Maurice Muise turns fragmented information into clear, usable insight.
Maurice is a researcher, analyst, and independent builder whose career has been shaped by one consistent strength: turning fragmented, hard-to-navigate information into clear frameworks, useful tools, and practical insight. His work sits at the intersection of research, analysis, digital strategy, and structured intelligence.
Over the past 20+ years, Maurice has worked across government, independent consulting, and entrepreneurial publishing. He held research and digital strategy roles with several Canadian federal government ministries, where he led digital strategy and performance measurement for a national behaviour-change campaign. He later brought those same analytical strengths into independent consulting and entrepreneurial publishing, advising federal teams on digital analytics, search behaviour, and online performance while building, growing, and eventually selling six niche informational websites.
In recent years, Maurice has focused on applied research into Canadian business funding systems — mapping programs, building structured databases, developing taxonomies, and translating complex eligibility and program logic into decision-useful analysis. He is especially drawn to work where valuable information is scattered, opaque, or poorly organized, and where better structure creates real leverage.
His academic background reflects that same breadth: a B.A. in English Literature from Saint Mary’s University, an M.A. in Development Economics from Dalhousie University, and a Graduate Diploma in Public Policy and Program Evaluation from Carleton University. Early in his career, his master’s research took him to India, where he designed and carried out field surveys in eight villages while affiliated with a U.N. research institute.
At heart, Maurice is a researcher-builder. He is less interested in noise than in clarity, less interested in appearances than in substance, and most energized when he is building structured knowledge assets that help people understand how markets, programs, and opportunities really work.