The latest generation of geostationary satellites carry sensors such as the Advanced Baseline Imager (GOES-16/17) and the Advanced Himawari Imager (Himawari-8/9) that closely mimic the spatial and spectral characteristics of MODIS and VIIRS, useful for monitoring land surface conditions. The NASA Earth Exchange (NEX) team at Ames Research Center has embarked on a collaborative effort among scientists from NASA and NOAA exploring the feasibility of producing operational land surface products similar to those from MODIS/VIIRS. The team built a processing pipeline called GEONEX that is capable of converting raw geostationary data into routine products of Fires, surface reflectances, vegetation indices, LAI/FPAR, ET and GPP/NPP using algorithms adapted from both NASA/EOS and NOAA/GOES-R programs. The GEONEX pipeline will begin to produce provisional data products to be consumed by external collaborators and the academic community. In order to better inform and introduce the GEONEX products to the science community, the provisional products shall be distributed from the NAS data portal, located at data.nas.nasa.gov, and simple webpage at www.nasa.gov/geonex has been deployed, which describes any algorithms used in deriving the products, user manuals and data file information. We will also update the status of the data processing, on the website and provide links to the latest datasets, and use a geonex mailing list, using lists.nasa.gov.