Help Grow Deeper Community Roots
GROZOME’s biologically complete living microbes:
- Improve soil structure and fertility naturally
- Boost plant health and yield without synthetic chemicals
- Create a thriving soil food web for long-term productivity
By donating products, time, and expertise, we help gardens produce more food with fewer inputs—so they can focus on feeding people, not fighting pests or struggling with depleted soil.
Get Involved
Do you run a community garden, school garden, or urban farm?Are you part of an organization that provides fresh food to those in need?
We’d love to partner with you.
Contact us to nominate your community garden today!
Share the Story
Every garden we support has a story—and we want to tell it. From small urban plots to multi-acre farms, we’ll feature your successes on our social channels to inspire other growers and spread the message that soil health is community health.