Executive Team
Jeff “Jedi” Wright: Managing Partner / CIA
Jedi is a consummate Internet entrepreneur and Information Architect and has been studying and working professionally in the information technology, multimedia, event production, and environmental fields since 1993. Prior to founding Green Gurus, he served as Director of Media Relations for Rooftop Promotion, a European music promotions company and General Manager at Hidden River Adventures, an outdoor adventure company.
He also serves as: Information Architect at IJHANA, CEO of Distinctivefabric.com, SysAdmin for The Do LaB, where he’s been a contributing member since its inception, and CTO at the Do ArT Foundation. Working tirelessly to transform any obstacle into a valuable asset, he leads any project or endeavor to a timely, successful completion with great professionalism and attention to detail.
Elizabeth Marley: Lead Design Engineer
Elizabeth assembles ideas and transforms them into novel next steps in her assorted design projects. She has stretched into architectural, mechanical, and industrial design realms as they pertain to environmentally + socially responsible design and community building. E.Marley collaborates with other artists, designers, engineers and scientists with the belief that our built environment is better designed with interdisciplinary teams. As a visual communicator, E.Marley thrives on illustrating possibilities for new worlds by hand and machine.
From creating multi-media children’s books, sitemaps, business presentations, and storyboards to transforming conceptual sketches into tangible, testable prototypes, built systems + habitable spaces, E.Marley brings 2D to 3D to market ready strategies with a love for detail, creative process + successful outcome for all participating. She holds a B. Arch from Southern California Institute of Architecture.
Douglas Reeser: Lead Anthropologist / Program Director
An anthropologist with a sense of humor, Douglas has graduate degrees in anthropology and public health, and is currently a doctoral candidate in Applied Anthropology at the University of South Florida.
His current interests and work revolve around indigenous cultures and ways of knowing. He seeks to understand how the intersection of the ancient and the modern may shed light on how to improve the condition of the world’s marginalized peoples. He is currently working in Belize conducting research about medical pluralism in the rural south. He is also a Columnist and Editor at Recycled Minds, Program Director at Remedia and Contributing Editor at Anthropology News.






