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	<title>Future Savvy: Quality in Foresight &#187; trend tracking</title>
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		<title>South Africa 2030, yes there will be life after the Fifa World Cup</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2010/05/south-africa-2030-life-after-the-fifa-world-cup/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2010/05/south-africa-2030-life-after-the-fifa-world-cup/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 May 2010 13:13:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The short-term future in South Africa is the Fifa Soccer World Cup, and at the moment it is really hard to get anyone to see or think beyond it. Football is life. Nevertheless a few hundred intrepid thinkers gathered in Cape Town earlier this month to consider South Africa in 2030, under the auspices of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The short-term future in South Africa is the Fifa Soccer World Cup, and at the moment it is really hard to get anyone to see or think beyond it. Football is life. Nevertheless a few hundred intrepid thinkers gathered in Cape Town earlier this month to consider South Africa in 2030, under the auspices of the World Future Society, <a href="http://www.wfs-sa.com/" target="_blank">South Africa Chapter</a>, and its very capable leader Mike Lee.</p>
<p>I was lucky enough to be asked to do the opening address at the conference, and even luckier in that this Web site: <a href="http://www.sagoodnews.co.za/newsletter_archive/our_future_in_the_hands_of_the_national_planning_commission_our_own_or_both_.html" target="_blank">South Africa &#8211; The Good News</a> summarized some of what I and others said:</p>
<p><span style="color: #000080;">&#8220;Adam Gordon,  Foresight Project Director and author of &#8220;Future Savvy&#8221; gave us some  pointers:</span></p>
<ol>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Beware of sector experts, they are deeply  entrenched in the present.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">The consumer and choice is the  determinant, not technology.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Change is about overestimating  followed by underestimating.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Trends are patterns in the data,  behind the trend are enablers and drivers, but frictional forces exist  and in front of the trend are turners and blockers.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Trend  extrapolation is limited, don&#8217;t fall foul of the turkey syndrome.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">There  is well behaved and badly behaved change. Both can be predictable and  unpredictable. The potential of sudden shifts always lurks.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Scenario  planning wraps up the key uncertainties over which we have no control.</span></li>
</ol>
<p><span style="color: #000080;"><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span><br />
&#8220;The &#8216;BIG&#8217; question he asks is &#8216;when do we influence the future and when do  we adapt?&#8217; There are big predictable forces out there (like population  growth / the diminishing availability of oil etc), and there are big  unpredictable forces out there (ja, well no fine!). Importantly, we can  design our ability to influence and we can design the way we adapt. It  is critical that we are able to do both.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #000080;">&#8220;But managing the future  is more than just about scenario planning, it is also about the  implementation of the plan. It is about developing a methodology that  prioritises, engages with stakeholders, and enables proactive actions on  the ground.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #000080;">So how?</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #000080;">Some important considerations (from various speakers):</span></p>
<ol>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Often we know what causes the problem (poverty, crime, HIV) but we  don&#8217;t know what to do about it.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Often the logic that gives  rise to the problem is not the logic that will solve the problem.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Mostly  the problem does not contain the makings of the solution.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">Solutions  in one area can exacerbate problems in another.</span></li>
<li><span style="color: #000080;">The current  situation has momentum, change to the system should happen concurrently  not suddenly.</span></li>
</ol>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span><br />
<span style="color: #000080;">&#8220;What is critical is the  foresight process, it must be well-informed so that the implementation  strategies that follow have buy-in, are doable, are relevant and  far-reaching. There is a very real danger of visions being disconnected,  unachievable and, at the end of the day, a pipe-dream.&#8221;</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #000080;">Dr  Elizabeth Dostal talked of a stakeholder democracy in which she promoted  the design of a matrix that recognised different stakeholder levels on  the vertical axis and different environmental dimensions on the  horizontal axis. A multi-level, multi-dimensional model.</span></p>
<p><span style="color: #000080;">&#8220;Imagine&#8221;  she said, &#8220;putting four Nobel Peace laureates together and asking them  what the causes of global conflict are. One may argue poverty, another  ideology, another resources, and another greed. In no time, they would  all be in different silo&#8217;s defending their view, in one sense they are  all right, but in another sense they have not looked at the whole  picture. A multi-level, multi-dimensional model would reveal this, the  gaps in their logic, and the opportunities for agreement.&#8221;</span></p>
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		<title>Been a while since there was a &#8216;Future Savvy&#8217; podcast, but here&#8217;s a new one</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2010/04/a-future-savvy-podcast/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2010/04/a-future-savvy-podcast/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Apr 2010 18:00:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=1292</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I had a chat the other day to Stephan Magus for his Abenteuer Zukunft (Future Adventures) podcast channel, taking about the rationale behind making a stand for quality in foresight. That is, what&#8217;s under the hood of Future Savvy, and why. The podcast is up at the Abenteuer Leben site, playable via the buttons on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I had a chat the other day to Stephan Magus for his Abenteuer Zukunft (Future Adventures) podcast channel, taking about the rationale behind making a stand for quality in foresight. That is, what&#8217;s under the hood of <em>Future Savvy</em>, and why.</p>
<p>The podcast is up at the <a href="https://ssl.dasabenteuerleben.de/index.php?id=2&amp;oid=312349" target="_blank">Abenteuer Leben</a> site, playable via the buttons on the right hand side.</p>
<p>Alternatively it can be accessed directly at</p>
<p><a href="http://media1.roadkast.com/abenteuerzukunft/DAZ71_120410_6tt6.mp3" target="_blank">http://media1.roadkast.com/abenteuerzukunft/DAZ71_120410_6tt6.mp3</a></p>
<p>(If you don&#8217;t speak German, you need to fast forward through the first 3 minutes.)</p>
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		<title>Unexpected prediction modesty highlights problems of timing and impact</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/10/unexpected-prediction-modesty-highlights-problems-of-timing-and-impact/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/10/unexpected-prediction-modesty-highlights-problems-of-timing-and-impact/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Oct 2009 11:04:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=965</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Continuing the theme of financial types talking to each other about predictions and predictability, this &#8216;Tea with the Economist&#8217; interview of Stephen Roach, Chairman, Morgan Stanley Asia by Economist New York Bureau Chief Mathew Birk, carries interesting lessons about the limits of prediction. Birk commends Roach for being one of the few to have predicted [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Continuing the theme of financial types talking to each other about predictions and predictability, this &#8216;Tea with the Economist&#8217; interview of Stephen Roach, Chairman, Morgan Stanley Asia by <em>Economist</em> New York Bureau Chief Mathew Birk, carries interesting lessons about the limits of prediction.</p>
<p><code><iframe src='http://video.economist.com/linking/index.jsp?skin=oneclip&#038;ehv=http://audiovideo.economist.com/&#038;fr_story=3daace2614ad333bf206c925acd0075e71818be2&#038;rf=ev&#038;hl=true' width=402 height=336 scrolling='no' frameborder=0 marginwidth=0 marginheight=0></iframe></code> </p>
<p>
<br />
Birk commends Roach for being one of the few to have predicted the Credit Crunch problems, to which Roach demurs in saying he was &#8220;too early&#8221;. He then furthers his modesty in saying that the &#8220;breakage&#8221; in the financial system was &#8220;in excess of anything I envisioned.&#8221;</p>
<p>Self-deprecation in assessing one&#8217;s predictive abilities will endear anyone to me. Even Roach, who later in the interview burns this hard-won credibility by laying the blame for the credit crunch at the door of regulators, forgetting how hard financial institutions lobbied regulators for greater freedoms in the 1990s.</p>
<p>But I digress. The predictive issues the interview raises are as follows. Issue one: it&#8217;s not enough (as any stock short-seller will confirm) to get the direction of a future change right. One must get the timing right too. Issue two: it&#8217;s not enough to anticipate a change. One must be able to judge it&#8217;s impact. Getting either timing or impact wrong is effectively to have missed the future.
</p>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span></p>
<p><strong>Probability</strong></p>
<p>On the latter topic &#8212; the problem of impact &#8212; Nassim Taleb is unrelenting, and he is right. Analysts routinely mix up probability and impact. They think that because an event has a low probability (&#8216;it would be a 10-sigma event!&#8217;) it can be marginalized in the predictive number crunching. Of course, it can&#8217;t. The low-probability of a wildcard or black swan event is irrelevant because when it happens it will change the game, and that&#8217;s why, in every predictive situation of reasonable complexity and uncertainty, using statistical extrapolations (regressions and so on) to predict, is to dangerously paper over the cracks. It is precisely the cracks that businesses and policy makers need to worry about.</p>
<p>Determining the direction of change is hard enough. Assessing timing or extent of impact &#8212; a &#8216;total future impact index&#8217; &#8212; is wickedly difficult. It&#8217;s a task not to be underestimated, and to simply extrapolate current trends (= assuming the trend&#8217;s timeline and impact stay the same as in the past) is the royal road to underestimating it.</p>
<p>This is the reason foresight for complex, uncertain, changing situations can only be grasped by NOT predicting (quantitatively or otherwise) but by exploring the limit-conditions of the plausible (What would happen if the timing of the change accelerated, or was significantly delayed? What if  the impact was 10x or one tenth of what we expect? And so on.)</p>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span></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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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://futuresavvy.net/?p=803</guid>
		<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? [...]]]></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>The Age of Stupid viewed from 2055. Dystopic futuring meets activist journalism</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/05/the-age-of-stupid-viewed-from-2055-dystopic-futuring-meets-activist-journalism/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2009 13:52:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=598</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Apocalyptic predictions are designed to be wrong. The point of doing them, as with &#8220;1984,&#8221; &#8220;Brave New World,&#8221; &#8220;When the Wind Blows,&#8221; etc., is to raise consciousness to negative outcomes and engender action so that the prediction, by succeeding in purpose makes itself incorrect in fact. &#8220;The Age of Stupid&#8221; is this all over. See [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Apocalyptic predictions are designed to be wrong. The point of doing them, as with &#8220;1984,&#8221; &#8220;Brave New World,&#8221; &#8220;When the Wind Blows,&#8221; etc., is to raise consciousness to negative outcomes and engender action so that the prediction, by succeeding in purpose makes itself incorrect in fact. &#8220;The Age of Stupid&#8221; is this all over. See the trailer here:</p>
<p><div style="float:right;margin-left: 10px;"><span class="youtube">
<iframe title="YouTube video player" class="youtube-player" type="text/html" width="320" height="265" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/DZjsJdokC0s?color1=d6d6d6&amp;color2=f0f0f0&amp;border=0&amp;fs=1&amp;hl=en&amp;modestbranding=1&amp;loop=0&amp;showinfo=0&amp;iv_load_policy=3&amp;showsearch=0&amp;rel=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
</span><p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZjsJdokC0s">www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZjsJdokC0s</a></p></div></p>
<p>There is also a <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/video/2009/mar/02/age-of-stupid-making-of" target="_blank">documentary</a> about how the movie was funded and made.</p>
<p>Set in 2055, post the environmental global climate change collapse, it features last-man-on-earth (Pete Postlethwaite) as an archivist in a tower refuge somewhere in the Arctic north of Norway sifting through records of human life before it was wiped out, trying to find out why people did nothing to stop the eco-catastrophe that was imminent. The plot device allows filmmaker Franny Armstrong, (director of McLibel, 2005, about environmentalists who successfully challenged McDonalds) to showcase a selection of real reportage and news clips from today to withering effect. Like any good scenario it gives granularity: dates, names, actions, timelines. It points fingers and mentally readies the reader-watcher to act.</p>
<p>By all accounts this is a punchier movie than Al Gore-fronted &#8220;An Inconvenient Truth (2006),&#8221; and punchy is what is required to effect the goals of a future-influencing forecasting, that is, an assault on the powers that be and/or on public complacency.</p>
<p>By the way, if you want to see the best activist consciousness-raising movie (ever!) see Pete Postlethwaite in the anti-Thatcherite &#8220;Brassed Off.&#8221;</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>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2009/03/the-pub-of-the-future-and-what-guinness-would-prefer-not-to-be-thinking-about/#comments</comments>
		<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 [...]]]></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>Same data, new bottles, clearer messages, and better forecasts</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/10/same-data-new-bottles-clearer-messages-and-better-forecasts/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/10/same-data-new-bottles-clearer-messages-and-better-forecasts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2008 22:59:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=109</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[They say a definite cure for romantic notions about any previous era of human existence is to think about the dentistry. That fixes any nostalgia. However it&#8217;s safe to say that no one will be nostalgic for all prior eras of working with data which was – when findable (pre-search engines) – a matter of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>They say a definite cure for romantic notions about any previous era of human existence is to think about the dentistry. That fixes any nostalgia. However it&#8217;s safe to say that no one will be nostalgic for all prior eras of working with data which was – when findable (pre-search engines) – a matter of scouring through tables of figures in heavy books.</p>
<p>No longer. The paradigm was broken by the Hans Rosling (Gapminder) video <a href="http://www.gapminder.org/video/lectures/ " target="_blank">“Debunking Myths About the Third-World,”</a> 2006. By Rosling’s own admission, his analysis is not based on new or better data. The (UN) data has always been there (yes now it’s becoming more available). But the seachange is new software which makes it easy to filter and present it in dynamic, graphic form. And, no surprise, this is popular. According to Gapminder, this video has seen by 500,000 people, not bad for a 20-minute treatise on perceptions of developing world countries.</p>
<p>Data turned into dynamic moving pictures is, one might say, required in our era (trends: visual literacy, short attention span, computing power) so thankfully we can expect more of this. What’s important, for forecast evaluation purposes, is the power of explanation and mental-model challenge that the improved communication provides. As Rosling says of his Swedish graduate students: “Their problem was not lack of data, it was preconceived ideas” (an outdated world view of &#8220;1st world&#8221; vs &#8220;3rd world.&#8221;) An endless amount of poring over dusty tables of figures would be unlikely to change that. But it&#8217;s hard to watch Rosling&#8217;s moving bubbles and not have one’s paradigm shaken.</p>
<p>Another site, in a similar vein, is <a href="http://www.worldmapper.org/index.html">worldmapper</a>, a University of Sheffield initiative. Worldmapper communicates hundreds of world indicators, from infant mortality to military spending and so on, by manipulating the size of territory of each country to indicate presence or absence of the variable in question, as the following maps show:</p>
<div id="attachment_113" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 488px"><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/prisoners11.png"><img class="size-full wp-image-113" title="prisoners11" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/prisoners11.png" alt="prisoners11 Same data, new bottles, clearer messages, and better forecasts" width="478" height="246" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Prisoners as percentage of population</p></div>
<div id="attachment_114" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 490px"><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/girls-not-school1.png"><img class="size-full wp-image-114" title="girls-not-school1" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/girls-not-school1.png" alt="girls not school1 Same data, new bottles, clearer messages, and better forecasts" width="480" height="246" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Girls not at secondary school</p></div>
<div id="attachment_115" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 491px"><a href="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/strikes1.png"><img class="size-full wp-image-115" title="strikes1" src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/strikes1.png" alt="strikes1 Same data, new bottles, clearer messages, and better forecasts" width="481" height="246" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Strikes and lockouts, 2002</p></div>
<p>Again it is basically UN data that is being sourced, but now presented in a way that cuts through the obscurity tells and the story much more vividly. As we know, humans “get it” better and faster via images than via words or figures. It challenges our perceptions in a way that figures in dusty tables cannot. They payoff is it’s harder to miss what’s really going on. So we have a better view of the world: our mental model aka &#8216;paradigm&#8221; more closely approximates reality. That means we will make better assumptions going forward which will, on balance (no guarantees of course), convert into better predictions.</p>
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		<title>Horizon scanning includes asking: What&#8217;s in people&#8217;s heads?</title>
		<link>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/horizon-scanning-includes-asking-whats-in-peoples-heads/</link>
		<comments>http://futuresavvy.net/2008/07/horizon-scanning-includes-asking-whats-in-peoples-heads/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jul 2008 16:44:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Gordon</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.futuresavvy.net/?p=48</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Being future savvy &#8211; developing quality foresight &#8211; starts with going out into the world and looking for clues to change. The lingo for this is &#8220;horizon scanning,&#8221; or &#8220;environmental scanning,&#8221; and it&#8217;s commonly taken to mean looking and listening out beyond our common patch &#8211; to the margins where clues to the future may [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Being future savvy &#8211; developing quality foresight &#8211; starts with going out into the world and looking for clues to change. The lingo for this is &#8220;horizon scanning,&#8221; or &#8220;environmental scanning,&#8221; and it&#8217;s commonly taken to mean looking and listening out beyond our common patch &#8211; to the margins where clues to the future may exist currently, in the form of &#8220;weak signals&#8221;. (It includes embarking on learning journeys, as discussed in the previous post). If we find them and decode them right, that gives us a competitive jump on planning for the future.</p>
<p>The common view of horizon scanning that it is about seeing what’s &#8220;out there&#8221; in the world. We look for events and signs and changes in behavior or technology and so on, that suggest the beginning of a larger trend. So far, so good. Many institutions, organizations, and companies practice this, or subcontract this service. But &#8211; and this is far less commonly practiced or understood &#8211; good scanning should focus equally at what’s going on in people’s heads: their ideas, values, and motivations, because these will determine the choices they make, and these choices aggregated over the population and over time will determine the future. (Internal perceptions and external events are linked of course.)</p>
<p>We can&#8217;t look into peoples&#8217; heads. But we can look at what is going into their heads: exposing ourselves to the knowledge and ideas people are getting, or choosing. For some analysts this appears a very &#8220;low-brow&#8221; experience, too insulting of their intelligence to be worth doing. But there can be no adequate future scanning without it.</p>
<p><strong>Fred</strong><br />
I&#8217;m prompted into this discussion by a post on the <a href="http://foresightculture.com/">Foresight Culture</a> blog which flags the importance of scanning inputs such as Fred YouTube videos. As posted: &#8220;Fred is the YouTube character of a Nebraska teenager, Lucas Cruikshank. I came across his videos because they kept turning up under Most Viewed or Most Popular on Youtube. Most viewed doesn’t make the content of a video valid or even viewable, but in my view, it makes it important to know about. His 19 videos have a combined view total of over 4 million, and Fred’s YouTube channel has 290,762 subscribers, the 4th highest total on YouTube&#8230;. Good scanning includes knowing what the mass of people are watching and liking. That means tv shows you might not like or even approve of&#8230; The Fred videos are  interesting because, even though they are silly satire, they may represent a modern teen’s ideas about life, family, and society.&#8221;<br />
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/Fred">View Fred’s video channel </a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.futuresavvy.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/youtube.jpg" alt="youtube Horizon scanning includes asking: Whats in peoples heads?" title="youtube" width="238" height="152" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-49" /></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 [...]]]></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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