FutureScapes March 25: Resilience


Welcome to this week’s edition of FutureScapes. Today we’re pleased to announce that we’ve added futurist and financial advisor James H. Lee’s book Resilience and the Future of Everyday Life to our online store. Scroll down a bit for more on James and the book.

And with our Future Day discount, pick up a copy of Resilience and the Future of Everyday Life for less than $7 with coupon code 20Futr until March 31st.

In this issue:

As always, please feel free to share this newsletter with friends and colleagues, and send us an email if you’d like – your feedback is always appreciated.


Resilience and the Future of Everyday Life by James H. Lee

How can we sustain ourselves in a world turned upside-down?

That’s the central question of Resilience and the Future of Everyday Life. In this thought-provoking book, financial advisor and futurist James H. Lee explores the unprecedented challenges of the post-modern age.

Some see these problems–from financial chaos and exploding debt to career uncertainty and environmental worries–as proof that human society is on the verge of collapse. Lee looks past the doom and gloom and sees possibility instead. He asks, “What if the so-called ‘coming apocalypse’ leads not to societal collapse but a more resilient way of life? What if these global problems initiate a positive cultural transformation?”

There are signs of a grassroots revolution everywhere. The do-it-yourself ethos is bigger than ever.  Homesteading is back. People are rethinking consumption and re-imagining lifestyles. From co-housing to co-working, makerbots to microfarms, and repurposing to retooling, a major shift is underway.

With equal parts honesty and optimism, Lee guides readers beyond our contemporary troubles and into the everyday lives of people and communities who are discovering practical, livable solutions. Resilience and the Future of Everyday Life is for those who recognize our global challenges are real… and are ready to do something about it.

“Resilience…takes the reader from the paralyzing darkness of the “gloom and doom” we hear so much about to the path of getting off our butts and into action, creating the reality we want for our children and their children – the epitome of resilience!” – John Renesch, author of The Great Growing Up: Being Responsible for Humanity’s Future

Visit our store to pick up a copy today. Be sure to use coupon code 20Futr to receive 20% off of Resilience before March 31st.

Futures Finds in Media

The Windsor Debates – Artificial Intelligence via Roy Sheppard

A quick look at The Windsor Debates held last week in which our own Rohit Talwar spoke on artificial intelligence and its inevitable future in business.

The Future of Business: Book Review via lifeboat foundation

“The concepts developed through the pages of the book by many experts are fundamental to thrive in a world of exponential changes, where we have to carefully navigate in the middle of much uncertainty.”

Microsoft is deleting its AI chatbot’s incredibly racist tweets via Business Insider

When AI goes horribly, horribly, yet hilariously wrong. This is the fate of AI that learns from internet trolls.

Why You Don’t Need to Worry About Robots Taking Over Just Yet via Inc.

Arguments that the AI boom is a bit over-hyped. “The vast majority of the [AI] funding–about 70 percent–has gone to seed and angel rounds, which means the industry is still in its infancy.”

Royal Bank of Scotland Replaces Face-To-Face Financial Advice with “Robo-Advisers” & New Report Predicts Over 100,000 Legal Jobs Will Be Lost To Automation via Futurism

Whereas the beginning of automation killed blue collar jobs, we’re now seeing nascent AI take over white collar careers.

The Largest Coal Plant in North America is Being Replaced by a Solar Farm via Futurism

Great news for planet earth brought to you by Ontario. In 2014 Ontario completely phased out coal and as a result, they’ve reduced smog days from 109 between 2005-07, to zero in 2015.

MIT researchers plan “death of traffic light” with smart intersections via dezeen

As autonomous cars take over, researchers at MIT believe that traffic lights will become obsolete. They’ve developed a conceptual traffic system that would enable driverless vehicles to drive through intersections without colliding, eliminating lights and cutting pollution.

South Korea trumpets $860-million AI fund after AlphaGo ‘shock’ via nature

“The commitment includes an already-budgeted 138.8 billion won for 2016; if the rest is spread evenly over the following four years, it represents a 55% increase in annual funding for AI.”

The last job on Earth: imagining a fully automated world via Guardian Animations

Step into a beautifully animated futurescape that explores our automated future and some of the frustrations that go with it.

This Guy Fixed His Teeth for Cheap With Homemade, 3-D–Printed Retainers via Slate

16 weeks with his self-designed, 3D printer retainers and this guy straightened his own teeth. This is definitely not the last time we’ll see 3D printing employed for body modification.

Updates & Offers

futrdayextend

We’re in the last days of the Future Day Sale. Here’s what we’ve got up for grabs until March 31st:

Visit our store and be sure to use coupon code FutrDay for 65% off The Future of Business or 20Futr for 20% off all other books.

Rohit on the Road

FutureScapes March 15: What Works


Welcome to the latest edition of FutureScapes. As of today, we’re happy to announce that Fast Future Publishing is offering Sohail Inayatullah’s latest book What Works: Case Studies in the Practice of Foresight as the newest addition to our store. For more on the book and Sohail, see below.

And with our Future Day discount, pick up a copy of What Works for less than $8 with coupon code 20Futr until March 31st.

Also in this issue:

As always, please feel free to share this newsletter with friends and colleagues, and send us an email if you’d like – your feedback is always appreciated.


What Works: Case Studies in the Practice of Foresight by Sohail Inayatullah

Sohail Inayatullah, the UNESCO Chair in Futures Studies & a professor at Tamkang University, is a world-renowned futurist with over 30 years experience whose specialties include teaching futures, helping individuals and organizations develop their alternative and preferred futures, theorizing how the future is constructed, and developing futures methodologies.

His latest book, What Works: Case Studies in the Practice of Foresight (August 2015) furthers the practice of foresight in organizations, institutions, cities and nations. Divided into three parts, What Works moves from theorizing the future to case studies of foresight in action and concludes with innovative futures methods.

The first part introduces futures studies — its principles, theories and methods. The second and main part of the book presents case studies.

Chapters include:

  • Deep inclusion in a digital era: democratic governance Asia 2030
  • Leap-frogging the West: e-health futures in Bangladesh
  • From the lecturer to the murabbi: the alternative futures of higher education in Malaysia
  • Leveraging development: the alternative scenarios for BRAC University
  • Transforming agriculture: from salinity research to greening the desert
  • Cities as agents of change: emerging issues and case studies
  • Going beyond the thin blue line: the futures of international policing
  • From the collection to co-creation: the futures of libraries and librarians
  • From crops to care: the changing nature of health care in rural Australia

The third and final section focuses on methodological innovation. These chapters explore the implications of forecasting the long-term future, the use of the Sarkar game in foresight workshops, and how causal layered analysis has been used to transform personal and institutional stories. The conclusion evaluates the use of futures thinking for strategy development.

“What Works covers over thirty years of Inayatullah’s research in futures studies and offers one of the most comprehensive works on methods and case studies and, most importantly, implications and applications available today. Inayatullah presses the reader to grapple with the global challenges we all face and urges each of us to take more responsibility for today, and for future generations. It is a must-read for any person who is serious about our futures.”

Dr. Robert Burke, Associate, Melbourne Business School, University of Melbourne

Visit our store to pick up a copy today. Be sure to use coupon code 20Futr to receive 20% off of What Works before March 31st.

Futures Finds in Media

Episode 253 – Fastening The Future via Robot Overlordz

intrenmotiThe Future of Business contributing author Alexandra Whittington was recently interviewed by our friends over at Robot Overlordz. She discussed the future of mobile, internet, society, and her chapters in The Future of Business.

Mobile 2030: Scenarios for the Role of Mobile Technology in Society via The Future of Business Podcast

intrenmotiSpeaking of Alex, she also contributed a reading of her and Amir Bar’s chapter “Mobile 2030”, in which they present four scenarios exploring how mobile technology could permeate every day aspects of our social and professional lives by 2030.

John Oliver explains why iPhone encryption debate is no joking matter via ars technica

intrenmotiIn his typical satirical style, John Oliver highlights the frankly terrifying implications of the iPhone encryption debate on personal and national security.

Watch Monkeys Drive Wheelchairs with Just Their Thoughts via Singularity Hub

intrenmotiBesides being a simply fascinating video, the implications for these computer-brain interfaces for the disabled are potentially life-changing.

Blockchain-Enabled Smart Contracts: Applications and Challenges via Let’s Talk Payments

A good, simple explanation of smart contracts and their application in a myriad of legal situations. Also check out Exploring the Business of the Blockchain podcast episode by Rohit Talwar & Alexandra Whittington for an in-depth look at the tech behind smart contracts.

Retirement Singularity; The End of Retirement as We Know It via Retirement Singularity

intrenmotiContributing author to The Future of Business Michael Nuschke address the current unknowns, trends, questions, and our own thinking on the future of retirement in this free 40-page report.

Ontario Set to Trial Universal Basic Income via Futurism

intrenmoti“…the pilot program is set to study whether basic income will offer a more efficient way to provide income support and strengthen attachment to the labor force—which will hopefully translate towards savings in health care and housing.”

Updates & Offers

futrdayextend

Our Future Day Sale continues! Get a copy of The Future of Business for 65% off (coupon code FutrDay), and take 20% off all other books in our store (coupon code 20Futr), including our newest addition What Works. And thank you for your support!

Rohit on the Road

FutureScapes March 9: Foray into the Future

Welcome to the latest edition of FutureScapes. Today we take a look at some of the global drivers of change that may have a hand in shaping the future over the next decade and beyond. Specifically, we focus on economic, policy and governance drivers, and shifts in economic systems.

In this issue:

As always, please feel free to share this newsletter with friends and colleagues, and send us an email if you’d like – feedback is always welcome.


Writings on the Future: Drivers of Change – Section One

By April Koury, Iva Lazarova and Rohit Talwar from The Future of Business
You can also listen to this chapter on The Future of Business Podcast on iTunes, our RSS feed, or our YouTube Channel.

Policy and Governance

Rate of Democratic Transition – As one regime after another toppled in the wake of the Arab Spring, expectation rose that more nations would move to a democratic form of government either through conflict or peaceful means. Now, however, the resulting difficulties of adopting a democratic model have highlighted the capacity building challenges and the hurdles inherent in transforming governmental and social structures in such a short time frame.

Reframing of Global Governance Institutions – The global shifts of wealth, power, and influence toward the emerging economic giants is driving demand for the restructuring of global institutions like the United Nation, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund. Power will continue to flow to the populous and increasingly economically strong nations – led in particular by China, India and Brazil. New alliances and groupings will form such as the Shanghai Co-operation Organization and ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) and they will seek to increase trade and political ties, bypassing the West in many cases.

Democracy 2.0 – The rise in digital technology has given many citizens easier access to governments – who in turn have greater access to the thoughts, opinions, needs, and wants of all citizens in a flexible, adaptable, and real time manner. Individual citizens can increasingly be consulted on any matter and are able to bring their issues to government attention.

Country Mergers – Many governments will struggle to finance everything they are expected to by their citizens, from policing and social welfare, to education, climate change protection, and economic development. The map of the globe will change, driven by economic and environmental forces. Many smaller and poorer countries may find it impossible to cope on their own with the accelerating pace of change and the cost of keeping up to speed with a globally connected planet. By 2025, we could see 20-25 country mergers, with “at risk” nations seeking to come together to create the critical economic strength and attract the investment required to serve their populations and compete in the hyperconnected era.

Country Fissions – New countries could also emerge. Since 1945, the number of countries worldwide has grown from 60 to 196 today. New states developed with decolonization in the 1960s and 1970s, and even more gained sovereignty with the break-up of the USSR. Now, Catalonia, Brittany, Scotland, the Western Sahara, sections of Myanmar, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and even Saudi Arabia are among the many regions today that could break apart and form new nations in the next two decades. Alongside country mergers, we may also face a future of an increasing number of smaller, independent nations.

Neo-Cold War – Tension could increase between Russia and Europe / the U.S., particularly if Russia’s economic situation declines further and it continues to seek to annex former parts of the Soviet Union. A new cold war between China and the U.S. / Europe could arise if China is seen to become too strong economically and to be pursuing a global political stance that goes against the western nations’ wishes. Additionally, the proliferation of nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons could introduce new state players into this situation.

Rise of Brutal Fundamentalism – A growing number of fundamentalist groups may emerge from a variety of religions and worldviews as their leaders seek to pursue religious, political, social, and economic ambitions through the bullet rather than the pulpit or ballot box. Governments and global institutions will struggle to respond effectively because of the lack of desire to engage in ground conflict and the increasingly outdated notion of outright victory in such conflicts.

Networking and Automation of the World’s Legal System – While world law may not exist in the foreseeable future, the world’s legal systems are expected to become increasingly networked. This could lead to ever closer alignment of legal frameworks and the increasing automation of the law as it becomes embedded in our environment – for example vehicles that automatically fine us if we exceed the speed limit.

Political Experimentation – Worldwide, there is a growing view that current governance models simply are not appropriate for a world in transition in the digital age. Democracy, single party states, dictatorships, and monarchic rule are being scrutinized as governments experiment to see which new models can best serve national goals. In increasing instances where the government has been viewed as utterly ineffective, citizens have joined together to solve problems that were traditionally handled by the government.

Empowered Populations – New models of government coupled with technology advances are empowering populations to share knowledge, be aware of their environment, and make informed and responsible decisions. One challenge to leveraging all of this data and information is the ever growing shortage of data scientists. However, these empowered communities are still able to challenge the roles of the decision makers currently running politics, health, education, and welfare systems.

Civic Hacktivism – Civic hacktivism is the combination of civic activism and the digital world. Civic hacktivists use their coding and computer programming know-how to replace slow, outdated government bureaucracy with fast, usually internet-based solutions. By networking citizens, governments, and technologists together, local problems can be discussed, ideas brainstormed, and apps developed which solve the initial problems. By streamlining government bureaucracy, citizens are better able to understand and participate in their local governments, and governments are made more transparent and accountable to their constituents.

Rise in E-Government – Globally, countries are pushing for more e-government projects in order to cut costs and improve internal communication, as well as to gain a better understanding of – and provide services to – their citizens. These initiatives are already changing the way businesses and citizens interact with, and access, government services.

Privatization of Public Services – Worldwide, governments are increasingly turning to the private sector to deliver public goods and services. Often commercial providers are more efficient, cheaper, and have a quicker response time than government-run public services. However, when an increasing number of public services are delivered by the private sector, questions around governance, transparency and risk emerge.

Economics

Economic Growth – Despite economic uncertainty and systemic fragility, economic growth (global GDP) is expected to continue growing into the next decades. According to projections, the global economy is expected to grow at an average rate of over three percent per year from 2011 to 2050, doubling in size by 2030, and again by 2050.

Public Debt – Public debt is the total amount owed by a central government to its creditors. The global financial crisis and the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis have both left developed economies with high levels of indebtedness. Total debt for OECD has risen from 79.9 percent of total OECD GDP in 2008 to 111.2 percent in 2014 according to OECD figures.

Economic Power Shifts – Emerging economies are experiencing growth, allowing them to exert more influence over the global economy. This shift in power may lead to the rise of a new international system. Leading the way for the last decade were the growing economic juggernauts of Brazil, Russia, India, China and – to a lesser extent – South Africa. Potentially following in their wake are the so-called “Next 11” countries – Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, Turkey, and Vietnam. These are identified as having the potential to become some of the world’s largest economies in this century.

Global Flows – As the world becomes more interconnected, the flow of goods, services, people, and finance across borders continues to grow. These global flows represent over 36 percent of global GDP and are creating new degrees of interconnectedness between countries. The degree of connectedness of a nation is seen as an indication of its current and potential prosperity. It is estimated that countries with a larger number of connections in the network of global flows increase their GDP growth by up to 40 percent more than less connected countries.

Feminomics – In both developed and emerging markets, by 2020 roughly one billion women who had been living at a subsistence level will enter the global economy for the first time – as middle class consumers, producers, entrepreneurs, and employees. They will have roughly as much economic influence as the populations of India or China. Governments will need to address any gender-based discrimination that may arise. Businesses will need to reassess not only what goods and services to provide these new consumers, but also how to meet the needs of these new employees.

New Trading Zones – Worldwide, governments are entering into new trade agreements, which in turn will stimulate the development of new trading hubs, creating new growth markets and increasing trade volumes by 2020.

Global Inequality – Over the past 20 years, global inequality has increased dramatically, a trend expected to continue into the future. In 2014, Oxfam reported that 85 of the world’s wealthiest individuals had a combined wealth equal to that of the bottom 50 percent of the world’s population, or about 3.5 billion people. It is projected that by 2016, the wealthiest one percent will own more than half of all global wealth. Research indicates that greater income inequality within countries correlates with higher unemployment and crime rates, and lower than average health and social mobility.

Continued Globalization – As the world shrinks through transport improvements and ever faster communications technology, so the flows of goods, services, people, and capital moving between nations and across continents continues to increase. While globalization tends to lead to market liberalization and expand trade in most countries, concerns arise over the additional levels of complexity it adds to business decision making and the potential for cultural dilution.

Technological Long-Term Unemployment – By 2025, it is estimated that up to 50 percent of current jobs at every level will be replaced by software, robots, or smart machines. As more jobs are automated, fewer are being created by the emerging sectors; those that are created require higher skills and fewer people. This could result in long-term unemployment, placing massive pressure on governments, businesses, and society to rethink business policies. It will also force a re-evaluation of approaches to education, lifelong learning, job creation, and job placement assistance. Long-term unemployment would strain government social security budgets, lead to a rise in poverty, and drive the expansion of the shadow economy as people seek to work outside of the tax system.

Economic Systems

Systemic Fragility – The global financial crisis of 2008 illustrated just how fragile and interconnected today’s global operating environment is. Every aspect of finance, government, and commerce was affected by this systemic fragility. This growing sense of risk is driven by continued economic volatility, continuing rich-poor divides, the complexities of financial markets, declining government spending, the disruptive impact of crowd financing, and cybercurrencies, increasing polarities between political groups, and the demand for truly sustainable infrastructure investment and resource allocation.

Systemic Antifragility – Risk analyst Nassim Taleb introduced the concept of antifragility to systems thinking, with the idea that a system improves as it is exposed to stress. While a rigid system may seem more stable, in the long run it is unable to cope with unexpected shocks. Conversely, an antifragile system contains built in redundancies that help it thrive and adapt to changing forces and pressures. Governments and businesses are exploring antifragility concepts to develop better policies and regulations concerning financial systems in particular.

Networked Economy – The networked economy is the emerging economic environment that is driven by the massive, multilayered, exponentially-growing, real-time connections between people, devices, and businesses. It is the convergence of social networks, business networks, and the network of devices connected to the Internet of Things. SAP estimates that the networked economy will be valued at $90 trillion over the next 10 to 15 years. To adapt to the new economy, businesses will need to become mobile, social, and “always connected” to both internal and external business and social networks. Because the networked economy hinges on information, companies will need to address issues concerning the ownership, privacy, and security of that information.

Global Derivatives Market – The global derivatives market is an integral part of the international finance system and global economy. Worldwide, businesses use derivatives to hedge risks and reduce uncertainty about future prices. Defaults on sub-prime mortgages, a type of financial derivative instrument, partially triggered the last global financial crisis. Most financial derivatives are not traded on any exchange and so total exposure is difficult to determine. Estimates vary greatly – and some suggest the face value of all derivatives outstanding is over three quadrillion (3,000 trillion) dollars, or more than 40 times the entire world’s annual GDP.

Full Reserve Banking – Full reserve banking only allows banks to lend out the assets they actually hold. This is the alternative to the dominant fractional reserve banking system, which many believe has created unmanageable instabilities in the global economy that will drive future economic collapses. Full reserve banking requires that banks keep the full amount of depositors’ funds at all times, and that they may only lend out the actual assets they possess. Some economists argue that full reserve banking is more robust and less liable to create the types of credit bubbles, systemic risk, or “too big to fail” scenarios that occur under fractional reserve banking.

Technological Hegemony – Countries with ownership of core technologies typically enjoy higher levels of added value as a result. Hence a country’s science and technology development level could decide its status in the international arena.

Socio-Economic Unrest – With debt issues unresolved and a hyper-volatile global economy, the potential for further downturns is very real. The costs of recovery could see further redundancies and austerity measures similar to those experienced in Greece. Populations may not be willing to put up with this while others continue to make disproportionate gains in wealth, further widening the gap between rich and poor.

Governing the Shadow Economy – The shadow economy exists alongside a country’s official economy, and consists of illicit economic activities like undeclared work and black market transactions that avoid government regulation, oversight, and taxation. Current estimates place the annual market value of the global shadow economy at $1,829 billion. Many countries who once tried to control the shadow economy are now moving toward a model of acceptance, acknowledging that in some instances it can deliver many of the services governments are failing to provide, such as policing, education, and healthcare.

Futures Finds in Media

Steve Wells in the media

Our own Steve Wells, Head of Operations and Author Liaison, has been making the rounds and discussing the future of business.

  • BBC WM 95.6 – an interview about the driverless convoys, the implications for truckers, and techonological unemployment.
  • BBC Radio 5 – again Steve touches on driverless lorries & smart automation taking over jobs, including blue collar professions.
  • Robot Overlordz episode 249: Future Bizness – Steve sat down with the guys from Robot Overlordz to discuss The Future of Business. Also check out episode 250 where they talk more about how much they like the book.

Rats vs. computers vs. rat cyborgs in maze navigation via Kurzweil News

cyborgratThe intelligent rat ‘cyborgs’ beat both the computers and the rats. The conclusion: “…optimal intelligence may reside in the integration of animals and computers.”

“People will fall for it like a drug”—Game devs on the future of VR via ars technica

VRWill VR ever live up to its hype, or is it simply too much for the average consumer? Game developers throw in their two cents.

We’re Entering a Golden Age of Space Tourism Propaganda via GIZMODO

retropostersIn case you’ve missed them, SpaceX and NASA have both put out gorgeous, retro-inspired travel posters. With propaganda this beautiful, who wouldn’t want to go?

We may all happily follow our robot overlords to disaster via ars technica

eergency robotHow much do we trust robots? In this study, participants willing followed a labeled rescue robot they knew was malfunctioning. Perhaps it’s not how much we trust robots, but how much we believe in labels…

Will Electric Vehicles be 35% of New Car Sales Globally in 2040? via WFS

EV“…electric vehicles (EVs) will achieve 41 million unit sales by 2040 and 35% of new light duty vehicles. That’s an increase of 9,000% over current unit sales which reached 462,000 in 2015.” A bit of a look into the possible scenarios that could play out based on the recent report released by Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

YouTube as Motivator – what people can do with their basic incomes via IEET

intrenmotiBasic income – without the incentive of financial gain, will anything get done? On the contrary: “…YouTube to me is a window into a post-basic income world full of intrinsic motivation, where video after video is made for the love of making and sharing videos with those who enjoy watching them.”

Updates & Offers

futrdayextend
Because we’ve had such great success with our Future Day Sale, we’ve decided to extend the offer until the end of March. Check out our website to pick up a copy of The Future of Business for 65% off (coupon code FutrDay), and take 20% off all other books in our store (coupon code 20Futr). And thank you for your support!

Give the Gift of the Future

Help your team, colleagues, friends and family prepare for the year ahead by sharing powerful insights on the big ideas that could shape all our futures.

As we approach the holiday season, we’d like to make a very special offer to you and your teams. We are offering a 25% discount on the print, PDF and e-reader versions of both The Future of Business and 2015-16 State of the Future.

The Future of Business draws on the ideas of 62 future thinkers from around the world to explore the economic, political, social and technological forces, developments and ideas shaping the future. It examines how these potentially disruptive advances could transform existing industries, create new trillion-dollar sectors and reinvent business over the next decade. The book also provides a powerful set of tools and approaches to help embed future thinking and navigate the organisation through a fast changing landscape.

“The beauty of The Future of Business can be found at three levels: the self-contained quality of each chapter, the disruptive model used to publish it and its potential use as temporary gym equipment [for the body and brain].” Karl Chapman – CEO – Riverview Law

2015-16 State of the Future – This is the eighteenth and most comprehensive edition of the study which is compiled with input from across the globe and via The Millennium Project’s 56 country nodes. The 2015-16 State of the Future highlights 15 global challenges and is a compelling overview of humanity’s present situation, issues, opportunities, and potentials for the future. It highlights actions and policies that could improve humanity’s outlook – in clear, precise, and readable text with unparalleled breadth and depth. “It is time for intolerance of irrelevant speeches and non-actions by leaders. The stakes are too high to tolerate business as usual”, warns the Executive Summary of the report.

The offer runs from now until December 31st. To ensure delivery by December 24th, please place your order by December 16th.

Additional discounts of up to 30% are available on orders for two or more books. If you’d like to order more than 20 copies of The Future of Business please email so we can provide you with a quote for the shipping costs.

Please use discount code gift4futr at checkout.


Will AI Eat the World? An Interview with Calum Chace

Calum Chace is a highly acclaimed author, international authority on artificial intelligence (AI), and an experienced business executive. Artificial intelligence is already here, and in this short interview, Calum touches on the potential implications and threats humanity may face as AI evolves, and how we, as humans, should pay attention to trends and developments in AI to make sure that we’re shaping a positive future for humanity.


What is the focus of your chapter in The Future of Business?

My chapter, “Will AI Eat the World?” starts by pointing out that artificial intelligence is already ubiquitous. It is improving at an exponential rate, and it is changing the world. It has brought great benefits, and it promises to bring even more in the future. But it also brings perils. In the short and medium term there is the prospect of technological unemployment. In the longer term the arrival of artificial general intelligence (machines with cognition at human level or above in all areas – and volition) is one of the few genuinely existential threats facing mankind.

We don’t yet know how AI will evolve, and how it will impact us. My claim is that the future is not predestined, and we can determine whether we obtain the astonishing benefits or suffer the appalling downsides. Making predictions is difficult, especially about the future, but we really have no choice. We need to pay close attention to the trends, understand where they are taking us, and harness our talent and our ingenuity to influence the outcome.

Tell us a little about yourself and what you do?

I have been a journalist, a marketer, a strategy consultant and an entrepreneurial CEO. Now I am principally a writer, mostly about artificial intelligence. This year I published a novel, Pandora’s Brain about the first conscious machine, and Surviving AI, a non-fiction review. I also chair growing companies and coach entrepreneurs.

What future-oriented topics or issues are you focusing on currently?

I’m working on The Economic Singularity, a book about the possibility of technological unemployment and the impact that will have. I also need to find the time to work on the draft of a sequel to Pandora’s Brain, provisionally titled Pandora’s Oracle.

If you could bring about one change in the world to ensure a positive future – what would it be?

I would like to see a consensus emerging that the existing and potential benefits of artificial intelligences are huge, but that we can only enjoy them if we take the challenges seriously, and that we need to start addressing those challenges today.

Strategic Plan Need a Pick-Me-Up? – Interview with Maree Conway

Maree Conway is an Australian-based foresight and strategy consultant, the founder of Thinking Futures, and author of the chapter “Foresight Infused Strategy – Using Foresight to Create Generative Thinking” in The Future of Business.

Below she discusses her chapter, her work, and what change she would make to ensure a better future for us all.

What is the focus of your chapter in The Future of Business?

My chapter focuses on a framework to use to integrate foresight approaches into existing strategy development processes. It’s about how to reinvigorate conventional strategic planning by including a systematic approach to using the future today. The framework is the Generic Foresight Process Framework which allows people to understand change shaping their organisation’s future, test individual and organisational assumptions underpinning beliefs about how an organisation’s future will evolve, exploring alternative possible futures to identify a preferred future and finally, using insights gained during this process to inform decision making and action today.

Tell us a little about yourself and what you do?

I help organisations reframe conventional strategic planning approaches with foresight thinking and methods with a renewed focus on the power of their people.

What future-oriented topics or issues are you focusing on currently?

I am researching the future university for my PhD which is both exciting and depressing because the university’s history is acting as a weight on its ability to move forward. In my business, I am looking at how foresight methods can be used in ways to help people develop their individual foresight capacities, and how best to integrate and connect those methods in a strategy development process.

If you could bring about one change in the world to ensure a positive future – what would it be?

To move beyond our current data/fact/evidence based decision making so that we, collectively, can begin to explore the possibility for our world rather than focusing on past performance and today’s short-term demands on our time and energy. I’m working to do this in organisations, and other groups are working to do the same thing in different domains. If we can escape the busyness of today to create a long term context, we will be able to accentuate the positive and mitigate the negative – proactively not today’s default of reaction.

Space-Based Solar Power – What’s Holding Us Back? An Interview with Devin Daniels

Devin Daniels is a scholar, physicist, futurist, and entrepreneur. In this small interview, he discusses his contribution to The Future of Business, his interests, and his future hopes for humanity.

What is the focus of your chapter in The Future of Business?

For The Future of Business, I wrote the chapter “Space-Based Solar Power and Wireless Power Transmission”. The focus of this chapter is to first demonstrate why space-based solar power (SBSP) is a desirable technology, establish its feasibility, and elaborate on the obstacles. The primary obstacle to SBSP is wireless power transmission (WPT). WPT is necessary to properly utilize SBSP, as any other solution would require a physical orbital tether, which is currently outside of feasible technology until a latch key breakthrough in materials science would allow such a tether to be built. WPT would allow the near-limitless power able to be generated through SBSP to be transmitted back down to the planet for usage anywhere across the globe. WPT also has numerous other uses and applications, which interestingly enough would require a technology such as SBSP to become more commonplace. Thus, these two technologies are inherently tied together in a feedback loop.

Tell us a little about yourself and what you do?

I am a university student studying theoretical physics. I am currently assisting a Portland State University emeritus professor in studying quark confinement. Outside of this, I run a small futurism website, Seize My Future, which is designed to help bridge the gap between cutting edge science, futurism, and public communication.

What future-oriented topics or issues are you focusing on currently?

I am primarily oriented on space-based futures, though I do have interests in transhumanism and longevity research. I am currently in the process of writing a book, Our Future Among the Stars (a working title), which is designed to first inform the interested public about the possible future of space exploration over the next fifty years, and to then motivate them to become more involved in pushing for expanded human involvement in space. I am particularly interested in researching and pushing for space-based technologies that have clear benefits for those still on Earth, as I believe the key to motivating the public to demand more human involvement in space is for them to see just how much it can benefit their own lives, even if they never leave the atmosphere – or have any interest in science whatsoever.

If you could bring about one change in the world to ensure a positive future – what would it be?

The one change that I would like to bring about is ensuring that humans become a truly interplanetary species. This is actually one of my primary life goals, and one I seek to bring into my work as a futurist. I believe that becoming an interplanetary species is the ultimate insurance policy, and is the epitome of the human pioneer spirit. Once we become an interplanetary species, I believe that not only will we have insurance against a catastrophic global disaster, but that we will start to become closer as a species.

Blockchain, the Future of the Internet, Mobile 2030: She Covers It All – Interviewing Alexandra Whittington

Alexandra Whittington coauthored three chapters in The Future of Business: “The Future of the Internet”, “Mobile 2030: Scenarios for the Role of Mobile Technology in Society”, and “The Decentralization of Everything? Exploring the Business of the Blockchain”. In addition to her prolific writing, she’s also managed to record all of these chapters for The Future of Business Podcast (found on Stitcher Radio, and YouTube, and in iTunes under The Future of Business Podcast).

In this short interview, Alex tells us a little about herself, her chapters, and how she would change the world if she could.

What is the focus of your chapter in The Future of Business?

I coauthored three chapters about new and evolving technologies that are now reshaping society:  the Internet, Blockchain and Mobile. The internet chapter looks at the way the internet has already changed society, as the Pew Foundation said, becoming more and more “like electricity” to the extent that it’s everywhere and gradually being taken for granted. We discuss how as the IOT expands this will be even more important to our day-to-day lives as everyday things become smart and connected.  The Blockchain chapter is more informational, geared toward educating the audience about this new game-changing technology, and who the players are/where their stakes are being placed. Finally, the Mobile chapter explores the human relationship with mobile devices as being somewhere on the continuum of “Frenemy” or a “Better Half” into the next fifteen years.

Tell us a little about yourself and what you do?

I’m a futurist! I work at the University of Houston as an undergraduate adjunct instructor and I also do foresight research for Fast Future.

What future-oriented topics or issues are you focusing on currently?

I work on a lot of topics… Most recently my projects have been on the future of higher education, transportation and cities.

If you could bring about one change in the world to ensure a positive future – what would it be?

If I could bring about one change it would be to transform our world so that empathy and compassion were considered more important than profits or power. We should shift away from “competing” in the global economy to “cooperating”. As long as we have the competitive mindset, pressing matters of economic inequality, climate change, education and equal rights are impossible to solve. We can end social suffering if we chose to prioritize cooperation over competition.

Let’s talk about why we need Strategic Foresight with Dr. Peter Bishop

Dr. Peter Bishop originally taught for and then took over as the chair for the Futures Studies (now Foresight) Graduate program at the University of Houston. I’d hazard a guess and say that more US futurists (including this one) have passed through his classrooms and certificate programs than any other professor out there today. His dedication to teaching futures led him to found Teach the Future, an NGO with the goal of establishing futures thinking as a natural component of secondary, post-secondary and professional education.

In this short interview, Dr. Bishop discusses his chapter in The Future of Business, and explains the importance of teaching foresight – after all, the future is where we’re all headed.

What is the focus of your chapter in The Future of Business

The world is changing faster and becoming more complex at increasing rates. As a result, the ways we used to deal with the future are no longer adequate. In the old days, most people could be certain that a change was taking place before responding to that change. Today, if you wait you’re late.  Strategic Foresight and Futures Studies is the emerging discipline that takes these changes into account. It handles the uncertainty inherent in anticipating change to come rather than waiting for it to occur by describing the future, not as a prediction, but as a set of plausible scenarios. The field is growing with now some dozen academic programs around the world, about the same number of certificate programs and an untold number of keynote speeches and corporate seminars devoted to the topic. My chapter, “Critical Foresight Skills” in The Future of Business, describes the growth of these training opportunities and documents where they are occurring.

Tell us a little about yourself and what you do? 

I am a retired Associate Professor of Foresight at the University of Houston where I managed the Master of Science program in Foresight there. Since then I founded and am running an NGO whose mission is to introduce futures thinking to classes and schools around the world.

What future-oriented topics or issues are you focusing on currently?

The future of education is a topic of interest to business people and citizens alike throughout the world. As the world is changing so must the education that young people receive to be successful and happy in that world. Unfortunately, education has not changed much to meet this challenge. As opposed to the more innovative institutions in society, like business, the military or professional sports, educators have considered themselves the keepers and the transmitters of knowledge, tradition and culture, an inherently backward-looking mission. Not that the past is unimportant. Far from it. But the future is also important, and education has paid scant attention to that part of the narrative that makes up the human story. Most people think of the time and change as ending in the present, something called The End of History Illusion. It’s like reading a novel and stopping in the middle. No, the story of human civilization will go on. Not that we can tell definitely what that story will be in the future, but we can get some idea of what it might be. And more importantly, education should equip students with the ability to anticipate and influence the changes to come, not just leave that to their own devices.

If you could bring about one change in the world to ensure a positive future – what would it be?

Academic disciplines have a beginning, just like any other institution in society. The ancient Greeks were particularly inventive in establishing many of the disciplines we take for granted today – history, geometry, and a form of physics. We may be in a similar position today with the study of the future. Before the Enlightenment, religion was in charge of our knowledge of the future supplemented by a healthy dose of superstition. The modern world improved on that approach by introducing the concepts of mathematical extrapolation and prediction. That approach served us well when the world was more orderly, but simple extrapolation does not do justice to a complex and increasingly novel future. Nevertheless, we are still equipping our students to deal with the future in this century with the tools from the last few centuries. My recommended change, therefore, is that every student in the world takes at least one required course on foresight and futures studies in order to handle change in the world that they will live in rather than the world that their parents and teachers did.

“Fire Ice” – Our Future Energy Source? An Interview with Jim Lee

Jim Lee, an authority on emerging technologies and social trends, claims that methane hydrates, also know as fire ice, will be the next big energy source after fracking. But, as any good futurist will tell you, there’s always a few trade offs to consider.

Check out his chapter in The Future of Business for more.

Below, Jim talks about his chapter, the other futures topics he’s currently researching, and how replacing apocalyptical visions of the future with utopian ones could lead to our preferred futures.

What is the focus of your chapter in The Future of Business?

Here is an interesting question.  What are the alternatives to alternative energy?  While there has been much focus on solar, wind, and other renewable sources, mainstream energy companies have a few ideas of their own. Given that they have a significant financial interest in fossil fuels, it is useful to consider the conventional industry perspective when we think about the future of energy.

Certainly, fracking (drilling and injecting high-pressure fluids to release natural gas from shale formations) is already controversial. On one hand, it provides a cleaner-burning fuels than, say, coal or petroleum. On the other, fracking opens up a whole new set of challenges when it comes to water use and the allocation of natural resources.

But even more controversial is what comes next, which may be the mining of deep-water methane hydrates. This could provide a significantly greater source of energy than all of the world’s existing shale formations, but also poses significant environment risks. So, my chapter is a preview to what will be a very public conversation by the 2030’s.

Tell us a little about yourself and what you do?

I apply foresight to the process of investing. In addition to being academically-trained as a futurist, I also have a boutique investment advisory firm where I identify patterns and emerging trends for clients.

What future-oriented topics or issues are you focusing on currently?

While individual life expectancy is rising, organizational life expectancy is continually getting shorter. This implies that the old career models of stable employment and retirement are no longer applicable. Despite all of the change and uncertainty, there is some good news here. We all get a “do over” and can work through a series of very interesting careers over the course of our lifetime.

We’ve seen three career models that we’ve seen over the last 50 years. Each generation seems to be taking a slightly different approach.

Ladder (Silent Generation): Start at the bottom, work your way to the top of a single organization.

Lattice (Baby Boomers): This works the same as a career ladder, but includes lateral movements to other organizations.

Patchwork Quilt (Millennials): Stitch together multiple simultaneous work opportunities in a way that is flexible and covers your needs.

It is worth mentioning that the GenXers are hitting a “concrete-ceiling” in their career trajectories, as many Boomers are working much longer than expected. The result is that many GenXers are leaving the corporate world to build their own companies. So, in this regard, the Boomers are unintentionally creating a much more entrepreneurial culture within the U.S.

If you could bring about one change in the world to ensure a positive future – what would it be?

In the field of foresight, we explore three types of futures: the possible, the probable, and the preferred. The goal here is to the make our preferred future the most probable one, too.

So, I’d like to replace apocalyptic narratives with utopian visions. This is one thing that is really exciting about start-up culture right now. It is OK to fail (and fail often) if you can create a better outcome in the end. Utopias aren’t always perfect, but always engaging and evolving.

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