Politics focuses on such small percentage wins. If we increase the scope of wins, we multiply the impact of the outcome.
Politics revolves around making decisions. How best though does one make a decision on behalf of millions of People?
At Nine Carat we specialise in understanding patterns and connecting threads that appear to be completely unrelated. And it's our mission to design the solution.
When there is a problem, we don't consider all of the contributing factors that that got us there. It's usually never about where the problem presents, but the misaligned domino affect that concentrates into one area. When making decisions we often make them focused on one sector and not how a potential solution could exacerbate problems in another.
The question to be answered, is how does everyone win? How do we undo centuries of opposing decisions? How does one party get what they want without diluting what is important to another? How do we answer the vast and varied needs of all People? How do we get everyone what they need? And which need do we answer first? The loudest?
Rather than approaching problems as being entirely disconnected phenomenon, we must understand that they all require the same solution. For problems to be addressed from a connected perspective. To take seemingly disparate needs and reconcile them to create a solution for the benefit of all the constituents.
This is your invitation to look at problems from outside of the problems.
local economies
Time and big business have created dilapidated town economies that need to rehabilitate local business infrastructure. To re-establish the ability for locals to operate and manage their own businesses, opportunity needs to be created.
When social demographics are evolving and interstates change the viability of town planning, this turns once formidable industries into a vintage concept. Leaving a trail of empty buildings, desolate streets and lack of local business investment.
We believe that local business is a lost art. We see the potential lying dormant in your old buildings, in the businesses that had seen their hay day. We see that if fluidity had been contagious that local businesses would have had their share of the pie too.
This is your invitation to stimulate the success of your own ecosystem.