The Briefing.Today is an independent, niche, non-for-profit podcast aiming to create awareness on innovative thinking and doing. The podcast sits at the intersection of Futures, Innovation and Design. At The Briefing.Today, we want to contribute to knowledge and practice by inviting maverick innovators and change-makers that have an entrepreneurial spirits, and want to push the boundaries of innovative thinking. The Briefing.Today speaks to people's creativity by embracing the wonder of change, and curiosity by adventuring in unchartered territories to eventually drive positive innovation.
Exploring the use of foresight for unpacking issues on justice, injustice, and inequality. Today I am joined by Matt Finch, Associate Fellow at the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford and strategy consultant at Mechanical dolphin.
The basis of competition is changing. Rivalry is shifting from well-defined industries to broader ecosystems that deliver expansive value propositions. Industry boundaries are collapsing everywhere we look, emergence is around the corner, and this trend is just accelerating. Today I am delighted to talk to Ron Adner, on ecosystem strategy and the value underpinning the design of such. Ron is professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship at the Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth.
This episode features Peter Scoblic discussing long-term anticipatory thinking and strategic foresight. The conversation explores how to navigate uncertainty, the importance of scenario planning, and building a common language for future thinking within organizations. Scoblic highlights the value of embedding foresight in education and cultivating imagination to shape better futures.
Time goes by and elements of the past are carried over into the future becoming heritage. Decisions are made on what to carry and what to leave behind, maybe some will be forgotten. How do we make such a decision on what to carry across? What do we as humans look for in making a heritage decision? Today we will talk about the concept of heritage mindset with Richard Sandford, Professor at UCL in Heritage Evidence, Foresight and Policy. Richard has a diverse array of experience: coding, education...
How do we apply futures studies? Why do we need to look into different futures? What is the impact in the present? Today I am thrilled to be joined by Nicklas Larsen, Senior Advisor at the Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies, one of the oldest think tanks studying the future, in the world.
Biases are part of our day-to-day thinking and decision making. There are also futures fallacies which sways us from envisioning, using Dorr’s terms, “realistic” futures in an effective and efficient manner. These are common errors we fall trap while reasoning about futures. Today I am joined by Ivana Milojević, director at Metafuture and Metafuture School, who has extensive experience researching and experimenting on the subject matter.
Episodic foresight is identified as the primary neural mechanism that enables humans to construct images of the futures, providing explanatory power to further define and understand the processes that are invoked in futures studies and foresight activities. These enlightening words are from Maree Conway who joins us to chat about How humans can imagine and construct images of the future, and what happens in our brain. Maree has extensive expertise on foresight in practice, and she is founder of ...
Technology and innovation are constantly shaping our lives, often for the better. Yet, today’s security landscape is volatile, subject to unexpected shock. From terrorism to cybercrime, unparalleled criminal activities can quickly emerge on the radar. I am pleased to be joined by Director of INTERPOL Innovation Centre, Anita Hazenberg to explore police futures. Anita has extensive experience in policing and brought the discipline of foresight into law enforcement
Mission-oriented innovation and market-shaping policies have recently been adopted by policymakers around the world in international bodies like the EU and UN, national governments, and institutions. Missions can be designed and implemented as a policy tool. Using missions to drive national strategy or innovation means focusing less on sectors, but more on problems that matter to all. The mission must set clear objectives that can only be achieved by a portfolio of projects and supportive policy...
“Chaos and catastrophe by their very definition do not repeat but it is important to realise that there are different types and levels of uncertainty that we need to be aware of. It is not always about being rational or having a process in place: being aware of our limits in what we are able to see and comprehend as possibilities is as important as planning. Indeed, in some contexts, planning may make us more vulnerable than improvising, as it exposes us to inattentional bias” writes Dave Snowde...
People. Interactions. Groups. Relationships. Communities. Participation. Togetherness. Systems. With System we generally defined a group of entities that operates within the same boundaries, which informs/defines are doing. At a macro scale, we have society, at a smaller scale there is an organisation, or even smaller a family. But who designs these systems, boundaries, rules? Were different voices taken into considerations? Was enough weight given to everyone’s perspective? Did everyone feel co...
Turbulence and uncertainty are still strongly prevalent in our professional and personal lives. How we see, think and explore trends is influencing the way we imagine possible future scenarios, eventually informing our decision. Today I am joined by a friend and colleague David Kalisz to go beyond the classic 2by2 matrix scenario exploring a novel approach to scenario design. David is associate professor at the department of management and strategy, Paris School of Business. He merges futures st...
Envisioning futures that are non-linear from the present isn’t that hard. Teams need different tools and reasoning to think laterally. By combining human ingenuity with nature’s genius, the possibilities of envisioning alternative futures are infinite. Nature is the only real model that shows us a truly sustainable process creation. Today I am joined by Ilaria Mazzoleni to explore the following question: How can teams use biomimicry to envision and design for sustainable futures?. Ilaria is an a...
Frank Snowden once said “all pandemics afflict societies through the specific vulnerabilities people have created by their relationships with the environment, other species, and each other.”. Today such vulnerabilities show the lack of inclusion, anticipation and adaptation of human beings. The economy and the society at large are mainly built off a single mindset. Diversity is often not included when thinking, designing and making decisions for and of the futures. Today I am joined by Jose Ramo...
Paradigms are shifting. We cannot stress it more: things are evolving for the good or the bad. Currently, we do not know how things will unfold in the long term. Too many uncertainties. Yet, we as a collective are required to engage in more sustainable and inclusive practices. When it comes to decision-makings, we, however are biased and decision makers can fall trap on them. I am pleased to be here with Betina Szkudlarek to explore more of this matter. Betina has consulted for the United Nation...
Designers are the creators of new products, services, applications and so on. Simply put, designers are the creators of the things we interact in our daily life. Each new addition to the system means that known and unknown consequences will follow. Today I am joined by John Rousseau to explore the underlying steps of responsible design and the beauty of systems in flux. John is partner at Artefact, and leads teams in strategic foresight and speculative design.
We know that there is more than one possible future. Now we have adjusted to what has been called The New Normal, however we are asked to further adapt to a New New Normal. Today I am joined by Peter Black for a practical talk to discuss Deep Drivers of change. Peter is Director of Essential Foresight and has extensive expertise in foresight and emerging infectious diseases. Previously Peter was a veterinary epidemiologist and worked on emerging infectious diseases for 25 years.
“Hyper-Learning is cognitive, behavioral, and emotional. Yes, Hyper-Learning is behavioral. It is how you think, how you listen, how you connect and relate to people emotionally and how you collaborate. It starts with mindset.” I am citing Ed Hess who is here with me today to chat about human adaptation in the digital era and continuous high-quality learning-unlearning and relearning. Ed is professor of Business Administrator as Darden Graduate School of Business.
The future is Uncertain, Ambiguous, Unknown, Challenging, Novel. In the past months, how many times have you heard these ‘frightening’ words? Today I’m joined by Loes Damhof whose expertise relates to teaching the use-of-futures to innovate in the present. Loes teaches at Hanze University and is UNESCO Chair, Futures Literacy in Higher Education.
The 21st century is dictated by complex, ambiguous and fast changing societal scenarios. Innovation requires new reasoning capabilities to deal with these entangled dynamics. Today I’m joined by colleague and friend Massimo Garbuio to chat key reasoning to strategically design innovative futures. Massimo is Associate Professor in Entrepreneurship at the University of Sydney.
Some ask what the future will bring, few ask how we can shape that future. It goes without saying that there are several futures, not just one. However, we can strategise and plan for changes. Today we explore from a practical perspective the very exercise of scenario planning and how it is used to rethink strategy. For this, I am joined by Steve Tighe of Chasing Sunrises.
Who doesn’t like a good story to let the imagination flows? Today we explore the value of Narrative Foresight to actually explore, generate and describe possible alternative scenarios, whether utopian or dystopian. I am joined by Sohail Inayatullah, UNESCO Chair in Futures Studies. Sohail designed the Casual Layered Analysis (CLA) framework to explore in-depth drivers of change and create narratives for the futures.
In a society that is pivoting to a ‘new’ normal which shows the fragility of the interrelationship of its elements and values are changing, people are questioning what the future will hold. Today I will explore the potential of embracing an attitude toward imagining the futures and leveraging off diversity as strategy for resiliency. For this I have the honour to be joined by Riel Miller, Head of Foresight for UNESCO, whose speciality is Futures Literacy.
Jun 26, 2020•31 min
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