Founder’s Note

Across our work with climate, health, livelihoods, financial inclusion, and other pressing challenges, we have come to recognize a humbling truth: complexity cannot be solved; it can only be navigated. 

Most of the problems facing our societies today are not static puzzles. They are deep, rooted, and highly interconnected systems—constantly evolving, often accelerating. Their impacts unfold exponentially, but unevenly. And it is always the communities closest to the frontline who feel these shifts most viscerally. 

A smallholder farmer does not experience climate change as an abstract trend line. A shift in rainfall or temperature reshapes everything—cropping cycles, growth, yield, price, and ultimately, survival. Their exposure is immediate and existential, while the resources to act are distant, centralized, or fragmented. 

The Double Exponential Gap 

In observing these systems, we see a phenomenon we call the Double Exponential Gap. 

The first exponential is the accelerating nature of the problem itself—the way climate volatility, health crises, or livelihood shocks compound over time. 

The second exponential is the widening distance from resources. A few actors hold vast institutional capability, while millions navigating these crises have very little. This creates what we call the C-Curve: a steep, unequal distribution where those with the deepest context lack resources, and those with resources lack context. 

This split produces a profound Collective Wisdom Gap—both horizontal and vertical. Horizontally, local insights rarely flow across communities facing similar struggles. Vertically, the “top” lacks granular sensing, and the “bottom” lacks access to institutional knowledge. 

When the problems of our time grow exponentially, wisdom cannot remain fragmented. 

From Uniform to Unified 

For too long, “scale” has meant a top-down template—a uniform solution rolled out everywhere. While sometimes necessary, this approach struggles in hyper-local contexts where nuance determines success. 

At Apurva, we are asking a different question:
Can scale emerge from the bottom up? 

What if scale was not imposed, but grown?
What if communities were the first mile of insight, not the last mile of implementation? What if many local, context-rich responses could be connected so that a unified pattern emerges—one that is not uniform, but coherent? 

This shift—from Uniform Scale to Unified Scale—requires a renewed commitment to three pillars: 

Listen:
To truly hear communities, NGOs, field teams, and frontline actors—not as data points, but as partners in sensing complexity. 

 

Learn:
To enable circular flows of wisdom—peer-to-peer learning, bottom-up insight for funders, and the translation of institutional knowledge into contextual practice. 

 

Act:
To enable the ecosystem to respond collectively, with interventions that are as local as the problem they seek to address and as connected as the systems they inhabit. 

The Promise of Apurva 

Apurva was built as an architecture for this kind of response. 

A suite of product building blocks powered by exponential technologies. Platforms that strengthen interactions and network effects. Protocols that enable shared discovery, interconnected learning, and emergent intelligence. 

In other words: tools designed not to simplify complexity, but to work with it, mirroring the systems they serve. 

We believe the future of solving complex problems lies in unlocking local collective wisdom and enabling ecosystems to act together—rooted in context, connected at scale. 

We invite change-makers, funders, and institutions to join us in building this unified, bottom-up architecture of response. Because the challenges ahead are too complex for any one actor—and too urgent for us to remain disconnected. 

— Anand 

Renewed visions for the time ahead of breaking barriers and collective wisdom

It is always intriguing to see how Apurva is able to bring together organisations and domains to solve societal problems through the lens of collective wisdom. Here is the story of Catalyst Management Services (CMS), their journey with Apurva so far and their renewed visions for the future, stitched together from conversations with Raghunathan Narayanan, Co-Founder and Director, and Prerak Shah, Senior Associate

Catalyst Management Services (CMS) works on improving the health and well-being of each individual, especially the vulnerable communities. Aiming to improve 100 million lives of vulnerable populations, they share their thoughts on how Apurva.ai as an impact tool boosts their pace and efficiency to reach their goal.

Collectivised Wisdom

Prerak Shah, Senior Associate at CMS, describes how Apurva.ai emphasised the importance of collectivising knowledge and wisdom from multiple sources. This led to a shift in focus on how CMS is able to democratise wisdom curated instead of retaining it, thereby reaching and working with larger communities, and eventually benefitting the larger ecosystem. “When we started using Apurva for a few of the interactions, we were able to synthesise in a much more streamlined and structured manner, and we didn’t have to spend a lot of time synthesising this information as well, because it used to be more accessible and easily consumable.” Knowledge derived with the help of Apurva ranges from calls to actions, different themes emerging from conversations, and new insights from the field, which eventually get institutionalised within the organisation. 

Raghunathan Narayanan, Co-Founder and Director, further adds that collective wisdom is essential for their organisation as they repeatedly work on complex societal problems which are multidimensional and multi-layered. He goes on to emphasise the importance of collective wisdom by stating, “Every organisation takes a stance, has an approach on its own, and it looks at learnings from outside. Collective kind of wisdom is important as a particular context requires different solutions, and there’s no one solution which is workable everywhere.”

CMS and Apurva.ai

CMS has been in awe of Apurva.ai’s Power of Co-creation, the insights emerging from conversations and Apurva’s active role in the discussions. Similar to so many who have encountered Apurva, both Narayanan’s and Shah’s AHA moment was during their first interaction of querying Apurva. Narayanan shares, “When we came back and saw the output, I was wondering what was the possibility of a tool like this. It was about picking up those threads and giving back those points for further discussions, resulting in deepening the discussion.” Narayanan was impressed with the ability to derive meaningful insights from diverse community voices that are available immediately, thereby improving their ability to respond with various solutions quickly. Shah, on the other hand, was excited how Apurva was able to pick up nuances across different languages and geographies and synthesise all the knowledge curated, thereby breaking barriers present today.

Power of Co-creation

Apurva.ai joins and participates in conversations, both online and offline, to co-create knowledge. The platform actively listens and adds to the discussion and provides perspectives, sentiments, ideas and call-to-actions at the end. The knowledge co-created can be queried during and post the conversations. The emerging collective wisdom is added to the ever-growing Apurva’s digital brain of the organisation.

Narayanan recalls querying the conversations from the women’s economic empowerment program and finding new insights on how women entrepreneurs are stigmatised, harassed, how they have to deal with English-speaking customers and more. Narayanan was astounded by the insights as they are not drawn out during their routine reviews. Shah too highlighted how they were able to derive insights from women entrepreneurs on the challenges and barriers they face, despite conversations being in local languages. 

Narayanan explains that Apurva fits perfectly with CMS’s goal to solve for vulnerable populations across different parts with context-relevant and quick responses. With Apurva, the collective wisdom emerging from conversational querying and institutional knowledge, from a specific theme or combination of themes and across languages, enhances problem-solving. “It is an impact tool, through which an organisation’s effectiveness can be improved. This will enable us to be able to deliver our work much better.”

Narayanan is specifically excited to build the agency of communities with Apurva.ai. Working across different domains, geographies and populations, he describes how CMS works on building responses to various problems faced by different populations. “Everybody brings their experiences together, their own reflections together around agency building, and Apurva can look at building for those specific units, and organisations, as a catalyst.”

Visions for the time ahead

Narayanan states that, “Apurva can be an enabler of organisations, a tool in which new perspectives can be built.” He elaborates how societal issues are extremely complex and systemic, making it difficult for people to learn and trace patterns by just reading and listening to people’s experiences. Instead, leveraging the time and work invested by people to understand the system can open new routes of looking at societal issues and approaches to solve them. This impact tool can play a significant role in improving effectiveness for policymakers, program planners, nano micro and small medium enterprises.

Shah envisions using Apurva with their communities and their ecosystem network to derive the pockets of wisdom that lies within these spaces, which leads to the crux of most of the work done by CMS. He claims that “The biggest value add will be at the community level because institutions can enable or push for it, but it is not necessarily valued at the community level. So once we understand and showcase the value of it to communities, it can be translated to the community institutions, then to the organisation and there’ll be more buying for the entire chain of people who are working for the community.” With the collective wisdom curated, Shah says they want to understand challenges at the community institutional level by going beyond implementation and also looking into design, network and methods to scale their solutions. 

Shah probes the relevance of Apurva with the question, “How do we bring different context-based knowledge to other places? Maybe not 100% fit, but at least 80%, which will lead to a decrease in discovery cost.” He further adds that this can be possible. “This can be enabled by Apurva if all the ecosystem players start using it and understand the value that each of them bring to the ecosystem. This can be translated to different geographies and different communities as well.”

Narayanan describes the journey of Apurva and CMS as a “highly co-creation process” where it is “helping others to learn and grow exponentially. To me, I think CMS and Apurva are in the pathway for collective impact.”

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