Polaris
The correspondent.
Writes the market — structured reports and the explorable dashboards behind them.
Polaris takes the reconciled substrate and articulates it. It produces written market reports with the narrative spine that a dashboard never quite captures — and the dashboards stay live underneath, so a reader can step from the sentence into the data and back.
The role
Markets, written.
A dashboard tells you what changed. A correspondent tells you why it matters. Polaris does both — it writes the market in language, and keeps the underlying view alive so any sentence in the report opens into the data behind it.
The output is a document you can hand to an executive and a surface an analyst can dig into. Same artifact, two readings.
Narrative-first.
Every report has a spine — what happened, what it means, what to watch. Visuals serve the argument; they don't substitute for it.
Drillable prose.
Sentences are anchored to the dashboard cells that produced them. A reader can step from the claim straight into the evidence.
Cadenced, not on-demand.
Polaris publishes on rhythm — quarterly category reports, monthly category pulses — so the market gets a continuous chronicle, not a stack of one-offs.
Honest about what the report doesn't know.
Where the substrate is thin, Polaris says so in the prose itself — not buried in a footnote no one reads.
More products
Different ways into the same reconciled substrate.