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	<title>Future Savvy: Quality in Foresight &#187; 2025</title>
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		<title>The Market is a MMORPG. It&#8217;s Whip or Be Whipped</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2012/01/the-market-is-a-mmorpg-its-whip-or-be-whipped/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2012/01/the-market-is-a-mmorpg-its-whip-or-be-whipped/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2012 16:15:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2025]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[economy & finance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[strategic foresight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[technology change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Day traders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[eurozone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[financial markets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Foltz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FT]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MMORPG]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=2087</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Financial markets are delicately poised at the start of the year, to say the least. A steady low-bubbling stock rise – what the FT calls a &#8220;stealth&#8221; rally – has left the S&#38;P 500 index at a five-month high and the Dow up 10% in 6 weeks, flying in the face of the 2012 analyst [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2012/01/the-market-is-a-mmorpg-its-whip-or-be-whipped/' addthis:title='The Market is a MMORPG. It&#8217;s Whip or Be Whipped' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Market-Whipped-Choice-J-Foltz/dp/0984657304" target="_blank"><img class="alignleft" style="margin: 9px;" src="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2012/01/mw-150x150.png" alt="mw 150x150 The Market is a MMORPG. Its Whip or Be Whipped" width="150" height="150" title="The Market is a MMORPG. Its Whip or Be Whipped" /></a>Financial markets are delicately poised at the start of the year, to say the least. A steady low-bubbling stock rise – what the FT calls a &#8220;stealth&#8221; rally – has left the S&amp;P 500 index at a five-month high and the Dow up 10% in 6 weeks, flying in the face of the 2012 analyst outlook which is on-the-whole bearish amid Eurozone debt and global growth concerns.</p>
<p>Bears are in a surprise squeeze. Not so long ago it was rebound-optimist Jon Corzine of MF Global publicly taking the hit that many others were privately taking too.</p>
<p>It’s certainly not news that markets don’t behave as expected, nor that emotion drives decisions, but Joan Foltz, author of  <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0984657304" target="_blank"><em>Market Whipped: And Not By Choice</em></a> (Alsek, 2012) suggests something further: that we are going through a basic shift in how markets work and therefore how to succeed in them.</p>
<p>She says the financial markets have become a MMORPG, that is, a “massive multiplayer online role-playing game.” In gamer world, a MMORPG is a vast virtual world where an effectively unlimited number of players assume characters and interact with each other in a persistent and ever-evolving “reality.”</p>
<p>The same computation and virtualization platform technologies that have produced game worlds also underpin financial markets, and are therefore unsurprisingly producing similar effects.</p>
<p>Buy a stock and you have entered a virtual arena of realms and battles, with characters taking roles in stories that play out over a known (to insiders) time period. There are masters and magicians and druids and emporers, and who knows what else, all gaming for your money. Play the game right, and you win theirs.</p>
<div>
<dl id="attachment_728">
<dt><a href="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2012/01/mmorpg.jpg"><img src="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2012/01/mmorpg.jpg" alt="mmorpg The Market is a MMORPG. Its Whip or Be Whipped" width="390" height="229" title="The Market is a MMORPG. Its Whip or Be Whipped" /></a></dt>
<dd>picture: mmorpg.com</dd>
</dl>
</div>
<p>Says Foltz: “Keep the market in mind as you go through this list of features:</p>
<ul>
<li>a massive base of online players who create a dynamic environment that requires extremely complex strategies and sharp analytical skills.</li>
<li>an extensive systems architecture with multiple regions and restricted levels of access, all of which are usually controlled by a Game Master.</li>
<li>an online location that blurs the real and virtual worlds, where human and computerized players interact with real money that transfers into virtual currencies.</li>
<li>automated programs (bots) that create situations to trig­ger reactions from other players.</li>
<li>players who are classified by attributes, powers, and capabilities, which limit their territories.</li>
<li>players who can take on multiple characters, each with a unique mission.</li>
<li>social interaction that immerses players in role-playing opportunities.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p>Who are the characters in the game? High-frequency traders, hedge funds, corporations, pension funds, celebrity investors, the media, the government, to name just the obvious ones.</p>
<p>Into this world walk investors who think the markets are what they used to be, and work how they used to work – that they are understandable through due-diligence in research, and winnable by well-considered valuations or by technical analysis. No surprise that they find themselves surprised. In gamer world, nothing is as it appears and nothing works out as expected.</p>
<p><strong>Game on</strong></p>
<p>Foltz’s argument is that traders of all stripes improve their results by acknowledging market MMORPG and thinking like a gamer. That is, seeking to understand where the battle is at any time; recognizing who battles whom, under what conditions, and for how long; knowing who the strongmen are in their realm and what story is playing out.</p>
<p>Investors should know their own token in the game, its attributes and ammunition, as well as its limitations. This will improve judgment of where to be, when to come and go (market timing), and encourage quick exits from realms that are best left to more powerful, and perhaps, darker forces.</p>
<p>The book itself has a chaotic, breathless, aspect, and is marred by a tendency to conspiracy theory. But it does provide a productive analogy that sheds light on unchartered territory. In other words, it does what “futurists” should do when they do their job right: identify and illuminate a change in the world, and describe why assumptions and practices that worked in the past may fail going forward.</p>
<div><img src="http://img.zemanta.com/pixy.gif?x-id=bda84811-e134-4b8f-9124-ba891882423a" alt=" The Market is a MMORPG. Its Whip or Be Whipped"  title="The Market is a MMORPG. Its Whip or Be Whipped" /></div>
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		<title>Add M&amp;A Headache to World Bank&#8217;s Global &#8216;Multipolarity&#8217; Forecast</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2011/05/add-ma-headache-to-world-banks-global-multipolarity-forecast/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2011/05/add-ma-headache-to-world-banks-global-multipolarity-forecast/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 May 2011 08:57:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2025]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[strategic foresight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[euro]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GE]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[M&A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[renminbi]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[World Bank]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=1550</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The World Bank on May 18 released a report “Multipolarity: The New Global Economy” with outlook for the geo-financial system to 2025. “Multipolarity” catches the World Bank up with what has been clear for a long time: an actually, genuinely different global economic order is unfolding as growth moves to emerging economies, with countries such [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2011/05/add-ma-headache-to-world-banks-global-multipolarity-forecast/' addthis:title='Add M&#038;A Headache to World Bank&#8217;s Global &#8216;Multipolarity&#8217; Forecast' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p><a href="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2011/05/multipolarity.jpg"><img class="alignleft" style="margin: 9px;" src="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2011/05/multipolarity.jpg" alt="multipolarity Add M&A Headache to World Banks Global Multipolarity Forecast" width="150" height="170" title="Add M&A Headache to World Banks Global Multipolarity Forecast" /></a>The World Bank on May 18 released a report “<a href="http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTGDH/Resources/GDH-AdvanceEd-CompleteBook.pdf" target="_blank">Multipolarity: The New Global Economy</a>” with outlook for the geo-financial system to 2025.</p>
<p>“Multipolarity” catches the World Bank up with what has been clear for a long time: an actually, genuinely different global economic order is unfolding as growth moves to emerging economies, with countries such as China, India, South Korea, Russia, and Brazil accounting for the majority of economic growth in the next decade and beyond. And, on the back of this, the dollar will lose its pre-eminence as global reserve currency.</p>
<p>The report is nevertheless important at a meta-level. When the World Bank puts out a perspective, that means the perspective becomes more-or-less institutionalized wisdom. Global financial revolution, effectively, is no longer a theory out there. It is the “official future,” and financial and political institutions are more likely to act in line with it. Therein a reinforcing feedback loop.</p>
<p><strong>Renminbi</strong></p>
<p>A couple of things stand out. Report author Mansoor Dailami says the euro and renminbi will establish themselves on an equal footing to the dollar. This seems plausible, but one is left wondering – given the pace of innovation in finance, and in computing, and in communications and networking, and the 14 years to 2025 – will we still be looking at a system where national or regional currencies are  “dominant?” Could the world financial system not evolve differently, for example away from a global reserve requirement altogether, or towards more multi-currency baskets? (The report does entertain the adoption of the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights system.)</p>
<p>The foresight principle: In looking at the future it’s tempting to see new agents dominating current structures, but often the structures themselves change.</p>
<p>The other point that pops out is an expectation that cross-border M&amp;A deals originating in emerging markets will be an increasing feature of the new corporate landscape.</p>
<p>This is as solid a prediction as one will find. But it surely will not be one way. While cash-flush emerging-market companies will look to diversify into European and American companies, or take them over entirely – particularly ones that have Asian brand recognition and prestige (remember the Japanese corporate shopping trips of 1980s) – developed-world companies will be returning the favor, buying their way into emerging market companies to get a piece of their growth.</p>
<p>And we’re not talking passive investment here. The action will be immersive developed-meets-emerging market M&amp;A (and surely also corporate raiding, hostile takeovers, etc.)</p>
<p><a href="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2011/05/cross-border-ma.jpg"><img src="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2011/05/cross-border-ma.jpg" alt="cross border ma Add M&A Headache to World Banks Global Multipolarity Forecast" width="494" height="357" title="Add M&A Headache to World Banks Global Multipolarity Forecast" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>M&amp;A is &#8220;speed&#8221; for corporate leaders. A big high, often followed by a<a href="http://www.forbes.com/2009/06/16/mergers-acquisitions-advice-leadership-ceonetwork-recession.html" target="_blank">crash</a>. But if history is any guide, the lure of buying someone else’s growth, not to mention instantly enhancing a company’s industry size-power footprint, is more intoxicating than the sirens of Odysseus, so one can confidently predict it going forward.</p>
<p>Which is to say the spreadsheet-anticipated wins in economies of scale, scope, market synergies, or vertical integration of M&amp;A will be up against the problems of marrying company cultures, systems, products, brand values and business models &#8212; a vexing problem that routinely defeats even the best business leaders.</p>
<p>But add to this, here, very significant cross-cultural management and staff issues, problems of distance, and regulatory systems that are often purposed to different ends, and you have a leadership challenge indeed for firms that venture down this path. But venture they must, because companies in low-growth markets can only buy back their shares for so long (aka “we’ve got no ideas about what to do with investor money, so we’re giving it back to you”) &#8212; witness GE’s $12bn share buy-back <a href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7a16a0d6-81a8-11e0-8a54-00144feabdc0,s01=1.html#axzz1Mo0StGot" target="_blank">announcement</a> this week.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div><img src="http://img.zemanta.com/pixy.gif?x-id=57ae596f-e439-4cad-a510-912742282502" alt=" Add M&A Headache to World Banks Global Multipolarity Forecast"  title="Add M&A Headache to World Banks Global Multipolarity Forecast" /></div>
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		<title>From economic power to political muscle: the future rhymes with the past</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2011/04/from-economic-power-to-political-muscle-the-future-rhymes-with-the-past/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2011/04/from-economic-power-to-political-muscle-the-future-rhymes-with-the-past/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Apr 2011 15:20:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2025]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Zuma]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=1541</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The new axis in world diplomacy and global leadership flexes its muscles next week on Hainan Island – the southernmost tip of China – with the BRICS summit on April 14 in Sanya, and the Boao Forum the following day. BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) is already something of a “G5” of [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2011/04/from-economic-power-to-political-muscle-the-future-rhymes-with-the-past/' addthis:title='From economic power to political muscle: the future rhymes with the past' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p><a href="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2011/04/brics.jpg"><img class="alignleft" style="margin: 9px;" title="brics" src="http://blogs-images.forbes.com/adamgordon/files/2011/04/brics.jpg" alt="brics From economic power to political muscle: the future rhymes with the past" width="179" height="145" /></a>The new axis in world diplomacy and global leadership flexes its muscles next week on Hainan Island – the southernmost tip of China – with the BRICS summit on April 14 in Sanya, and the Boao Forum the following day.</p>
<p>BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) is already something of a “G5” of non-Western nations. Next week its leaders (China&#8217;s Hu Jintao, Brazil&#8217;s Dilma Rousseff, Russia&#8217;s Dmitry Medvedev, India&#8217;s Manmohan Singh, and South Africa&#8217;s Jacob Zuma) will set themselves to discuss their joint concerns in international affairs, economics, development, trade, security, etc.</p>
<p>More than anything, the event signals growing intention to coordinate views and act in closer alignment, and press towards future empowerment and responsibility of non-Western world leaders. Political clout has always gone with economic clout, and in this respect the future can be depended on to “rhyme” with the past.</p>
<p>BRICS countries already account for 40% of global population and 20% of global GDP – and they are the nations expected to grow most rapidly in GDP terms in the next decade and beyond, and to provide primary succor to neighbors in their regions.</p>
<p>Hainan 2011 is the third summit of the BRIC countries. The acronym BRIC was coined by Goldman Sachs (<a href="http://finapps.forbes.com/finapps/jsp/finance/compinfo/CIAtAGlance.jsp?tkr=gs&amp;tab=searchtabquotesdark" target="_blank">NYSE: GS</a>) in 2001 in a chicken-and-egg prophesy: causing Russia, China, Brazil and India to see their interests as potentially aligned, and politically worth aligning. South Africa was accepted into the group in February.</p>
<p>Without stopping for breath, the diplomatic caravan moves 125 miles overnight up the coast of Hainan Island to Boao, where President Hu will give the keynote address the next day at the annual Boao Forum for Asia (BFA).</p>
<p>Boao is an undisguised knock-off of the World Economic Forum in Davos (with skiing replaced by snorkeling perhaps): a high-level gathering for policy and business influencers, with a similar nudge-and-influence mandate, here with an Asian focus. In attendence, in addition the the BRICS representatives, will be by Korea’s Kim Hwang-Sik, Spain’s Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, Ukrainian’s Mikola Azarov, and New Zealand’s Bill English.</p>
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		<title>2025 for download: &#8216;you don&#8217;t have to be right, you just have to be interesting.&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/09/2025-for-download-you-dont-have-to-be-right-you-just-have-to-be-interesting/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/09/2025-for-download-you-dont-have-to-be-right-you-just-have-to-be-interesting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Sep 2009 12:43:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=891</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I note from a link on the Ian Miles Futures blog that &#8220;2025:  Scenarios of US and Global Society Reshaped by Science and Technology&#8221; by Coates, Hines, &#38; Mahaffie, is now available free for full-text download. For full disclosure, I should say I worked in the Coates office in Washington D.C. during the mid-late 1990s [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/09/2025-for-download-you-dont-have-to-be-right-you-just-have-to-be-interesting/' addthis:title='2025 for download: &#8216;you don&#8217;t have to be right, you just have to be interesting.&#8217;' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span id="btAsinTitle"><a href="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/2025.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-894" style="margin: 9px;" title="2025" src="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/2025-188x300.jpg" alt="2025 188x300 2025 for download: you dont have to be right, you just have to be interesting." width="150" height="240" /></a>I note from a link on the Ian Miles <a href="http://4site.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Futures</a> blog that &#8220;2025</span><span id="btAsinTitle">:  Scenarios of US and Global Society Reshaped by Science and Technology&#8221; by Coates, Hines, &amp; Mahaffie, is now available free for full-text <a href="http://www.josephcoates.com/2025_PDF.html" target="_blank">download</a>. </span></p>
<p><span id="btAsinTitle">For full disclosure, I should say I worked in the Coates office in Washington D.C. during the mid-late 1990s (but got there just after the book was done.)<br />
</span></p>
<p><span>There are deep and ultimately overwhelming problems with the book itself. It sees science-technology as the primary driver of change, when what science is done and what technology is produced is often the product of policy or economic or values / zeitgeist decisions further up the chain. It also has an astoundingly poor conceptual framework (&#8216;Worlds 1, 2, 3&#8242;) for dealing with non-US societies and cultures, and their economic and social development: one that would make Tom Friedman (&#8216;World is Flat&#8217;) giggle and <a href="http://www.ted.com/talks/hans_rosling_at_state.html" target="_blank">Hans Rosling</a> surely cry. Truly there are many reasons they have to give this book away for free.<br />
</span></p>
<p>But its importance is elsewhere. It remains remarkable for one thing &#8212; the thing that the Coates &amp; Jarratt foresight firm was known for &#8212; a willingness to speculate confidently and in detail (and sometimes even stupidly) about future changes. The book is likewise exemplary in its commitment to concrete, interesting, &#8216;fearless&#8217; long-range speculation, in a world where most analysts waste most of their foresight ink timidly equivocating and covering their back.</p>
<p><strong>Quality, reloaded</strong></p>
<p>Evocative, concrete speculation is important, even if it is wrong. It is commonly misapprehended that the purpose of foresight work is to &#8220;predict the future,&#8221; (and someone with this perspective is going to pop up in 2025 and say &#8220;so, how right or wrong was this book?&#8221;) But, nobody can be right. The real value of foresight work is other: to know as much as we can about the present, and the forces and factors changing it, to be able to preconceive the full range of possible future outcomes that pertain, in order to make decisions <em>today</em> towards an outcome we prefer. (Who &#8220;we&#8221; are and what &#8220;we&#8221; prefer &#8212;  social welfare; shareholder value maximization; environmental sustainability, etc., &#8212; will vary hugely among interest groups of course.)</p>
<p>This preconception (of a range of scenarios, if you like)  is what allows truly effective discussions and debates to take place in considering alternatives, and therefore promotes better decision-making <em>regardless of whether the scenarios ultimately turn out to have been, in themselves, &#8216;right&#8217; or &#8216;wrong</em>.&#8217; High-quality scenarios are to be preferred of course, but quality is in the ability to stimulate and provoke management attention to the right areas in a timely manner, not in having been right in prediction. As Coates used to  say (and I echo this to my Industry Foresight students): &#8220;You don&#8217;t have to be right, you just have to be interesting.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Arsenal Football’s Arsène Wenger gets into the prediction game with a 10-year forecast for European soccer</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/arsenal-football%e2%80%99s-arsen-wenger-gets-into-the-prediction-game-with-a-10-year-forecast-for-european-soccer/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Aug 2009 11:08:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Arsenal FC manager Arsène Wenger this week made a big prediction about the future of football in Europe. Now it’s hardly news when a sports coach predicts the future, but that’s because their forecasts are of the day-to-day variety and restricted to their own micro-climate: “Ronaldo has been going well in practice, I predict he’ll [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/arsenal-football%e2%80%99s-arsen-wenger-gets-into-the-prediction-game-with-a-10-year-forecast-for-european-soccer/' addthis:title='Arsenal Football’s Arsène Wenger gets into the prediction game with a 10-year forecast for European soccer' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Arsenal FC manager Arsène Wenger this week made a big prediction about the future of football in Europe. Now it’s hardly news when a sports coach predicts the future, but that’s because their forecasts are of the day-to-day variety and restricted to their own micro-climate: “Ronaldo has been going well in practice, I predict he’ll get on the scoresheet come Saturday.’ Or, ‘We’ll beat Chelsea in next months return leg,“ and so on.</p>
<div id="attachment_865" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 153px"><a href="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/wenger.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-865" title="wenger" src="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/wenger.jpg" alt="wenger Arsenal Football’s Arsène Wenger gets into the prediction game with a 10 year forecast for European soccer" width="143" height="107" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Arsène Wenger</p></div>
<p>But this was different. Wenger (on the eve of the Arsenal vs Celtic Rangers Champions League match) predicted a “European League” in 10 years featuring the continent’s top clubs – that is, he offered foresight into potential structural, industry-wide change in multi-billion-dollar UK and European soccer industry.</p>
<p>Currently clubs play in their national domestic leagues. And all Europe-wide competitions are cup (pool stage + knockout) competitions.</p>
<p>Although not fleshed out, the form is not hard to see: the top four-or-so clubs from each major country (fewer from smaller countries) in one annual league competition. This means that Manchester United, Liverpool, AC Milan, Porto, Juventus, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Roma and so on would all be playing each other on a weekly basis throughout the year (and, presumably, playing in no other league competitions).</p>
<p><strong>Drivers of Change<br />
</strong></p>
<p>The point of <em>Future Savvy</em> is that one can judge the validity of predictions like this before time. In this case, part of the way to assess Mr Wenger’s future view would be to gauge the strength of driving vs blocking forces behind his outcome.</p>
<p>There is evidence of strong drivers in favor of a European Super League. These are:</p>
<p>1. The rise of “super-teams.” In the UK and across Europe the same few teams dominate their domestic league year after year. The reason is a simple reinforcing feedback loop where winning teams get more money (from TV rights, from gates, from merchandising, etc.) which means they can buy better players, which means they win more. Over the last decade the English Football Premier League has become, effectively, a competition between Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Arsenal. (In the US the “draft–pick” system mitigates against any franchise getting too strong in this way, but no such system-balancer exists in European football.)</p>
<p>2. The growing ease and ubiquity of continental travel. Whether fans will follow their teams across Europe is a key issue, but indicators from cup competitions is that fans can and will travel.</p>
<p>3. The growing role of, and technological sophistication of television, particularly Sky Sports. Despite the many who travel, most people these days follow games at home or in sports bars. Television’s coverage and choices (the remote control options “red button”) have exploded, and screens themselves have got bigger and better. And genuine personalization of camera feed and other forms of interactively is emerging. In this, football, and professional sports as a whole, is becoming more about the screen as the stadium, accelerating a long-term trend. The reality is it makes little difference to most fans if the game is being played 50 miles away or 500.</p>
<p>4. The move to high-level, star-packed, events. There’s a clear trend across sports in general for events featuring the best players playing each other in all-star environments, not as a special “all-star” game but as an everyday occurrence. In cricket, for example, the Indian IPL has ridden this trend, offering franchised matches of, effectively, one mixed team of global superstars versus another. The fans love it.</p>
<p>There is also the financial do-or-die logic that soccer clubs face. The money feedback loop means they must continually drive up their revenues. It’s not possible to stand still. A European Football Super League would compel participation from the top teams for this reason alone.</p>
<p><strong>vs Blockers</strong></p>
<p>Adequately assessing the likelihood of the Wenger view of the future further requires investigation of blockers – factors which will prevent the outcome. In this case these may be overwhelming logistics of moving teams around to this extent week in and week out; limits on fans’ travel energy and budget; extent of fans’ loyalty to the relatively minor (non-super) domestic teams; and domestic league administrators’ determination and ability to keep domestic leagues from loosing their cash cows and following their own downward spiral into television obscurity.</p>
<p>These blockers on the European football league forecast are real. The question is whether they stop the future or how long they delay it. I’d judge the blockers as considerably weaker than the drivers and so I’d go with Wenger in predicting a European Super League (even richer and more “glamorous” than anything soccer has seen before) in about 10 years from now.</p>
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		<title>Jobs of the future, science &amp; technology enabled employment for 2020-2030</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/jobs-of-the-future-technology-enabled-employment-for-2020-2030/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/jobs-of-the-future-technology-enabled-employment-for-2020-2030/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Aug 2009 14:48:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=845</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been following a fun little foresight project organized by Rohit Talwar of &#8220;FastFuture&#8221; contributed to by many members of the Association of Professional Futurists, which looks at new jobs that may emerge in the next 10-20 years as the result of science and technology advancement. One of the benefits of thinking about science and [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/jobs-of-the-future-technology-enabled-employment-for-2020-2030/' addthis:title='Jobs of the future, science &#038; technology enabled employment for 2020-2030' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve been following a fun little foresight project organized by Rohit Talwar of &#8220;FastFuture&#8221;  contributed to by many members of the <a href="http://www.profuturists.org" target="_blank">Association of Professional Futurists</a>, which looks at new jobs that may emerge in the next 10-20 years as the result of science and technology advancement.</p>
<p>One of the benefits of thinking about science and technology foresight in terms of jobs is that doing so encourages a reality check, forcing the question: <em>will someone get paid to do this, if so, by whom and why</em> (how will it be profitable to the job giver?) In other words, the question is taken beyond whether one can imagine a job that will need doing or a job that someone might like to do it – that’s just mental bubble gum – to the more interesting and taxing issue of whether such need will justify enough paying customers such that the job will exist at all.</p>
<p>Of course, in all this science and technology progress will make new products and services possible partly by reducing the price point of providing them.</p>
<p>Not all of the jobs of the future listed below, I feel, pass this test. But many do. And it&#8217;s an interesting thought experiment. It&#8217;s a work in progress (see below.) The list as exists so far is:</p>
<p><strong>1.  Body Part Maker</strong><br />
Due to the huge advances being made in bio-tissues, robotics and plastics, the creation of body parts &#8211; from organs to limbs &#8211; will soon be possible, requiring body part makers, body part stores and body part repair shops.</p>
<p><strong>2.  Nano-Medic</strong><br />
Advances in nanotechnology offer the potential for a range of sub-atomic &#8216;nanoscale&#8217; devices, inserts and procedures that could transform personal healthcare.. A new range of nano-medicine specialists will be required to administer these treatments.</p>
<p><strong>3.  Pharmer (sic) of Genetically Engineered Crops and Livestock</strong><br />
New-age farmers will raise crops and livestock that have been genetically engineered to improve yields and produce therapeutic proteins. Works in progress include a vaccine-carrying tomato and therapeutic milk from cows, sheep and goats.</p>
<p><strong>4.  Old Age Wellness Manager / Consultant Specialists</strong><br />
Drawing on a range of medical, pharmaceutical, prosthetic, psychiatric, natural and fitness solutions to help manage the various health and personal needs of the aging population.</p>
<p><strong>5.  Memory Augmentation Surgeon</strong><br />
Surgeons that add extra memory to people who want to increase their memory capacity and to help those who have been over exposed to information in the course of their life and simply can no longer take on any more information &#8211; thus leading to sensory shutdown.</p>
<p><strong>6. ‘New Science&#8217; Ethicist</strong><br />
As scientific advances accelerate in new and emerging fields such as cloning, proteomics and nanotechnology, a new breed of ethicist may be required. These science ethicists will need to understand a range of underlying scientific fields and help society make consistent choices about what developments to allow. Much of science will not be a question of can we, but should we..</p>
<p><strong>7.  Space Pilots, Architects and Tour Guides</strong><br />
With Virgin Galactic and others pioneering space tourism, space trained pilots and tour guides will be needed, as well as designers to enable the habitation of space and the planets. Current projects at SICSA (University of Houston) include a greenhouse on Mars, lunar outposts and space exploration vehicles.</p>
<p><strong>8.  Vertical Farmers</strong><br />
There is growing interest in the concept of city based vertical farms, with hydroponically-fed food being grown in multi-storey buildings. These offer the potential to dramatically increase farm yield and reduce environmental degradation. The managers of such entities will require expertise in a range of scientific disciplines, engineering and commerce.</p>
<p><strong>9.  Climate Change Reversal Specialist</strong><br />
As the threats and impacts of climate change increase, a new breed of engineer-scientists will be required to help reduce or reverse the effects of climate change on particular locations. They will need to apply multi-disciplinary solutions ranging from filling the oceans with iron filings to erecting giant umbrellas that deflect the sun&#8217;s rays.</p>
<p><strong>10. Quarantine Enforcer</strong><br />
If a deadly virus starts spreading rapidly, few countries, and few people, will be prepared. Nurses will be in short supply. Moreover, as mortality rates rise, and neighborhoods are shut down, someone will have to guard the gates.</p>
<p><strong>11. Weather Modification Police</strong><br />
The act of stealing clouds to create rain is already happening in some parts of the world, and is altering weather patterns thousands of miles away. Weather modification police will need to control and monitor who is allowed to shoot rockets containing silver iodine into the air &#8211; a way to provoke rainfall from passing clouds.</p>
<p><strong>12. Virtual Lawyer</strong><br />
As more and more of our daily life goes online, specialists will be required to resolve legal disputes which could involve citizens resident in different legal jurisdictions.</p>
<p><strong>13.  Avatar Manager / Devotees &#8211; Virtual Teachers</strong><br />
Avatars could be used to support or even replace teachers in the elementary classroom, i.e., computer personas that serve as personal interactive guides. The Devotee is the human that makes sure that the Avatar and the student are properly matched and engaged.</p>
<p><strong>14. Alternative Vehicle Developers</strong><br />
Designers and builders of the next generations of vehicle transport using alternative materials and fuels. Could the dream of underwater and flying cars become a reality within the next two decades?</p>
<p><strong>15.  Narrowcasters<br />
</strong>As the broadcasting media become increasingly personalized, roles will emerge for specialists working with content providers and advertisers to create content tailored to individual needs. While mass market customisation solutions may be automated, premium rate narrow casting could be performed by humans.</p>
<p><strong>16. Waste Data Handler</strong><br />
Specialists providing a secure data disposal service for those who do not want to be tracked, electronically or otherwise.</p>
<p><strong>17. Virtual Clutter Organizer</strong><br />
Specialists will help us organise our electronic lives. Clutter management would include effective handling of email, ensuring orderly storage of data, management of electronic ID’s and rationalizing the applications we use.</p>
<p><strong>18.  Time Broker / Time Bank Trader</strong><br />
Alternative currencies will evolve their own markets – for example time banking already exists. (Time banking facilitates reciprocal service exchange based on units of time.)</p>
<p><strong>19.  Social &#8216;Networking&#8217; Worker</strong><br />
Social workers for those in some way traumatized or marginalized by social networking.</p>
<p><strong>20. Personal Branders</strong><br />
An extension of the role played by stylists, publicists and executive coaches –advising on how to create a personal ‘brand’ using social and other media. What personality are you projecting via your Blog, Twitter, etc? What personal values do you want to build into your image &#8211; and is your image consistent with your real life persona and your goals?</p>
<p>I added a few of my own to the database (trying to avoid repetition) which would both be needed and economically justifiable:<br />
(1) <strong>Organ Agent:</strong> person who sources and negotiates real or artificial organs on behalf of those in who want them. Interacts with donor, manages prices or bids if applicable, negotiates with hospitals, and so on.<br />
(2) <strong>Automated Systems Monitor:</strong> person who oversees automated systems (e.g. smart highways) and intervenes and corrects as necessary. &#8220;ASMs&#8221; would each need specific expertise in their field &#8212; transport or manufacturing or surgery or whatever is automated &#8212; but would share the specific skill of being a complex-automated-system monitor, evaluator, and emergency troubleshooter.<br />
(3) <strong>End-of-Life Planner:</strong> person who helps people plan and manage their own death (combating the fact that medicine/technology will be able to keep most people technically alive pretty much forever).</p>
<p>You can add your own thoughts by taking the survey at <a href="http://www.zoomerang.com/Survey/?p=WEB229HP2J3ALX" target="_blank">http://www.zoomerang.com/Survey/?p=WEB229HP2J3ALX</a> closing date: August 19th, 2009.</p>
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		<title>Poundstretcher&#8217;s lessons for the future, for 2025, for 2050, and beyond</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/poundstretchers-lessons-for-the-future-for-2025-for-2050-and-beyond/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/poundstretchers-lessons-for-the-future-for-2025-for-2050-and-beyond/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Aug 2009 17:03:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[In all the predictions of the future that I have ever read or heard, and all the scenarios I have been exposed to, it&#8217;s almost unheard of to see one that says &#8220;the squeezed middle class keeps their eye on a good deal, as they always have.&#8221; I&#8217;m thinking about this as I see the [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/08/poundstretchers-lessons-for-the-future-for-2025-for-2050-and-beyond/' addthis:title='Poundstretcher&#8217;s lessons for the future, for 2025, for 2050, and beyond' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In all the predictions of the future that I have ever read or heard, and all the scenarios I have been exposed to, it&#8217;s almost unheard of to see one that says &#8220;the squeezed middle class keeps their eye on a good deal, as they always have.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;m thinking about this as I see the Guardian today featuring a story about how &#8220;Poundland&#8221; has doubled it&#8217;s profits. Poundland is a copy-cat of the venerable US institution, the &#8220;dollar store,&#8221; where everything cost the same price, in this case £1.</p>
<div id="attachment_840" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 470px"><a href="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/poundland-dollar-store.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-840" title="poundland-dollar-store" src="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/poundland-dollar-store.jpg" alt="poundland dollar store Poundstretchers lessons for the future, for 2025, for 2050, and beyond" width="460" height="276" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Pic: Andrew Fox, The Guardian, August 4, 2009</p></div>
<p>The merchandising of these stores is not unsubtle. There are definite too-good-to-be-true loss leaders, but these more than offset by the many items that cost pennies wholesale. Fair enough. And recently reported doubling of profits is because more people are buying at these stores (downshifting) due to recessionarly squeeze and/or because of the current &#8220;sense of thrift&#8221; in the zeitgeist which makes pennywatching more &#8220;the done thing.&#8221;</p>
<p>But neither merchandising, nor consumer psychology is our primary concern here. From a foresight point of view, the point is that forecasts of 2010 that were around around a decade or two ago didn&#8217;t quite get around to saying anything about Poundstretcher leading a healthy economic life. It&#8217;s as unsexy as anything, compared to &#8220;peak oil&#8221; or advancing &#8220;singularity,&#8221; or nano-babble, and so on into the glorious future &#8211; or its polar alternative: crash &amp; burn, soup kitchens, urban warlords rampaging, and so on.</p>
<p>But here we are coming to the end of the decade and a basic retailing gimmick for the squeezed middle-class consumer  is well trafficked and very much part of the future. Yes, it&#8217;s success correlates with tougher times, but  economic cycles will be with us repeatedly through the rest of the century and beyond.</p>
<p>This doesn&#8217;t mean there won&#8217;t be breakthroughs in technology or in consumer behavior. In fact, looking at the picture, one surely would not have got a pound for any amount of plain bottled water in a retail environment 20 years ago. Things do change. They just change slowly, or unevenly, against the gritty reality of savvy agregate choices made by a wary (global and growing) middle class.</p>
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		<title>40 years after Apollo 11, and what no man on Mars can tell us about predicting</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/07/40-years-after-apollo-11-and-what-we-learned-about-predicting/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/07/40-years-after-apollo-11-and-what-we-learned-about-predicting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Jul 2009 13:51:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The copy of USA Today, slipped under my Chicago hotel room door on Friday—failing which I would have missed the event entirely—marks the 40th anniversary of Apollo 11 putting man on the moon (July 20, 1969). It says: &#8220;40 years after Apollo 11: What&#8217;s our Next Step?&#8221; The strap goes on: &#8220;The moon again? Mars? [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/07/40-years-after-apollo-11-and-what-we-learned-about-predicting/' addthis:title='40 years after Apollo 11, and what no man on Mars can tell us about predicting' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The copy of USA Today, slipped under my Chicago hotel room door on Friday—failing which I would have missed the event entirely—marks the 40th anniversary of Apollo 11 putting man on the moon (July 20, 1969). It says: &#8220;40 years after Apollo 11: What&#8217;s our Next Step?&#8221; The strap goes on: &#8220;The moon again? Mars? An asteroid? Four decades after the moon landing, NASA seeks a new—and affordable—frontier in space.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/moon_landing_2.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-811" title="moon_landing_2" src="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/moon_landing_2-800x600.jpg" alt="moon landing 2 800x600 40 years after Apollo 11, and what no man on Mars can tell us about predicting" width="480" height="360" /></a></p>
<p>The failed &#8220;our-future-in-space prediction&#8221; cluster is useful because it is the poster child for bad predicting, nothing less than foresight idiocy in its purest form, worth mentioning only because it helps us to see smaller and more subtle future-thinking mistakes we make routinely.</p>
<p>This is what I said in <em>Future Savvy</em> (Chapter 5):</p>
<p>&#8220;The forecasts that surrounded the future of space travel and exploration are perhaps the most high-profile and comprehensively poor set of forecasts ever made, and therefore provide a good vantage point to consider what can go wrong in forecasting. From the 1950s, space was a huge topic of interest. All significant earthbound exploration challenges had been overcome, technology was moving rapidly, and what lay ahead, unconquered, was space. The need to explore it was deeply in the zeitgeist.<br />
&#8220;At the same time, the Cold War created the specific situation where beating the Soviets in prestige projects was an important priority, important enough to divert massive resources to it. J.F. Kennedy’s rousing (future-influencing) 1961 prediction of putting a man on the moon by the end of the decade motivated and galvanized the United States, and the resulting Gemini and Apollo programs made this not only a human achievement but a successful prediction. As a result, analysts of all stripes were quick to project the trend and predict a moon base, lunar communities by 2000, followed soon by trips to Mars and beyond, and on to the limits of space. . . .<br />
&#8220;The last man to set foot on the moon was in 1973. The Space Shuttle tried to maintain forward momentum under the guise of scientific research, not without disaster, and an almost inconsequential international space station has been built. To this day there are many who cry into their soup over the lack of space exploration and conquest. So what happened? The groundswell of prediction was wrong because it failed to see that putting a few U.S. men into orbit did not add enough value to enough peoples’ lives to justify the expense—particularly in the economically uncertain 1970s. In the end, the majority of consumers voted with their wallets to postpone, if not entirely eviscerate, human space exploration.&#8221;</p>
<p>One could go into great detail, but simply put, the intertwined elements resulting in this poor view of the future were:</p>
<p>1. Failure to recognize user utility and the choice consumers make in determining the future. That is, for most people the cost of any space venturing is not worth the benefit (i.e. what benefit?) The fact that we &#8220;can do it&#8221; is hardly relevant. The real futures question is always: do most people want it? In the 1960s space was &#8220;worth it&#8221; (particularly in that the goal was clear and bounded) because spending billions on a prestige project made sense at a time of (a) absolute US economic prosperity and (b) ideological dispute with the USSR.</p>
<p>2. Projecting trends without considering the strength of underlying drivers. Space exploration was, apparently, on-the-up in the 1950s and 60s. But trends are only as good as the drivers that support them. When the drivers go away (lack of public support due to cost/benefit issues) the trend stops. In fact, there is no real, dependable, trend to space exploration. There was a blip in the 1960s when conditions temporarily favored a national prestige extravaganza. There wasn&#8217;t a trend before, and there hasn&#8217;t been any since.</p>
<p>3. Forecasting mired in the conditions or spirit of the present, the zeitgeist. Space was important in the golden-era 50s and 60s; and particularly in that it was arena of competition with the Soviets. But it&#8217;s always a mistake to assume the framing conditions of the present will exist in the future, and in this case 40 years later, they most certainly don&#8217;t.</p>
<p><strong>Don&#8217;t hold your breath</strong></p>
<p>What of 40 years time? It is quite likely that &#8220;space flip&#8221; flights into orbit will be safe and cheap enough to commercialized in the next decade. Unmanned probes (again safe and relatively cheap) will continue, and popular access to their images and experiences will be greatly enhanced. But that&#8217;s all that will happen until such time as costs and other conditions of possibility change fundamentally, which implies a completely new form of space travel, of energy, of materials, and of human resilience and longevity. Not in this century.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/07/apollofutureapollofuture/" target="_blank"><em>Wired Science</em></a> ran a July 20 article <strong>&#8220;</strong>40 Years After Apollo 11, NASA Maps Out the Future,&#8221; which puts the best possible spin on  this unmanned-probe future. It is careful to end without crushing the feelings of space junkies, saying: &#8220;Any American landing on Mars through the Constellation program would come some time after 2030.&#8221; It won&#8217;t happen, and here&#8217;s another secret: if anyone is going to land anywhere it will be a Chinese person. China still has prestige projects ahead of it, and human space exploration could be one of them.</p>
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		<title>&#8220;Prospects for Middle-East Peace Dim&#8221; was a good prediction and remains so</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/06/prospects-for-middle-east-peace-dim-was-a-good-prediction-and-remains-so/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2009 12:19:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=740</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Top of the news yesterday along with Iran&#8217;s election protest was Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu&#8217;s statement that he &#8212; as leader of the right-wing Likud party &#8212; could endorse a Palestinian state. It was framed in conditions on Jewish-state recognition, and requirements on security, borders, refugees and Jerusalem that are, from today&#8217;s vantage point, [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/06/prospects-for-middle-east-peace-dim-was-a-good-prediction-and-remains-so/' addthis:title='&#8220;Prospects for Middle-East Peace Dim&#8221; was a good prediction and remains so' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Top of the news yesterday along with Iran&#8217;s election protest was Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu&#8217;s statement that he &#8212; as leader of the right-wing Likud party &#8212; could endorse a Palestinian state. It was framed in conditions on Jewish-state recognition, and requirements on security, borders, refugees and Jerusalem that are, from today&#8217;s vantage point, very difficult to imagine Palestinians or Arab states agreeing to. So no change is expected. Even the breaking-story reporters had to admit that, rhetoric aside, this is not a breakthrough.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s an old joke in journalism from the 1970s that goes: &#8220;You can write the same headline on any and every story about Israel&#8217;s relationship with its neighbors: &#8216;Prospects for Middle-East Peace Dim.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Sure, it&#8217;s partly Eeyeore-ish journalist wit. But what&#8217;s interesting from a foresight point of view is that, running the world forward 40 years shows it was a reasonable understanding of the future. Why? Solid foresight is always predicated on a solid understanding of the forces for and against change. &#8220;Prospects for peace dim&#8221; acknowledged that forces and enablers of change were overpowered by what was preventing anything fundamental from happening (friction and blockers in Future Savvy terms.)</p>
<p>The basic truth is that Israel-Middle East is a complex situation characterized by a more-or-less equal balance of power. Israel has military and nuclear superiority, and US backing. Arab countries have oil, population numbers and population growth, and a billion more-or-less sympathetic moslems around the world, and therefore time on their side. They also have, particularly in Gaza, relatively widespread poverty and low welfare and educational development, which is  a force against moderation and therefore a negotiated settlement.</p>
<p>A genuine balance of power means we have equilibrium, and therefore should expect no change. That&#8217;s why we&#8217;ve had plenty of skirmishes, but no change in 40 years.</p>
<p>Looking out for the next 40 years, is this still the case? Can we write &#8220;Prospects for Middle East Peace Dim&#8221; on all news stories for another two generations? Following the foresight logic above, this depends on whether anything breaks the fundamental equilibrium. There are four issues apparently large enough to threaten the status quo:</p>
<ul>
<li>Water shortages and water conflicts</li>
<li>Change in US policy</li>
<li>The end of oil-based transport energy</li>
<li>Iran going toxic</li>
</ul>
<p>Water is a favorite of trend-foresight sessions. It sounds like the key issue in a rising-population world. In theory yes, but it&#8217;s unclear whether it will lead to anything more than local conflicts or wars, which in Israels case, we have already. On US policy, the Obama administration is attempting to show even-handedness, but its strategic interest lies with Israel as military ally and ideologically temperate (democratic, at least) bastion in the region. So no change there either. On oil, we are definitely in an era where &#8211; for security and climate change reasons &#8211; fossil fuel is entering it&#8217;s twilight phase, which will erode revenues and therefore power of ME Arab states. But, as mentioned earlier, poverty is as great an obstacle to peace as any other. (Remember the Israeli &#8220;let&#8217;s-grow-our-way-out-of the-situation-together peace platform of the 1990s, seeing tackling the development issues as the root of creating moderate mindsets across the region.)</p>
<p>That leaves Iran which may change the balance if it really goes toxic (develops and uses nuclear weapons in terror strikes.) This is a low futures likelihood &#8211; it&#8217;s not just luck that nukes have stayed in their box since 1945 &#8211; no state wants to carry the stain of the nuclear pariah for all time. There&#8217;s a moral blocker on this outcome that has worked for generations. Nuclear powers rattle, but the don&#8217;t bite. But &#8230; what if the wildcard scenario of a massive nuclear strike on Israeli soft targets were to happen, what then? The current low-grade hostile standoff would become a supernova, but we&#8217;d still have power balance, and while we have that we&#8217;ll have status quo and  journalists can expect to write &#8220;Prospects for Middle East Peace Dim&#8221; on top of every story about the region for another 40 years.</p>
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		<title>Energy, Biotech, the Brain, Food, and better Cities &#8211; the top technology challenges of our era &#8211; but what lies behind them?</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/05/energy-biotech-the-brain-food-and-better-cities-top-technology-challenges-but-what-lies-behind-it/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2009 16:39:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=641</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[College graduation is a fabulous time and place to think big, and therefore a good place to have a futurist do the thinking. Peter Schwartz recently gave the valedictory address to the 2009 graduating class of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (he graduated there in 1968) and offered a grand 10-point challenge list for techies of the [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/05/energy-biotech-the-brain-food-and-better-cities-top-technology-challenges-but-what-lies-behind-it/' addthis:title='Energy, Biotech, the Brain, Food, and better Cities &#8211; the top technology challenges of our era &#8211; but what lies behind them?' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>College graduation is a fabulous time and place to think big, and therefore a good place to have a futurist do the thinking. Peter Schwartz recently gave the valedictory address to the 2009 graduating class of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (he graduated there in 1968) and offered a grand 10-point challenge list for techies of the future:</p>
<p>Allowing for the usual pep-talk style of these things, it&#8217;s possible to boil the list down to five key things, which will indeed be essential to technology enabled industry and social change in the lifetime of today&#8217;s college graduates:</p>
<p>1. Non-pulluting, inexhaustible energy. Schwartz mentioned potential sources including fusion and gasoline-excreting     molecules. “We need something new for the long run, and it will     require new physics, new chemistry, new materials, new biology,     or likely some combination.&#8221;</p>
<p>2. A “bio-industrial     revolution” to make production of goods more energy efficient     and environmentally sustainable.</p>
<p>3. Advancing understanding of the human brain, and     developing new means to combat aging effects.</p>
<p>4. Improving agriculture to raise yields while reducing environmental costs.</p>
<p>5. Better urban planning, civil engineering, and smart architecture for more sustainable cities.</p>
<p>A fairly well known list &#8211; yet these are the key issues. But the most interesting thing of all that Schwartz said was this:&#8221;graduates should not assume they can do it alone. Collaboration is a key ingredient of     progress.&#8221;</p>
<p>“At some point in the next few years, probably by the time     you are 30 &#8230; you will have to make a life trajectory decision     that no one tells you about: Are you mainly going to work on     your own or work through others?” Schwartz said. “Many     engineers, scientists, artists, poets, writers have great lives     working mostly by themselves. But there are many things you     cannot do on your own. If you want to lead research teams in     larger organizations, or design and construct new buildings, or     make movies or start new businesses, the skills of human     collaboration are essential to success.”</p>
<p>In other words, collaboration &#8211; the means to and willingness to and resources to collaborate (globally) &#8211; is a key <em>enabler</em> of important breakthroughs. In theory everyone knows this and everyone agrees. But how much of competitive and legal process is all about protecting individual or national work, that is disrupting collaboration?</p>
<p>So in addition to the grand technology challenges for coming lifetimes, I offer a similar grand policy challenge (perhaps for Kennedy School grads of 2009): create the policies that genuinely promote and encourage collaboration. Do not encourage people, or companies, or countries to see benefit in working on their own. Facilitate and reward information sharing at every level&#8230; and then the Rensselaer grads and their equivalent around the country and the world will really be able to create the future that Schwartz envisions.</p>
<p>For event report see Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2585</p>
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		<title>Wired Magazine Launched in the UK, but is this Really &#8220;Your Life In The Future&#8221;?</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/04/wired-magazine-launched-in-the-uk-but-is-this-really-your-life-in-the-future/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 16:31:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[A basic tool of foresight work is horizon scanning, that is, scanning for signals of change, early portent of trends, straws in the wind of change. Futurists do it habitually, and if not habitually then &#8211; the wisdom is &#8211; do it routinely by consciously scanning sources of information you don&#8217;t normally. Buying an agricultural [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/04/wired-magazine-launched-in-the-uk-but-is-this-really-your-life-in-the-future/' addthis:title='Wired Magazine Launched in the UK, but is this Really &#8220;Your Life In The Future&#8221;?' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A basic tool of foresight work is horizon scanning, that is, scanning for signals of change, early portent of trends, straws in the wind of change. Futurists do it habitually, and if not habitually then &#8211; the wisdom is &#8211; do it routinely by consciously scanning sources of information you don&#8217;t normally. Buying an agricultural weekly or teen idol rag at the airport, rather than your standard dose of the <em>Economist</em>.</p>
<p><img style="float:left; padding-right:8px;" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/wired-uk-launch.jpg" alt="wired uk launch Wired Magazine Launched in the UK, but is this Really Your Life In The Future?" width="270" height="385" title="Wired Magazine Launched in the UK, but is this Really Your Life In The Future?" />It was in this spirit that I picked up the UK launch issue (aka May 2009) of <em>Wired</em>. Actually it&#8217;s not the first launch. <em>Wired</em> was in the UK ten years ago, but Condé Nast withdrew it in the dot.com crash. In the US at the time, I remember when Wired, the poster child of the Silicon Valley / Nasdaq bonanza, was almost as thick as a phone book each month. But those days were soon over.</p>
<p>Anyway, who could resist an offering that was about to tell me about my &#8220;Life in the future. &#8220;Fake Meat, Robots and Electro-Sex: the World is About to Change.&#8221; On the cover are, I kid you not, <em>flying cars!</em></p>
<p>Now, I wouldn&#8217;t take this stuff seriously for a moment, if everyone else promised not to. But they don&#8217;t. So here we go. In the &#8220;What&#8217;s Next?&#8221; cover story 46 experts make 99 predictions about the next 40 years, and none of them will happen, or not in the time frame expressed.</p>
<p><strong>Oh, moon settlement?</strong></p>
<p>I shrink from sharing the list. Meal replacement patches, check. Moon settlement, check. The male pill, check. Every techno-fantasy of the jockish sci-fi world, check. Well, let&#8217;s stop on the male pill for a moment. Can we not do it? Sure we can do it &#8211; today. What&#8217;s stopping it is not technology. It is attitudes (machismo, essentially). So <em>Wired</em> experts are telling us that this will go away in a decade. Puh-leez.</p>
<p>I hardly need mention there&#8217;s no method given behind any of these expert forecasts.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t you think <em>Wired</em> should be asking themselves why, in 2009, they are producing 186 pages of dead tree and carting it around the country in carbon-emitting trucks? Technology-vision may lead you to a view of the future. But it&#8217;s unreliable. The future is determined by what consumers are ready for. Well, that&#8217;s one of the 20-or-so key forecast filtering principles of <em>Future Savvy</em>.</p>
<p>Perhaps we should look at the cover story for what it is really about &#8211; which is selling magazines. Because, there&#8217;s no doubt that tech is changing, and many new capabilities are coming on stream, and this is very, very fascinating to imagine uses for. And this fascination is what Wired packages and sells. Don&#8217;t bet any money on the predictions though, certainly not their timeline.</p>
<p><strong>But sturdy in some areas<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Aside from the predicting lark, it&#8217;s a good magazine of its kind. The features are well-conceived, well-written, for example, one about how the BBC iPlayer business was built; a feature on sea salvage; a profile of PayPal founder Elon Musk; the David X Li formula and how it mis-calculated risk, and so on. Great stuff. Actually quite a sturdy business-oriented-view of techno-change, if you can get past the boys-with-toys riff of the magazine as a whole.</p>
<p>So, actually, much to like. Just, please, don&#8217;t think a lad&#8217;s mag is going to tell you anything coherent about the future.</p>
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		<title>The pub of the future and what Guinness would prefer not to be thinking about</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/03/the-pub-of-the-future-and-what-guinness-would-prefer-not-to-be-thinking-about/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2009 18:57:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=494</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s all in a day’s irony when Guinness releases its 250-year view of the future on the day that the UK Chief Medical Officer pleads for a minimum price for alcohol (and Gordon Brown, for now, says no, but don&#8217;t bet on that holding for long.) The Guinness Pub-of-the-Future is a St. Patrick’s day (March [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/03/the-pub-of-the-future-and-what-guinness-would-prefer-not-to-be-thinking-about/' addthis:title='The pub of the future and what Guinness would prefer not to be thinking about' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It’s all in a day’s irony when Guinness releases its 250-year view of the future on the day that the UK Chief Medical Officer pleads for a minimum price for alcohol (and Gordon Brown, for now, says no, but don&#8217;t bet on that holding for long.)</p>
<div id="attachment_495" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 413px"><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/future-pub.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-495" title="future-pub" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/future-pub.jpg" alt="future pub The pub of the future and what Guinness would prefer not to be thinking about" width="403" height="186" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Guinness&#39; view of the pub of 2259.                               Image  credit: Chris Bainbridge</p></div>
<p>The Guinness Pub-of-the-Future is a St. Patrick’s day (March 17) promotion. Nothing wrong with a little bit of fantasy foresight. But what they come up is so “20th-century-futurism” it’s hilarious. Among various reports on the project &#8211; for example in the <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/pubs/4981433/Pub-of-the-future-will-take-your-order-automatically.html " target="_blank">Telegraph</a> &#8211; the following features are foreseen:</p>
<p>- robotic doorman, greets you by name<br />
-	cash obsolete; orders via RFID; payments deducted automatically<br />
-	your product tailored to you on the spot<br />
-	touch-sensitive tables, send your order straight to the bar<br />
-	socializing via virtual / hologram technology<br />
-	a running tally of the number of units consumed.</p>
<p>Yawn. Even on it’s own terms (minimal constraints of realism) this is a totally derivative piece of foresight. These “innovations” are the staples of an infotech view of the future, and they have all been thought and spoken of countless times. Also many of the elements and services cited are already here, or not more than a decade away. What we have is the current pub assumptions + digital steriods, while the year 2259 will be, truly, another world.</p>
<p><strong>The limits to growth<br />
</strong>But all this leads us to more interesting industry foresight problem. Will there be pubs in even a generation, never mind 250 years? What the Telegraph dryly observes at the bottom of its report is that 39 pubs are closing every week Why? A number of driving forces are coming together:</p>
<p>First is strict drink-driving limits, which makes &#8220;the local&#8221; literally local or nothing. Second, pubs in the UK have traditionally been a refuge from housing that was poor and/or underheated. Unprecedented waves of affluence (credit-crunch notwithstanding) have led to widespread housing “do-ups.” It’s now a valid option for most people to spend their leisure time at home and entertain at home.</p>
<p>Then there’s the where’s-my-friend trend. You’re likely to go down the pub if your friends are there, but not if they are where most people’s friends are: on Facebook.</p>
<p><strong>The social-legislative clock</strong><br />
Fourth, no matter how you dress it up, pubs are retail outlets. So, like all retail they are under the cosh in a Wal-mart / Tesco world. The price gap between store and pub has become too great for most consumers to cross with good conscience.</p>
<p>Which brings us to the current price-floor legislation bid. Alcohol is a huge social cost in terms of health care and violence. Drink costs the NHS £3bn a year, and the total price of alcohol to the taxpayer is estimated at five times that. Eventually these costs will become unjustifiable so, like smoking before it, the social-legislative clock is ticking for booze. As the 2-martini lunch has become the 2-seltzer lunch, the trend to social stigmatization is clear, and legislators will follow (not with Prohibition, but with a much more subtle community-endorsed squeeze).</p>
<p>Like the good politician he is, Gordon Brown won&#8217;t let his party get ahead of the trend. But the trend is clear and it bodes ill for pubs.</p>
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		<title>Sir Fred Goodwin and the Imperative for Looking Long and Rewarding Longer</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/02/sir-fred-goodwin-and-the-imperative-for-looking-long-and-rewarding-longer/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Feb 2009 18:01:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=429</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Publication of the Institute for the Future’s “Map of Future Forces Affecting Sustainability” on the same day that it is revealed that Sir Fred Goodwin (50) of failed &#38; baled Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) will get a £693,000 (about $1,000,000) a year payment for the rest of his life, gets me thinking about short-termism [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/02/sir-fred-goodwin-and-the-imperative-for-looking-long-and-rewarding-longer/' addthis:title='Sir Fred Goodwin and the Imperative for Looking Long and Rewarding Longer' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Publication of the Institute for the Future’s “Map of Future Forces Affecting Sustainability” on the same day that it is revealed that Sir Fred Goodwin (50) of failed &amp; baled Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) will get a £693,000 (about $1,000,000) a year payment for the rest of his life, gets me thinking about short-termism and its entrenchment.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a rel="http://www.iftf.org/node/2269" href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/iftf-sustainability.jpg" target="_blank"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-431" style="margin: 10px 8px;" title="iftf-sustainability" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/iftf-sustainability.jpg" alt="iftf sustainability Sir Fred Goodwin and the Imperative for Looking Long and Rewarding Longer" width="418" height="301" /></a></p>
<p>The IFTF’s full map is available for download <a href="http://www.iftf.org/node/2269" target="_blank">here</a>.  Quick aside: these maps, putting complex forces into visuals, have defined IFTF’s public (and client, one presumes) communications for over five years, and have raised the bar of excellence in the foresight communications. The company has produced many such outstanding maps, some publicly available.</p>
<p>The new map and Sir Fred-gate are unrelated of course. But here was the connection for me: The IFTF map lists six “Key Driving Forces” (2007-2017) in the area of sustainability, and the first is:<br />
<em>&#8220;An Imperative for Looking Long: The 21st century will test our ability to grasp the future impacts of present choices, but even as we struggle to incorporate future knowledge into our day-to-day decisions, we’re tuning up our bodies and minds and even our cultural frameworks for a much longer view.”<br />
</em></p>
<p>My question is, &#8220;really?&#8221; Is the long view really a driver – something that will drive change and shape the future? Or do we hope it is. Are we trying to talk it into being?</p>
<p>No question that the long-term view is crucial. Solving just about any social, technological, or environmental problem requires sustained long-term action. And everyone who works in foresight keeps evangelizing long-termism. But, in fact, what we have in industry and government is rampant short-termism and there is no indication this will change, despite the crisis and many heartfelt calls.</p>
<p><strong>Linking big to long</strong></p>
<p>The problem with Sir Goodwin’s package (in career and in retirement) is that the reward numbers were based on short-term company returns. “Hey, we made lots of money this year, so you get a big bonus, and you get a big bonus,” etc. But a few years down the line  – in the long term – it turns out that no bonuses were valid (if a bonus is, truly, a reward for success).</p>
<p>Put it another way: in finance, as in other aspects of society, technology, and the environment, we don’t know if we’ve succeeded or failed until the long-term numbers are in. Few would have a problem with handsome rewards for a valuable job well done, but those rewards must surely be delayed, and delayed, until we are in command of the long view of the performance.</p>
<p>Easy in theory, hard in practice. Perhaps impossible in practice when most politicians and legislators are themselves on a short 3-7 year cycle, like CEOs. I have some inkling from the IFTF map that the thinking is that life-extending technologies will improve to the point where people will really see themselves in for the long haul, and so adopt a longer perspective on benefits and rewards.</p>
<p><strong>Time on the clock<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Perhaps. But, life-technologies aside, plenty of decision-makers – Goodwin included – still have a lot of time left on the clock and that doesn’t appear to stop them chasing and cashing in short-term incentives at the expense of the future. Or legislators (and the public who votes them in) structuring performance rating on our immediate perception of their performance.</p>
<p>What we have, and what we have increasingly had (the trend) over the past few decades, is systemic short-termism. Winning in the next annual report or the next election is what what leaders’ rewards are based on. Incentives for politicians or business leaders or even scientists or engineers to make a better world for 2025 or 2050 are negligable.</p>
<p>Until there is reason to anticipate that this fundamental underlying short-term incentive structure and mentality changes (that is – convince me – who will change it and how?) the future savvy perspective must say that the &#8220;long-term imperative&#8221; remains a nice sound-bite, but not a material driver of anything.</p>
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		<title>The future of newspapers in 1981, and what it tells us about emerging technologies</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/02/the-1981-view-of-the-future-of-newspapers-and-what-it-tells-us-about-2037/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2009 18:30:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[A fascinating 1981 two-minute KRON news story about home computers and the future of newspapers appeared on BoingBoing a few days ago. The clip is here: The story covers the pilot project of two San Francisco newspapers seeking to create an online edition. The presenter starts: &#8220;Imagine if you will sitting down with your morning [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/02/the-1981-view-of-the-future-of-newspapers-and-what-it-tells-us-about-2037/' addthis:title='The future of newspapers in 1981, and what it tells us about emerging technologies' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A fascinating 1981 two-minute KRON news story about home computers and the future of newspapers appeared on BoingBoing a few days ago. The clip is here:</p>
<p><object width="425" height="344" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/5WCTn4FljUQ&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/5WCTn4FljUQ&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /></object></p>
<p>The story covers the pilot project of two San Francisco newspapers seeking to create an online edition. The presenter starts: &#8220;Imagine if you will sitting down with your morning coffee and turning to your computer to read the day&#8217;s newspaper. Well it&#8217;s not as far fetched as it seems&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>28 years later it&#8217;s exactly what we do. But it seemed far-fetched then, and this was not a misjudgment: it has taken us until now, the full 28 years in most developed countries, to get to the point where mass online newspapers rival mass print editions in the market. What might that tell us about what seems far-fetched now, whether it will happen or not, and how long it will take? How does it improve our foresight?</p>
<p><strong>$10 plays 20c, but not for long</strong><br />
The news clip features early 1980s computers &#8211; the text-only green screens &#8211; and achingly slow phone-set modems. A newspaper takes two hours to download (with no picture, ads, or comics). So there are technology limitations.</p>
<p>Then there are economic barriers: the local-call hourly charge is $5 (=$10 for the paper) while the print copy costs 20c.</p>
<p>And there are system-wide market-adoption issues: there are only &#8220;two to three thousand&#8221; home computers in the Bay Area at the time. Home computer penetration is obviously related to utility (usefulness/cost) of the machine.</p>
<p>But in 1981 home computers were about to get a whole lot better for a whole lot less &#8211; and with this programmers would be drawn into turning the technology into something we actually need, and ultimately can&#8217;t do without &#8211; all driving towards the utility jump that signals mainstream adoption. But at the time home computers were an unimaginably small niche of the total media market.</p>
<p>Fast forward to 2037 and what might we be able to say about it? First, that the pilot projects of important new mainstream markets already exist today (along with great business opportunities). The technologies involved are, now, incredibly clunky and expensive, meaning consumer utility is laughably low. But this will steadily unravel to the point where the technology is fantastic and affordable, and voila! We will have fundamental transition and entirely new mainstream markets.</p>
<p>But the most important lesson of all is this: it will take a generation. The future never cuts corners. All fundamental changes in social and market patterns take at least a generation, if not more. There&#8217;s a well-known truism in foresight work, which is this: we tend to overestimate the pace of change, but underestimate how all-encompassing it will be, once it comes.</p>
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		<title>A future of computing scenario where digital meets the stone age</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/01/a-future-of-computing-scenario-where-digital-meets-the-stone-age/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2009 12:17:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Product prototype communication is a close cousin of scenario building. Typically the company creates their product or service in action, in the future, being used by happy customers, their &#8220;preferred future&#8221; scenario. Prototype communication doesn’t typically build in alternative scenarios, the litmus test of strategy-based scenario work. It’s more a kite-flying exercise, designed to put [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/01/a-future-of-computing-scenario-where-digital-meets-the-stone-age/' addthis:title='A future of computing scenario where digital meets the stone age' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_276" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 249px"><a href="http://mschnlnine.vo.llnwd.net/d1/on10/5/8/5/4/2/CES2009Futureofcomputing_on10.wmv"><img class="size-full wp-image-276" style="margin: 5px;" title="microsoft-future-computing" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/microsoft-future-computing.jpg" alt="microsoft future computing A future of computing scenario where digital meets the stone age" width="239" height="160" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Microsoft - Computer Electronics Show 2009</p></div>
<p>Product prototype communication is a close cousin of scenario building. Typically the company creates their product or service in action, in the future, being used by happy customers, their &#8220;preferred future&#8221; scenario. Prototype communication doesn’t typically build in <em>alternative</em> scenarios, the litmus test of strategy-based scenario work. It’s more a kite-flying exercise, designed to put out a future-oriented message to stakeholders and the public, garner broad feedback, and (if you’re powerful like Microsoft) put up “this-is-the-future-of-the-industry” markers.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, with the caveat that they are one among many plausible outcomes, product showcase scenarios can be an eye-opening guide to what’s actually possible and what the future will be like.</p>
<p>A newly released Microsoft “<a title="Microsoft Future of Computing" href="http://http://mschnlnine.vo.llnwd.net/d1/on10/5/8/5/4/2/CES2009Futureofcomputing_on10.wmv" target="_blank">Future of Computing</a>” video, showcased at CES 2009 in Las Vegas in the past few days, is an example. The 10-minute piece, presented by Janet Galore, Program Manger: Strategic Prototyping, takes us through a scenario of interactive education in the future (when, exactly, is not said but the implication is it’s not too far off) showing how participants would find, use, and share information across devices and across platforms.</p>
<p>What we see is a tablet PC that can communicate seamlessly with other electronics and interact with Web info on the fly. Okay nothing new there. What’s interesting is how it’s all held together by surface computing, a smart desk with a screen, which allows information to be viewed<em> in the process</em> of collaboration, sharing, and filing.  In some futurist fantasies it is thought that communication is ideally invisible (my phone e-handshakes your phone without me doing anything, etc.) But actually humans mostly seem to prefer to see what’s happening, and to have the choice to interact with what is happening while it’s happening &#8211; not least so they know what machines have done and don’t have to pull their hair out before they find their precious work buried four subdirectories into the Temp folder… sheesh. But I digress.</p>
<p>The scenario focuses on organizing and sharing multiple inputs, therein making a pretty clear statement about the future: what will be really valuable is not access to information anywhere, anytime (an assumed, table-stakes factor), but a way to share and collaborate with the information in an productive way. It refreshingly assumes that whiz-bang graphics &#8211; they are there too &#8211; are the easy stuff, but that collaboration and teamwork are the hard things to get right, and the truly valuable service given the chaos of billions of voices and trillions of data objects that pertain in any human-work future.</p>
<p>The other real strength of the prototype and related scenario is its close attention to natural (or, at least, strongly socialized, conventional, classic) human ways of doing things, which are slow to change, and therefore will change slowly. The smart desk is something one can really see oneself sitting around, because this is what we already do. Also this future of computing envisages no stylus, no mouse, no magic wand to master. Rather, we move digital stuff around the desk with our hands. We point to it and we shift it. That is, digital capability accommodates and interlaces with Stone Age human and organizational patterns. That’s why this view of the future is persuasive.</p>
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		<title>Dunce caps 2008, and why the short-term future is harder to see</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/01/dunce-caps-2008-and-why-the-short-term-future-is-harder-to-see/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/01/dunce-caps-2008-and-why-the-short-term-future-is-harder-to-see/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 13:05:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Happy New Year! Well, this time of year traditionally brings out the &#8220;January 1 quarterbacks,&#8221; poking fun at the wrong predictions for the year just past, awarding dunce caps, particularly (deliciously) to famous people. This punditry is widely read, and sometimes published in respectable places. Some of it is just year-end fun, and nothing wrong [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2009/01/dunce-caps-2008-and-why-the-short-term-future-is-harder-to-see/' addthis:title='Dunce caps 2008, and why the short-term future is harder to see' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Happy New Year! Well, this time of year traditionally brings out the &#8220;January 1 quarterbacks,&#8221; poking fun at the wrong predictions for the year just past, awarding dunce caps, particularly (deliciously) to famous people.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/failed-foresight.png"><img class="size-medium wp-image-269 alignleft" title="failed-foresight" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/failed-foresight.png" alt="failed foresight Dunce caps 2008, and why the short term future is harder to see" width="170" height="169" /></a></p>
<p>This punditry is widely read, and sometimes published in respectable places. Some of it is just year-end fun, and nothing wrong with that. But there is also a failed-forecast “nyah-nyah” that is corrosive to the foresight field in general, which demands answers. So at the risk of giving the 20/20 hindsight artists undue oxygen of attention, here are a few thoughts:</p>
<p>Consider <em>Foreign Policy’s</em> “<a href="http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4569" target="_blank">10 Worst Predictions for 2008</a>.” (Dec, 2008). Highlights include:</p>
<p>“If [Hillary Clinton] gets a race against John Edwards and Barack Obama, she’s going to be the nominee. Gore is the only threat to her, then. … Barack Obama is not going to beat Hillary Clinton in a single Democratic primary. I’ll predict that right now.” —William Kristol, Fox News Sunday, Dec. 17, 2006</p>
<p>&#8220;Should I be worried about Bear Stearns in terms of liquidity and get my money out of there?’ No! No! No! Bear Stearns is fine! Do not take your money out … —Jim Cramer, responding to a viewer’s e-mail on CNBC’s Mad Money, March 11, 2008 [Bear Stearns was sold to J.P. Morgan Chase at about a 90% discount to it market capitalization at the time of the forecast]</p>
<p>“The possibility of $150-$200 per barrel seems increasingly likely over the next six-24 months.” —Arjun Murti, Goldman Sachs oil analyst, in a May 5, 2008, report [Oil was then around $130 a barrel. By late December it was below $40.]</p>
<p>Or this one from <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/dec2008/db20081224_028134.htm" target="_blank"><em>Business Week’s</em> list of 10</a> (December 24, 2008)</p>
<p>&#8220;Existing-Home Sales to Trend Up in 2008&#8243; —Headline of a National Association of Realtors press release, Dec. 9, 2007 [On Dec. 23, 2008, the group said November sales were running at an annual rate of 4.5 million—down 11% from a year earlier—in the worst housing slump since the Depression.]</p>
<p>The Future Savvy question is: how should we think about predictions like this? And how should we think about failed-forecast spotting?</p>
<p><strong>1. Failed-forecast spotting is not remotely “scientific”<br />
</strong>This should be obvious, but somehow never is. Purposefully extracting the failed forecasts from the total set of forecasts says nothing about the quality of the set in general. Many did predict Obama; did predict the downturn, etc.</p>
<p><strong>2. Failed-forecast spotting raises a healthy skepticism, but runs to nihilism<br />
</strong>Despite not passing any credible test of knowledge, at least failed-forecast spotting stokes apprehension about forecasts and the wisdom of experts. At base this is healthy. Prediction is hard, and it is mostly done poorly. And experts often transgress the boundaries of their expertise. (Typically, in this instance, they know a lot about their field, but often don’t know more than the next Joe about the future of their field, often because their expertise is wedded to existing practices and assumptions.)<br />
Prediction skepticism is fine. What happens, however, is that tempts a “nobody can predict anything” nihilism. This is its own failing because many predictions are in fact excellent, producing good foresight, which is a key strategic and competitive advantage.</p>
<p><strong>3. Often the short term future is harder to see.<br />
</strong>This is the trickiest insight of the lot. As everyone knows, it’s impossible to accurately predict the future (which is not the same as <em>usefully</em> predict the future, see arguments in other posts). The world is just too complex, too chaotic. But there’s a wrinkle. It should be that the further we look into the future the harder it is to see. The world will change more – there is more time for unpredictable things to happen. The short-term future (one year, say) is closer to us, it should be more like today and we should be able to anticipate it better.</p>
<p>In fact, short-term foresight is the most impossible task: a casino game. In the longer term (10-20 years, say) strong trends can be relied on to have had their impact. For example, the move away from fossil fuels, or effective nanotechnology engineering, or simple domestic robotics, can be reliably forecast. But while the sweep of these and other similar evolutions are reliable over time, the short-term picture will suffer lags or reversals that follow no pattern at all. (It’s no accident that is this is just like the stock market. In the long term the market will go up, in the short term it can go anywhere.) Also short-term predictive failure is compounded by the fact that the standard to which it is held is higher – we expect specifics: dates, places, numbers, players, winners – that are not demanded of a long-term view. In other words, near-term predictions are all about &#8220;point forecasts,&#8221; and there&#8217;s nothing more impossible than a point forecast unless you believe in tea leaves and crystal balls.</p>
<p>The take away: short-term point forecasts really are a mugs game and the skeptics are right. Medium-long forecasts, when well done, are worthy of our strategic and competitive attention.</p>
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		<title>Barack Obama&#8217;s &#8220;Yes We Can!&#8221; That&#8217;s     Bob-the-Builder, right?</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/11/obama-yes-we-can-thats-bob-the-builder-right/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 18:45:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The futurist Edie Weiner says, if one wants to see the world, and therefore the future, as it really is, one must look &#8220;through the eyes of children or aliens.&#8221; That is, strip away our &#8220;educated incapacity&#8221; &#8211; the mental disability that comes with being over-familiar with a situation and therefore embedded in its associations [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/11/obama-yes-we-can-thats-bob-the-builder-right/' addthis:title='Barack Obama&#8217;s &#8220;Yes We Can!&#8221; That&#8217;s     Bob-the-Builder, right?' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The futurist Edie Weiner says, if one wants to see the world, and therefore the future, as it really is, one must look &#8220;through the eyes of children or aliens.&#8221; That is, strip away our &#8220;educated incapacity&#8221; &#8211; the mental disability that comes with being over-familiar with a situation and therefore embedded in its associations and traditions, which makes it hard to see future change.</p>
<p>I was reminded of this when, as my wife and I were talking happily about the Obama &#8220;Yes-We-Can&#8221; victory speech, our 3-year-old daughter piped up: &#8220;Bob-the-Builder&#8221;! [The economy's in crisis, can we fix it?] &#8220;Yes we can!&#8221; [The war in Iraq, can we fix it?] &#8220;Yes we can!&#8221;</p>
<p>If this means nothing to you, see <a href="http://www.bobthebuilder.com/ca/english/index.asp" target="_blank">http://www.bobthebuilder.com/ca/english/index.asp</a></p>
<div style="text-align:center;"><img src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/obama3.jpg" alt="obama3 Barack Obamas Yes We Can! Thats     Bob the Builder, right?" border="0" width="163" height="127" title="Barack Obamas Yes We Can! Thats     Bob the Builder, right?" /></div>
<p>This is not subtle stuff, this speechwriting. And politics is nothing if not the art of appealing to the 3-yr-old in all of us. But, as they say, &#8220;a win is a win.&#8221;</p>
<p>Anyway, it is for the foresight community to to get past the day&#8217;s euphoria and ask, what does this mean for the future? I think the win has trend tipping-point implications and allows some future-thinking insights to be accumulated.</p>
<p><strong>The &#8220;Hawaiian&#8221; Future</strong></p>
<p>One of the things Jim Dator and the <a href="http://www.futures.hawaii.edu/index.php" target="_blank">Hawaii Research Center for Future Studies</a> have long been saying is, &#8220;the future of the world is brown.&#8221; The running, long-term trend they are referring to is the movement of power and money from the white West to the brown East, and (eventually) South. And, on similar lines, we have seen rise in number of inter-racial couples (and more acceptance of), and the strong fashion and pop-star chic-ness of being &#8220;mixed&#8221; race. This aspect of the world&#8217;s future has been more obvious, earlier, in Hawaii than other places in the US (and the Obama-Hawaii connection is pertinent here), but now it&#8217;s mainstream. This in itself is a lesson that the future is to be seen earlier in some places than others. Anyway, November 4, 2008, is surely the moment where the trend tips and accelerates.</p>
<p>This is not to be naive. Nothing about the result is going to kill racism or ethnic affiliation. The world is a competitive place, and people organize and identify into groups to compete (and restrict access to benefits) more effectively. Whitey halls of privilege will continue to exist. Islamic identification and action will continue to be a huge force, and so on. But now that there is (and in future always will have been) a black person in the world&#8217;s top job, nobody can ever look at another person of color and see an intrinsic limitation on what that person can do, be, influence, or own.</p>
<p><strong>Images of the future</strong></p>
<p>For at least half a century the world has known this in theory of course. But theory doesn&#8217;t move the world. Pictures move the world. That is, pictures of the future bring the future closer. Obama making the president-elect victory speech, or seeing him and his family move into the White House, will undo more mental models &#8211; more educated incapacity &#8211; in the area of race than anything that has gone before. For driving the future, the Obama success image is more powerful than a thousand well-meaning affirmative-action programs.</p>
<p><strong>The ratchet effect</strong></p>
<p>The other, simultaneous, foresight principle at work is that change proceeds by ratchet effect. Sticking with politics, the Suffragette movement gathered momentum and finally swept aside millennia of tradition after women were seen to do traditionally &#8220;male&#8221; jobs during WW1. Here again we have the change-power of images of the future. After women were seen in these new roles there was no way to put the genie back. Yes, social changes can be reversed or stalled (Roe vs Wade is in the mire) but once the image of the future is out there, and minds have absorbed and habituated to it, it may be opposed but never removed. And this is what November 4 promises: visually ratcheting forward the world-wide acceptance of the potential of all people regardless of race as fact not theory &#8211; thereby tipping and accelerating the long-term trend to &#8220;The Hawaiian Future.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>&#8220;Future Savvy&#8221; prescribed for Masters Program in Strategic Foresight</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/11/future-savvy-masters-in-strategic-foresight/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2008 14:45:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[My aim for this blog is not particularly to champion success stories for Future Savvy. I&#8217;m happy to let the book talk for itself. I&#8217;d prefer to look at forecasts and foresight work out there and think about how well it is working, and/or who it may be working for. However it&#8217;s nice to be [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/11/future-savvy-masters-in-strategic-foresight/' addthis:title='&#8220;Future Savvy&#8221; prescribed for Masters Program in Strategic Foresight' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My aim for this blog is not particularly to champion success stories for <em>Future Savvy</em>. I&#8217;m happy to let the book talk for itself. I&#8217;d prefer to look at forecasts and foresight work out there and think about how well it is working, and/or who it may be working for. However it&#8217;s nice to be able to report, inter alia, that the book has been quickly picked up and prescribed as a required resource in the <a title="Strategic Foresight" href="http://www.regent.edu/global/msf" target="_blank">Masters Program in Strategic Foresight</a>, at the School of Global Leadership &amp; Entrepreneurship, Regent University (VA).</p>
<p><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/regent-2.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-135" title="regent-2" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/regent-2-300x78.jpg" alt="regent 2 300x78 Future Savvy prescribed for Masters Program in Strategic Foresight" width="425" height="110" /></a><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/regent-1.jpg"><br />
</a><em>Future Savvy</em> is intended to be a book for business and policy professionals, not academics. But it does speak to students and scholars who need to assess and evaluate foresight work. In any event, professors Jay Gary and Dennis Walters have included it alongside works by Wendel Bell, Jerome Glenn, and Ted Gordon (no relation) &#8212; household names in the foresight field &#8212; so the comparison is of course very happily accepted.</p>
<p>The following is from the course outline. I&#8217;ve included the full bibliography, which is in itself a valuable collection of sources in the futures field, and merits attention all the way down the list.</p>
<p><strong>Course Description:</strong><br />
Surveys traditional forecasting theory and methods. After a consideration of forecasting in general, students learn how to conduct research using both qualitative (secondary sources, interviews and questionnaires) and quantitative (data analysis, numerical forecasting and trend decomposition). They also apply critical thinking skills to existing forecasts. [Learning objectives:] 1. Managing: understand the principles and applications of operational forecasting within organizations. 2. Assessing: decide when to use statistical or judgmental methods in strategic forecasting, and how to combine foresight methods to generate 10 to 20 year outlooks. 3. Evaluating: gather information in a specific domain that can be used to forecast baseline as well as alternative futures. 4. Researching: construct a long-term strategic forecast for a client organization that draws upon both quantitative and qualitative sources.</p>
<p><strong>Required Resources</strong><br />
* Bell, Wendell. 1996. Foundations of futures studies: History, purposes, and knowledge. (Human Science for a New Era), vol. 1. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction. ISBN: 0765805391<br />
* Carlberg, C. G. (2005). Excel sales forecasting for dummies. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. ISBN: 0764575937<br />
* Glenn, J. C., and Gordon, T. J. Futures Research Methodology V2.0 CD-ROM American Council for the UNU. ISBN: 097220511X<br />
[This item is available through http://www.acunu.org/millennium/FRM-v2.html]<br />
* Gordon, A. (2009). Future Savvy: Identifying trends to make better decisions, manage uncertainty, and profit from change. New York: American Management Association. ISBN: 0-8144-0912-1<br />
* Jain, C. L. ed. (2001). Practical guide to business forecasting. Flushing, NY: Graceway. ISBN: 092126758</p>
<p><strong>Recommended and supplemental resources:</strong><br />
*  Coates , Joseph F 2025, John B. Mahaffie, and Andy Hines. 2025: Scenarios of US and Global Society Reshaped by Science and Technology. Oak Hill Press. ISBN: 1886939098, also available in .pdf files via http://www.josephcoates.com/2025_PDF.html<br />
* Armstrong, J. S. (1985). Long-range forecasting: From crystal ball to computer (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN: 0471823600, also available in .pdf files via http://www.forecastingprinciples.com/Long-Range%20Forecasting/contents.html<br />
* Armstrong, J. Scott. 2001. Principles of Forecasting . Kluwer. ISBN: 0792374010.<br />
* Caplow, T., Hicks, L., &amp; Wattenberg, B. J. (2001). The first measured century: An illustrated guide to trends in America , 1900-2000 . Washington , DC : AEI Press. Download chapters at: http://www.pbs.org/fmc/book.htm<br />
* Dawes, R. M. (1979). The robust beauty of improper linear models in decision making. American Psychologist, 34, 571-582.<br />
* Duberley, J., &amp; Johnson, P. (2000). Understanding management research: An introduction to epistemology. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.<br />
* Einhorn, H.J. (1986). Accepting error to make less error. Journal of Personality Assessment, 50, 387-395.<br />
* Fischoff, B. (1994). What forecasts (seem to) mean. International Journal of Forecasting, 10, 387-403.<br />
* Gawiser, Sheldon R., and G. Evans Witt. 1994. A Journalist&#8217;s Guide to Public Opinion Polls . Praeger. ISBN: 0275949893.<br />
* Gillham, Bill. 2000. The Research Interview. Continuum International. ISBN: 082644797X.<br />
* Hetman, F. (1969). Le Langage de la prévision, the language of forecasting: With a French-English-German vocabulary. Paris: S.ÉD.ÉI.S. http://www.cnam.fr/lipsor/eng/data/langageprevision.pdf<br />
* Jantsch, E. (1967). Technological forecasting in perspective. Paris: OECD. http://www.cnam.fr/lipsor/recherche/laboratoire/data/prevtech_en_final.pdf<br />
* Makridakis, S. G., Wheelwright, S. C., &amp; Hyndman, R. J. (1998). Forecasting: Methods and applications (3rd ed.). New York: John Wiley &amp; Sons.<br />
* Molitor, G. T. (2003). The power to change the world: The art of forecasting. Potomac, MD: Public Policy Forecasting.<br />
* Moore, D. A., Kurtzberg, T., Fox, C. R., &amp; Bazerman, M. H. (1999). Positive illusions and forecasting errors in mutual fund investment decisions. Organizational Behavior &amp; Human Decision Processes, 79, 95-114.<br />
* Orrell, D. (2007). The future of everything: The science of prediction. New York, NY: Thunder&#8217;s Mouth.<br />
* Rescher, N. 1998. Predicting the future: An introduction to the theory of forecasting. Albany: SUNY Press. ISBN: 0-7914-3553-9<br />
* Salant, Priscilla, and Don A. Dillman. 1994. How to Conduct Your Own Survey . Wiley. ISBN: 0471012734.<br />
* Seidensticker, R. B. (2005). Future hype: The myths of technology change. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler.<br />
* Schnaars, S. P. (1989). Megamistakes: Forecasting and the myth of rapid technological change. New York: Free Press<br />
* Sherden, William A. (1998). The fortune sellers: The big business of buying and selling predictions. New York: John Wiley.<br />
* Wood, G. (1992). Predicting outcomes: Sports and Stocks. Journal of Gambling Studies, 8, 201-222.</p>
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		<title>Issues in legacy systems: why vinyl is still here, and similar tunes</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/10/issues-in-legacy-systems-why-vinyl-is-still-here-and-similar-tunes/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/10/issues-in-legacy-systems-why-vinyl-is-still-here-and-similar-tunes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Oct 2008 15:38:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[My attention was struck by an advertisement in The Times on October 1, 2008 (on a plane to NY &#8211; for better or worse this paper not a routine part of my daily diet) that offered a &#8220;LP2CD&#8221; machine that transfers vinyl records to CD directly. This is the item: There&#8217;s nothing new about this [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/10/issues-in-legacy-systems-why-vinyl-is-still-here-and-similar-tunes/' addthis:title='Issues in legacy systems: why vinyl is still here, and similar tunes' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My attention was struck by an advertisement in <em>The Times</em> on October 1, 2008 (on a plane to NY &#8211; for better or worse this paper not a routine part of my daily diet) that offered a &#8220;LP2CD&#8221; machine that transfers vinyl records to CD directly.</p>
<p>This is the item:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/lp2cda.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-104" title="lp2cda" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/lp2cda-300x250.jpg" alt="lp2cda 300x250 Issues in legacy systems: why vinyl is still here, and similar tunes" width="300" height="250" /></a></p>
<p>There&#8217;s nothing new about this of course &#8211; the product has been around for a while, and ways to take vinyl and digitize it have been offered since the CD became the music industry standard in the mid-1980s. What&#8217;s interesting is that it is <em>still</em> being offered in 2008, more than 20 years after the technology transition. And still being bought, despite a sticker price of gpb 299 (nearly $600. In fact, this is the special newspaper-tie-in deal price.) The producers and marketers have, no doubt, done their homework: there are still enough people out there with vinyl records to justify a product and a campaign, including big newspaper spots that don&#8217;t come cheap.</p>
<p>What does this tell us about the future, and about predictions? It illustrates a key principle in thinking circumspectly and more accurately about the future. Legacy investments and legacy situations are a reality. They often represent a significant slice of daily practice or market share, well beyond the time when things have, officially, moved on. For all practical purposes, in any future the past continues to exist for a long time.</p>
<p><strong>A slow and measured exit<br />
</strong>This is common sense. But often missed by breathless techo-forecasters whose eyes are fixed on the next new thing. The implication of many forecasts is, when a new technology emerges into the market (which often takes longer than expected) that is also when previous solutions fall away. Not so. Yes, sometimes a new product is clearly advantageous, and adoption is rapid and pervasive. But when there are real investments in prior systems and technologies, these typically work their way out of people&#8217;s lives slowly, often over generations. The transition takes longer than we think it will.</p>
<p>While they are still part of the picture, legacy systems work against change (&#8220;This is working fine for me, why should I shift?&#8221; or &#8220;I&#8217;ve invested heavily in this, I can&#8217;t afford to shift&#8221;). On the other hand, as evidenced by the LP2CD in 2008, opportunities in the legacy system, or in facilitating a transition to the new system, may exist and be significatn long after everyone&#8217;s attention has moved on.</p>
<p>There are legacies in all kinds of products and services. A case that is currently pertinent, as discussed in <em>Future Savvy,</em> is the existence of deep legacies in the automobile industry and gasoline-petroleum supply chain. Both petroleum supply constraints and carbon emissions worries are driving hybrid engines, new fuels, and renewable forms of energy (technology is not the obstacle here) but the reality is that we are all deeply invested in a legacy petroleum-automobile system, from the well to the refinery to the factory to the forecourt. Even when new / alternative energies are proven, reliable, and equal in price and performance, the legacy will continue to exist, and it will erode gradually, as companies or consumers slowly renew their investment over time. Of course regulatory or social pressure can accelerate the incremental process, but nothing can make it vanish.</p>
<p>This means, in this example, there&#8217;s no possibility of a sudden change in individual land-based transport solutions. Whatever comes along will have to emerge into and live side-by-side with past systems and infrastructure for a very long time.</p>
<p><strong>Legacy as luxury<br />
</strong>Here&#8217;s another principle of legacy systems surviving into the future. There are many examples where a surpassed technology remains in existence, but moves into a niche or luxury market. The car replaced the bicycle and the horse, but both continue to enjoy massive popularity. In the developed world, more bicycles are sold than ever in history, but these are primarily for exercise or leisure. Horses, once widely distributed through society as instruments of work, are still part of a very active industry, but this industry is about leisure and/or gambling. Similarly, electricity replaced candles as our primary means of illumination, but candles are everywhere &#8211; associated with mood and romance rather than functionality. Ball-point pens squeezed the fountain pen off the table, but that merely freed the fountain pen to become an icon of status and refinement.</p>
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		<title>Debates in forecasting Euro&#8217;s status vs. Dollar, 2025</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/09/debates-in-forecasting-euros-status-vs-dollar-2025/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/09/debates-in-forecasting-euros-status-vs-dollar-2025/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Sep 2008 16:49:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[A recent forecast-and-critique exchange between economists is worthy of attention from a forecast assessment and evaluation point of view. The forecast is the recently published academic research paper: Chinn &#38; Frankel (2008), “The Euro May Over the Next 15 Years Surpass the Dollar as Leading International Currency,” Faculty Research Working Paper RWP08-016 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/09/debates-in-forecasting-euros-status-vs-dollar-2025/' addthis:title='Debates in forecasting Euro&#8217;s status vs. Dollar, 2025' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A recent forecast-and-critique exchange between economists is worthy of attention from a forecast assessment and evaluation point of view.</p>
<p>The forecast is the recently published academic research paper: Chinn &amp; Frankel (2008), “The Euro May Over the Next 15 Years Surpass the Dollar as Leading International Currency,” Faculty Research Working Paper RWP08-016 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University, John F. Kennedy School of Government) available <a href="http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research/wpaper.nsf/rwp/RWP08-016">here</a>. Frankel is a Professor of Economics at the Kennedy School.</p>
<p>The critique, &#8220;Forecasting the Euro&#8217;s Future,&#8221; by Benjamin Cohen, is <a href="http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=46197">here</a></p>
<p>The argument of the Chinn &amp; Frankel paper, which is also summarized <a href="http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/989">here</a> is that the euro may surpass the dollar as the leading international reserve currency as early as 2025. The authors use econometrically-estimated determinants of the shares of major currencies in the reserve holdings of the world’s central banks. Significant factors include: size of the home country, rate of return, and liquidity in the relevant home financial center (as measured by the turnover in its foreign exchange market). The analysis predicts a narrowing in the gap between the dollar and euro over the period 1999-2007, and forecasts this trend to continue.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/picture-11.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-77" title="Euro vs Dollar 2025" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/picture-11.jpg" alt="picture 11 Debates in forecasting Euros status vs. Dollar, 2025" width="500" height="289" /></a></p>
<p>Cohen has technical issues with the forecasts, saying, &#8220;the analysis addresses just one specific function of the two rival monies – their use in central bank reserves – ignoring all the many other roles that international currencies play. But  the essence of his critique is deeper. He says, &#8220;By concentrating purely on economic factors, (the forecast) ignores the politics involved, which in practice could prove to be far more decisive&#8230; key considerations include both the quality of governance in a currency’s home economy and the nature of relationships between countries. Is the issuer of a currency capable of assuring effective political stability at home? Can it project power abroad? Does it enjoy strong inter-governmental ties – perhaps a traditional patron-client linkage or a formal military alliance? Though it is by no means easy to operationalise many of these factors for purposes of empirical analysis, it is hard to deny their importance (for an accurate forecast.)&#8221;</p>
<p>Cohen&#8217;s agenda is not merely to tackle possible shortcomings of Chinn &amp; Frankel&#8217;s study, but to critique economic forecasters far-and-wide that analyze the technical data, while ignoring political (or social) factors that are hugely influential on outcomes, yet harder or impossible to quantify, and which are therefore conveniently ignored.</p>
<p><strong>Coming to grips with politics<br />
</strong>Says Cohen: &#8220;Chinn and Frankel are not alone in this shortcoming, of course. Many economists, perhaps even most, have a hard time coming to grips with the intricacies of politics, which can seem so messy and indeterminate when compared with the pristine parsimony of formal economics. When it comes to the analysis of public policy, few even bother to try to address political factors systematically.</p>
<p>&#8220;The result, though, is sadly predictable. By ignoring the role of politics, economists often get it wrong. How many trade specialists were prepared for the recent breakdown of the Doha trade talks, despite the obvious gains to be had on all sides from a new round of liberalisation? How many can explain the unprecedented accumulation of reserves in China or other East Asian countries, the widespread distrust of multinational corporations or the failure of the international community to do a better job at combating global warming? Politics is clearly critical to all these questions, and more&#8230; (Yet) conveniently, Chinn and Frankel set all these considerations aside in order to build a parsimonious model that they can use for forecasting purposes. Only three independent variables are highlighted in their regressions: country size (relative income), foreign-exchange turnover (representing the depth of competing financial markets), and trend exchange-rate changes (representing the rate of return on currency balances).&#8221;</p>
<p>Cohen offers potential political and ideological blockers to the particular forecast: &#8220;Japan, for instance, has long relied on a formal security umbrella provided by the United States to protect it against external threats; and the same, less formally, is true for Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states as well. Can we really imagine any of these nations, all very large dollar holders, casually jeopardising their ties to Washington for the sake of a few basis points of return on their reserves?&#8221;</p>
<p>To be fair to Frankel, the nature of his analysis is consistently political &#8211; see his blog at <a href="http://content.ksg.harvard.edu/blog/jeff_frankels_weblog/">http://content.ksg.harvard.edu/blog/jeff_frankels_weblog/</a><br />
One can&#8217;t imagine that Frankel or Chinn would dispute that politics will strongly influence the accuracy of their forecast. (What they clearly imply in their data-centered model is that the economic data is backed up by political shifts towards Europe, or at least there is nothing in the political realm that would counter their technical analysis.)</p>
<p>Yet the problem remains that these contextual factors are not built into the model. The technical stuff is quantifiable and gets forecasted quantitatively. The rest is a kind of political/social/ideology soup that we flounder in, and the best we can apparently say is &#8220;it&#8217;s going in the same direction&#8221; or &#8220;ceteris paribus&#8221;.</p>
<p><strong>International Political Economy</strong><br />
Going with Cohen, one may well ask: what is the value of the forecast that ignores the context, or separates it in this way? Surely very little. As impressive as the economics or the modeling is, the results are are circumscribed by the larger questions that are not in the model, and that affect everything.</p>
<p>As an alternative, Cohen offers International Political Economy (IPE), which explicitly combines political analysis with economic theory, saying, &#8220;part of what IPE offers is a critique policy choices as &#8216;rational calculus by unitary actors responding to well-defined structural constraints and incentives – in effect, an approach akin to the analysis of atomistic firms in a setting of perfect competition.&#8217;&#8221; IPE suggests three levels of political analysis: the systemic level (macro-international politics); the domestic level, revealing competition of domestic interest groups and institutions; and the cognitive level, ideas that legitimate governmental policy making. If one is not thinking at all three levels of politics, any prediction will surely fail.</p>
<p>Whether IPE succeeds in mitigating the shortcomings of technical analysis or not, one can only say amen to the principle &#8211; and that, additionally, there&#8217;s surely even more to factor in. Beyond politics, there are issues of technology change, changes in culture, values, ideologies and perceptions that shape the future. Truth is, we don&#8217;t know how to quantify all this &#8211; and it&#8217;s certainly not tractable to quantitative measures for anything but the short term. Using the technical analysis to predict the euro&#8217;s status vs. the dollar in 2025 must return a result which (while even possibly correct) is one we cannot rely on.</p>
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		<title>Learning journeys: conducting reconnaissance into the future</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/learning-journeys-conducting-reconnaissance-into-the-future/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Jul 2008 16:48:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[More on the Media Futures Conference – having yesterday got sidetracked into pushing back at misconceptions about citizen journalism (based on lousy forecast filtering) – now I’m actually getting to what I intended to talk about&#8230; Early in the day, as a warmup I think (but for me this was the juice) there was a [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/learning-journeys-conducting-reconnaissance-into-the-future/' addthis:title='Learning journeys: conducting reconnaissance into the future' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>More on the Media Futures Conference – having yesterday got sidetracked into pushing back at misconceptions about citizen journalism (based on lousy forecast filtering) – now I’m actually getting to what I intended to talk about&#8230;</p>
<p>Early in the day, as a warmup I think (but for me this was the juice) there was a “Research in the Real World” section. It started with a presentation by <a href="http://www.cornerstonestrategies.co.uk/Home/People/Associates/Alex_McKie/default.aspx">Alex McKie</a> reporting on a tour she made across the UK, where she interviewed people asking them what their “three wishes for the future” were. This was followed by Gill Wildman and Nick Durrant of <a href="www.plotsite.net">Plot</a>, who presented interviews where consumers were asked where and how they used media, and what they wanted from it.</p>
<p>The research is anthropological, no more or less than a customized field trip: going out, seeing what people do, and how they live, and what’s important and meaningful to them – and then thinking how one&#8217;s own area of interest (e.g. product) fits into this, or could fit into it in the future. That gives some clues as to what people will adopt and/or buy – what the market will “pull”.</p>
<p>The futures field lingo for this type of work is “a learning journey,” a process usually omitted in the helter-skelter of tracking new technology capabilities and other apparently more profitable lines of research. There are some good writeups of future learning journeys: one that comes to mind is “The Moen Story” Johnston, R. &amp; Douglas Bate, J., The Power of Strategy Innovation, Amacom Press, 2003, Chapter 5. Another is “Conduct Reconnaissance into the Future,” Sull, D &amp; Wang Y, Made in China, Chapter 3, HBS Press, 2005. I recently saw that <a href="http://wiresidechatwithdrtom.blogspot.com/2008/07/role-of-new-technology-in-health-care.html">Christus CEO Tom Royer</a> said his medical institution had conducted learning journeys (to Canada and India) as part of its Futures Task Force II scenario building process.</p>
<p><strong>Tuning in</strong><br />
No question this type of research is often tedious. You have everyday people umming and aahing  inarticulately and often unimaginatively about their preferences and problems, and hopes for the future. In fact the conference audience were impatient about having been presented with the interviews in raw form. But it is precisely in the careful listening that much about the real future is revealed. It is a vital ingredient in thinking about the future, and reigning in poor forecasts.</p>
<p>In the event, the consumers (in Plot’s terms “the people formerly known as … users”) were revealed as media wise, but often their savvy to screen out the information firehose. Although media types were thinking about the cutting edge, real people were articulating the need to be informed in a way they could manage – not too much or too little – and to be able to trust the news source, and be exposed to stories that move or inspire them.</p>
<p>Learning journeys are a very dependable way to think about the future by checking our industry insider preferences against the preferences of real people out there. Any prediction that makes assumptions about the market without this perspective is heading for failure. But there is a wrinkle, and it is this: market research – even this deep market field trip research which is much better than focus groups – is seldom enough to adequately anticipate the next new thing. It tells us what lab fantasies or executive business model fantasies will not fly. But it doesn’t help us make the jump either. Experience is that consumers want what they already have, maybe a bit better, maybe a bit cheaper. Market research did not see the Walkman. And as as Hal Sperling of Chrysler said: “In all the time we spent developing the Minivan, not once did we have a soccer mom come and ask us for one.”</p>
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		<title>Technologies change, but they don&#8217;t change themselves</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/technologies-change-but-they-dont-change-themselves/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2008 17:17:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[In planning seminars and discussions about the future, a key topic is inevitably &#8220;technology change.&#8221; Participants will turn to each other, or perhaps to industry research or techno-tracking Web sites or &#8220;technology roadmaps&#8221; to consider technology changes in their industry and in the world at large, and how this may change the future. So far [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/technologies-change-but-they-dont-change-themselves/' addthis:title='Technologies change, but they don&#8217;t change themselves' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In planning seminars and discussions about the future, a key topic is inevitably &#8220;technology change.&#8221; Participants will turn to each other, or perhaps to industry research or techno-tracking Web sites or &#8220;technology roadmaps&#8221; to consider technology changes in their industry and in the world at large, and how this may change the future.</p>
<p>So far so good. Tracking technology change is an important stage in scanning the external environment and anticipating sources or change and/or disruption. But no technology ever changed itself. History is littered with fabulous mind-bending, world-changing technologies that didn&#8217;t make it out of the lab. In fact, technologies only change because humans or human institutions want them to change AND (two separate hurdles here) they allow them to change.</p>
<p>Most people, most of the time, want technologies to change because they change for the better, improving products and services and/or making them cheaper. Companies want new technologies because improvements offer new sales options and (sometimes) industry competitive advantage, among other things. Societies express the desire for technology to go forward by stimulating and facilitating change in many ways (for example through government or industry funding of R&amp;D or protecting intellectual property or making capital markets more transparent.)</p>
<p><strong>Technology filtered by human choice</strong><br />
Once a technology breakthrough emerges, that’s hardly the end of the story. In fact it is still very much the beginning. New technologies of any importance are subject to public scrutiny and choices. Individually, or as a society, we ask ourselves, is this technology good for us? Debates happen, and power and politics and regulation takes its course, but one way or another technologies that most people like &#8211; mobile phone’s for example &#8211; will go forward while technologies such as GMOs will stall. Also, in a market economy, technologies are inescapably subject to consumer economics: those that raise user benefit (pass a buyer;s cost-benefit analysis) will be adopted. Those that don’t sit in the lab.</p>
<p>In other words, technology possibility is a matter of science and engineering, and the possibility frontier is expanding all the time, but the road from possibility to actuality is the rocky road of human ideas, preferences, and choices. Technology change means technology adoption, that is, it is a form of <em>social</em> change.</p>
<p>Why is this distinction important? Because one of the main reasons forecast fail is they see the technology possibility frontier as the future, underestimating the forces of social triage. There are two sites that I love that illustrate this wonderfully. Check out <a href="http://www.paleofuture.com">Paleo-Future</a> (A Look into the Future that Never Was) and <a href="http://blog.modernmechanix.com/">Modern Mechanics</a> (Yesterday’s Tomorrow Today). Both are crammed with failed forecasts of this type. This is not to say that we cannot forecast usefully – much more to come on this in this journal – but it does give us pause in viewing many of today’s techno-inspired forecasts which make the same type of error. (Pics credit to the sites mentioned.) 
<a href='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/technologies-change-but-they-dont-change-themselves/radio-future1/' title='radio-future1'><img width="150" height="150" src="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/radio-future1-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail" alt="radio future1 150x150 Technologies change, but they dont change themselves" title="radio-future1" /></a>
<a href='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/technologies-change-but-they-dont-change-themselves/sea-city-future/' title='sea-city-future'><img width="150" height="150" src="http://futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/sea-city-future-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail" alt="sea city future 150x150 Technologies change, but they dont change themselves" title="sea-city-future" /></a>
</p>
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		<title>More on &#8220;Future Savvy&#8221; rationale, and then I&#8217;ll stop. Promise.</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/more-on-future-savvy-rationale-and-then-ill-stop-promise/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/more-on-future-savvy-rationale-and-then-ill-stop-promise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jul 2008 16:40:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=35</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a how-to book: how to evaluate predictions about the future – how to assess which ones are credible and/or how credible they are (how likely the future will turn out similar to the prediction). It is not just a guide to bad forecasts, it is also about how to identify and extract what [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/more-on-future-savvy-rationale-and-then-ill-stop-promise/' addthis:title='More on &#8220;Future Savvy&#8221; rationale, and then I&#8217;ll stop. Promise.' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a how-to book: how to evaluate predictions about the future – how to assess which ones are credible and/or how credible they are (how likely the future will turn out similar to the prediction). It is not just a guide to bad forecasts, it is also about how to identify and extract what is valuable in any forecast. This benefits readers who are required to manage professional or  personal situations that depend on correctly anticipating change. Whatever we want to achieve – help a company be more profitable – solve the world’s problems – develop their career – success depends on a good reading of the future. There are many guides to the future (predictions) but no guides to the guides. This book fills that gap. It helps readers assess predictions so they can make better judgments about the future for themselves and their organizations.</p>
<p>Decision success always implies congruence between decisions and the world in which those decisions play out. If we decide today to launch a product, buy a house, study for a degree, build a new light rail system, or take any similar decision of significance, the environment of tomorrow will be a key factor in the success or failure of that decision. What we do will be tested by the future conditions that emerge. Where there is a good “fit” between the initiative and the environment it plays out in &#8212; “the right product at the right time” &#8212; we can expect success. If not, we should expect to fail. Our decisions are only as good as the view of the future they rest on. All opportunities and successes and profits are realized in the future. All threats, failures, and losses are in the future.</p>
<p>In a fast-moving world, we know that the future environment will be different to that of today in big or small ways. New technologies, market shifts, changes in legislation, or evolving social values damage or destroy the traditional good fit we have between ourselves and the world. To achieve “future fit” we therefore use forecasts to position ourselves and our organizations, creating (or renewing) the fit between our initiatives and environment. In some cases we may be strong enough also to influence future events and outcomes for our own future benefit, and forecasts help us do this too.</p>
<p>All enterprises benefit from narrowing down what they must adapt to and plan for &#8211; all effort spent preparing for a future that will not emerge is a waste of personal or organizational resources. Good forecasts are a key ingredient in limiting the vagaries of uncertainty, and therein working smarter not harder, avoiding surprises, exploiting new opportunities and plugging weaknesses in fitting in with the future, and where possible influencing the future to suit the organization. This is true not only of business. People and institutions of all types position themselves for success by anticipating and adapting to events, or shaping them. Whether it is an NGO raising money for developing-world children, an urban planner advocating a light rail system, a homeowner deciding to sell a house, or a student making a career choice, identical principles apply &#8212; a higher-quality reading of the future operating environment in which these decisions will play out is what separates winners from losers. We should all be vitally concerned with forecasts as we are all effectively betting significant resources on their validity.</p>
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		<title>Future Savvy: What&#8217;s Under the Hood</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/future-savvy-chapter-by-chapter/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/future-savvy-chapter-by-chapter/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 14:20:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=24</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The book Future Savvy shows readers how to critically judge forecasts for themselves. These are the chapters that take the reader there: Chapter 1: Recognizing Forecast Intentions, deals with considerations of how forecasts come about, who makes them, and with what intention. Those who research and produce forecasts, those who invest in understanding trends and [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style" addthis:url='http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/future-savvy-chapter-by-chapter/' addthis:title='Future Savvy: What&#8217;s Under the Hood' ><a class="addthis_button_twitter"></a><a class="addthis_button_linkedin"></a><a class="addthis_button_google +1"></a><a class="addthis_button_facebook"></a><a class="addthis_button_email"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The book Future Savvy shows readers how to critically judge forecasts for themselves. These are the chapters that take the reader there:</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 1:</strong> Recognizing Forecast Intentions, deals with considerations of how forecasts come about, who makes them, and with what intention. Those who research and produce forecasts, those who invest in understanding trends and drivers of change, and those (including the media) who bring the forecasts and their implications to our attention, inevitably have reasons for doing so – to benefit from the knowledge by seizing opportunities or avoiding threats or by affecting outcomes in the world. Understanding a forecast’s “return on investment” gives us an important vantage point in assessing the merits of a forecast.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 2:</strong> The Quality of Information, shows how a forecast communicates information between forecaster and reader subject to the same standards of accuracy, truth-telling, and bias-control by which one would judge any communication. Forecasts can be very different in methods and goals, but all forecasts lay claim to factual truth, particularly truth in the data, and the argument deals with the various ways in which data can be less solid than it looks, even with the best intentions.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 3:</strong> Interpretation and Bias, considers how data &#8211; whether good or bad in itself &#8211; can be interpreted or misinterpreted in forecasting, that is, the “political” aspects of forecasting. Just as there is no value-free look at history, so too there is no value-free look to the future and asking the right questions allows us be ready to mentally rebalance forecasts that are presented.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 4:</strong> Paradigms and Perception, investigates how predictive statements are exposed to a broader form of interpretive bias that has to do with the forecaster’s mental model or “paradigm,” and the “zeitgeist” (spirit of the times) when the forecast is made. This chapter investigates situations where forecast failure is caused by failure to escape society’s current mental models – which often do not hold through the forecast period.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 5:</strong> The Utility Principle, considers economic and market forces, and the role of consumers, in promoting or resisting the future. Without reigning in creative thinking, some simple economic filters inevitably apply direction or timing realism to futurist flights of fancy.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 6:</strong> Drivers, Blockers, and Trends, consider drivers and blockers of change, and how viewing these dynamics improves forecast assessment. It identifies the roles of Drivers, Enablers, Friction, and Blockers acting on events to cause change or resist it, and problems in dumbly projecting current trends.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 7: </strong>The Limits of Quantitative Analysis, discusses the role of statistical analysis and quantitative modeling in predicting the future &#8211; where this is possible and useful and where it is not, and why not.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 8:</strong> The Systems Perspective, investigates “system effects,” which occur whenever different elements or variables that may appear isolated are in fact linked together, such that changes in one element cause changes in others. Anticipating future behavior of any variable hinges on identifying the broader systemic elements influencing it and failing to do this is a big part of what causes forecasts to fail.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 9:</strong> Living with Alternative Futures, investigates non-predictive ways of approaching change – where the tone is more about managing uncertainty than predicting the future. It acknowledges unfathomable complexity of most future questions and provides perspectives that raise chances of  success in an inherently unpredictable future.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 10:</strong> Forecast Filtering in Action, illustrates the processes of the book by applying them in case studies to real-world sample forecasts that decision makers in business and policy areas might find themselves interacting with. This demonstrates how real everyday predictive material may be probed and critically evaluated, following the principles developed in previous chapters.</p>
<p><strong>Chapter 11: </strong>A Forecast Filtering Checklist, is a cross-cutting checklist which summarizes the principles of the book in one convenient, thematic list.</p>
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