What We Mean by Development Ecosystem Strategy and Why It Changes Everything
A destination is the system that determines whether assets such as heritage sites, festivals, national parks or even a resort generates sustained economic value.
This distinction is where our work at Red Clay begins.
Most conversations about tourism development in Africa start with attractions, arrival numbers, and hotel beds. These are reasonable things to measure, but they are outputs of a functioning system, not the system itself. When they become the primary focus of strategy, the result is investment that underperforms, infrastructure that sits underutilised, and tourism growth that is narrower and more fragile than it needs to be.
The pattern is consistent. A new hotel opens in an area with unmotorable roads, an underskilled hospitality workforce, and no coherent destination brand. Operations run below capacity. The supply chain imports rather than sources locally. The economic multiplier (the ripple of spending that should move through the local economy) leaks out rather than circulates. What is happening? The attraction exists, the investment arrived, but the ecosystem was not there to receive it.
Development ecosystem strategy addresses the conditions.
It works across five interconnected dimensions:
- connectivity, which determines whether a destination can be reached at competitive cost;
- hospitality capacity, which determines whether the accommodation and services infrastructure can support visitor demand;
- workforce readiness, which determines whether the skills exist locally to deliver quality experiences;
- safety and governance, which shapes the risk perception that drives investor and visitor behaviour;
- and brand and reputation, which determines how a destination is understood and evaluated by the people whose decisions matter most.

In the ecosystem, no single dimension works in isolation. A destination with excellent connectivity but weak workforce readiness will attract visitors it cannot serve well. Strong hospitality stock without brand clarity is invisible to the investors and travelers most likely to value what it offers. A destination with all five dimensions functioning coherently becomes a place where investment and development decisions are easier to make, returns are more predictable, and tourism generates economic value that extends well beyond the sector itself.
This is what investment readiness actually means. This readiness goes beyond a marketing campaign or the development of a masterplan. It requires a system in which the conditions for sustained economic activity exist and are visible to capital. This is why we describe our work as development ecosystem strategy rather than tourism consultancy.
Tourism consultancy produces recommendations for the tourism sector. Development ecosystem strategy produces the conditions for a destination’s economy to work, over the long-term. Tourism is the vehicle, the sector through which connectivity, capacity, workforce, safety, and reputation are built and tested. But the question we bring to every engagement goes beyond how to improve visitor numbers. It is how do we make this place more competitive, more resilient, and more worth investing in, for residents, for businesses, and for the institutions that allocate capital across the continent?
Africa has numerous destinations worth investing in but the ecosystem infrastructure that makes these destinations valuable and accessible for investment and development is missing.
That is the work.