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Search results for: foresight

Open Foresight

 

Open Foresight is a collective sensemaking process developed in collaboration with my colleagues Alvis Brigis and John Smart. It blends media production with the field of futures studies, creating an updated model for harvesting collective insight, generating scenarios, and creating strategic roadmaps into the future.

Our pilot project to employ the framework was The Future of Facebook, a 6-part video series. We used the STEEP forecasting methodology, and explored the risks and opportunities of massive social network platforms through the lenses of Society, Technology, Environment, Economics, and Politics.

We were interviewed on BBC and FastForward Radio about the Open Foresight process, and published an article about it in the Journal of Futures Studies.

Here are posts documenting the unfolding of that project:

Announcing: Open Foresight & the Future of Facebook Project
5 Key Issues Impacting the Future of Facebook
What is Open Foresight?
Open Foresight on BBC Radio!
Future of Facebook & Open Foresight on FastForward Radio
What is the Biggest Threat to Facebook?
The Bank of Facebook: Currency, Identity, Reputation
Facebook: The Social Accelerator?
Is Facebook a Liberator or the Man?
Future of Facebook Project Launch on CNN.com
Telcos become banks. Facebook next?

And here’s the 6-part series. The website we created for the project can be found at futureoffacebook.com

 

Open Foresight: A New Model for Public Futurism

29 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

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Tags

futures, projects

Screen-shot-2012-10-29-at-11.43.35-AM

Last year I was contacted by the Journal of Futures Studies with an invitation to contribute an essay in their special issue on the Communication of Foresight, a complication focused on the new communication and media strategies people are using to engage people in thinking and acting about the future.

Continue reading →

21 Card Decks for Creative Problem Solving, Effective Communication & Strategic Foresight

25 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

creativity, Resources

Screen-shot-2012-10-25-at-8.29.35-AM-300x250

What are some useful playdecks for sparking creativity and innovation?

That was this week’s question that went out on twitter, and below are some of your responses.

The number of decks out there is large, so I decided to curate this list based on whether there’s a full free version available online, or at the least a nice sample deck to get you started. So below are 21 tools, ranging from general design process principles to cards on game dynamics, facilitation methods, and long-range futures thinking. Under the descriptions, which are excerpted from the playdeck websites, are links to their free downloads. Below that are another 39 decks, toolkits and further resource lists for creative and innovative thinking.

Thanks to all who helped compile this.. Did we miss any?

Continue reading →

Future of Facebook & Open Foresight on FastForward Radio

19 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

interview, projects

2nd radio interview for the Future of Facebook Project! My partner Alvis Brigis and I got a chance to chat with Phil Bowermaster and Stephen Gordon of FastForward Radio about our project and the Open Foresight process.

Check out the podcast here: http://blog.speculist.com/2011/03/fastforward-radio—-the-future-of-facebook.html

Open Foresight on BBC Radio!

14 Monday Mar 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

interview

I had my first radio interview last week, thanks to Jamillah Knowles of the BBC show Outriders! I gave her a little background about Open Foresight and the Future of Facebook Project. The segment is on her Girl Tech page, or you can go straight to the podcast here. (Fast forward to around 14:55).

What is Open Foresight?

07 Monday Mar 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

Design

We recently introduced the concept of ‘Open Foresight’ as a process we’re developing to analyze complex issues in an open and collaborative way, and to raise the bar on public discourse and forward-focused critical thinking. It’s a work in progress and constantly evolving, but here are some of the basic principles we’ve developed so far.1) What is Open Foresight?

In simple terms, open foresight is a process for building visions of the future together.

2) The Big Picture Context

If you look around, it’s undeniable that there’s a new global narrative emerging in the way we fundamentally understand ourselves as humanity – how we do business, how we learn, how we generate value together, how we interact. This transformation is being driven both by new communication technologies, and by the emergent behaviors these tools enable. The context of our relationships is shifting, and we still don’t know exactly what that means for us as a species. We’re asking ourselves questions like:

  • What happens when social networks connect us on a global scale?
  • How do new social and virtual currencies challenge our ideas about what money is and how value can be created and exchanged?
  • How can we form globally distributed enterprises and collaborative teams?
  • What do these emerging business models look like?
  • How do we build knowledge together and become more effective learners?
  • How are our notions of democracy and governance evolving?
  • What role do social technologies play in the evolution of human consciousness?

These are all challenging questions, and we don’t know the solutions because we haven’t yet created them.

That may sound terrifying and disruptive, or like an incredible opportunity to shape and bring about the future we deserve. Or, most likely, a bit of both. Continue reading →

Announcing: Open Foresight & The Future of Facebook Project

01 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 80 Comments

Tags

projects, Video

In a world characterized by increasing complexity and accelerating change, we need tools that help us understand future possibilities in order to make more informed decisions today. The field of Futures Studies, or Strategic Foresight, has already developed many such tools, but they are still not commonly utilized by the general public.

So, I’ve partnered up with a colleague, Alvis Brigis, to help elevate the ‘futures thinking’ meme. We’re developing a process called Open Foresight, which aims to serve as an updated model for harvesting collective insight, generating scenarios, and creating strategic roadmaps into the future.

By combining available data, opinions from the experts, and the conventional wisdom of the crowds, we’ll be able to analyze a topic from a wide range of perspectives and viewpoints. We’ll then distill that down into a series of animation-rich videos that summarize these insights. The methodologies used will help us all gain a better understanding of the risks, opportunities, and implications surrounding the issues important to us. All of the content we collect will be made available via Creative Commons SA by-cc so that it can be reused, remixed, and built upon by others.

The first project to employ this framework was launched on Kickstarter today – The Future of Facebook video series.  (video above) Using the STEEP forecasting methodology, we’ll be viewing the challenges and opportunities for this company through the lenses of Society, Technology, Environment, Economics, and Politics. Each of these five categories will become a short focus video that fleshes out that topic area. The final video will be a big picture overview of the potential pathways for the evolution of Facebook.

by @EricaGlasier

Interviews are still underway, but here’s a look at who we’ve talked to so far:

  • David Armano – SVP, Edelman Digital
  • Stowe Boyd – futurist, social technologies blogger
  • Jamais Cascio – ethical futurist, Senior Fellow of the IEET
  • Amber Case – co-founder Geoloqi
  • Suzanne Fischer – Curator of Technology, The Henry Ford
  • Garry Golden – energy and emerging markets futurist
  • Alex Howard – Government 2.0 Correspondent for O’Reilly Media
  • Kevin Kelly – author, What Technology Wants; founding editor, Wired Magazine
  • Brett King – author, BANK 2.0
  • Rita J King – Innovator-in-Residence IBM Analytics Virtual Center
  • David Kirkpatrick – author, The Facebook Effect
  • Valdis Krebs – founder, Orgnet; network analysis expert
  • Richard MacManus – founder, ReadWriteWeb
  • Om Malik – founder, Giga Omni Media
  • Eghosa Omoigui – Venture Capital & Private Equity
  • Howard Rheingold – author, Smart Mobs
  • Douglas Rushkoff – author, Program or Be Programmed
  • Doc Searls – author, Cluetrain Manifesto
  • David Siegel – author, Pull
  • John Smart – President, Accelerating Studies Foundation
  • Scott Smith – founder, Changeist
  • Nova Spivack – founder, Lucid Ventures
  • Sibley Verbeck – founder, The Electric Sheep Company

by @gavinkeech

To launch the public arm of the project, we’ve posted the same 15 questions we asked all interviewees onto Quora. We’ll be monitoring the topic for the most insightful and provocative answers you’ve got. The people with our favorite answers will be invited to participate in an interview with us for inclusion in one of the final videos. You can add your visions to “The Future of Facebook Project” topic here.

We’ve also created a Facebook page, aptly named “Future of This Social Network.” 😉 Please follow our developments, video releases, and conversations there as well as on Twitter with the hashtag #fofb.

We hope this will be the first of many upcoming foresight projects that teach us to better harness our collective intelligence to understand complex issues in a way that’s open, collaborative, and fun.

Please help us develop this initiative by supporting the Future of Facebook project on Kickstarter and contributing your thoughts and insights through the various channels listed above.

We’re looking forward to developing Open Foresight with you!

3 Tools for Futures Thinking & Foresight Development

08 Wednesday Dec 2010

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 32 Comments

Tags

futures

(followup to When Futures Thinking Meets Design Thinking post)

The last post outlined a general framework for “futures thinking.” Here, we look at three techniques for honing your ability to see beyond the horizon.

1. Trend Analysis

In order to develop the capacity for imagining alternative futures and create design solutions accordingly, it is useful to be aware of the current driving forces and megatrends underway. The “STEEP” categories [Social, Technological, Environmental, Economic, Political] give us the mental framework for understanding the complex web of change around us, and can also be further broken down into subcategories for refinement. For example, “Social” could be viewed at the more granular levels of culture, organization, and personal.

Once a trend is identified, both its causes and impacts can be considered. For instance, a rise in life expectancy might be caused by rising living standards, better medical treatments, and healthier environments. The corresponding impacts of this trend may be that a longer portion of a person’s life is spent in retirement, and so there will be an increasing demand in goods and services for the elderly and perhaps a bigger financial strain on families to care for aging parents or grandparents. What types of environments should be designed in order to accommodate these changes?

Another example is the increasing amount of “leisure time” people are now facing. Technological automation has made human involvement in many processes unnecessary, and global economic recession has left many unemployed. If these trends continue, what types of structures must be designed in order to redirect the wasted productivity and surplus mental power that is currently sitting idle? When thinking about the world at this scale, the “big picture” pops out and we can begin to think about design in terms of strategic preparation for our future.

2. Visioning

Clarifying a vision is one of the most powerful mechanisms for engaging a team, organization or community and getting them excited to push forward into new territory. A successfully designed product or service should intentionally impact the thoughts and behaviors of society and culture, and serve as an example of the mindset and values of its creators. So, what does this future humanity look like? Creating that clear vision is a precursor to planning, and a key to creating the conditions to mobilize a group of collaborators around a common goal.

There is a nice guideline in the book Futuring that breaks down this process of “Preferred Futuring” into these eight tasks:

1. Review the organization’s common history to create a shared appreciation.
2. Identify what’s working and what’s not. Brainstorm and list “prouds” and “sorries.”
3. Identify underlying values and beliefs, and discuss which ones to keep and which to abandon.
4. Identify relevant events, developments, and trends that may have an impact on moving to a preferred future.
5. Create a preferred future vision that is clear, detailed, and commonly understood. All participants, or at least a critical mass, should feel a sense of investment or ownership in the vision.
6. Translate future visions into action goals.
7. Plan for action: Build in specific planned steps with accountabilities identified.
8. Create a structure for implementing the plan, with midcourse corrections, celebrations, and publicizing of successes.

Ultimately, it’s not about creating MY vision, but about creating a SHARED vision. As responsible, forward thinking humans, we all want to create a better future. But what does it look like? Have we defined it? Have we described it? Who are we within it? What does interaction look like? If our idea gained mass adoption, what would that mean? What does that world look like?

If we can see it, we can build it.

3. Scenario Development

As an extension of visioning, scenario development is where the power of narrative comes in. Throughout human history, we are defined by the stories we tell each other and ourselves. We create meaning and understanding by the way we remember our stories, like personal cargo that we carry in our minds. Our surroundings, natural or designed, are artifacts and objects within those stories. When thinking about the future, whether it’s the future of society, the organization, or the self, developing a series of scenarios allows us to objectively deal with uncertainty and imagine plausible costs and benefits to various actions and their consequences. It is often suggested to create a minimum of three scenarios when considering future events or situations by identifying futures that are possible, probable, and preferable. Here’s a suggested five sample scenario from the Futuring book:

1. A Surprise-Free Scenario: Things will continue much as they are now. They won’t become substantially better or worse.
2. An Optimistic Scenario: Things will go considerably better than in the recent past.
3. A Pessimistic Scenario: Something will go considerably worse than in the past.
4. A Disaster Scenario: Things will go terribly wrong, and our situation will be far worse than anything we have previously experienced.
5. A Transformation Scenario: Something spectacularly marvelous happens – something we never dared to expect.

Once the stories has been written that describes what each of these scenarios looks like, the conversation can begin. What is the likelihood of each of these? What is the desirability? What are the correlating values of the people? And most importantly, what actions can be taken today to steer the ship and design towards or away from the various scenarios?

Two common methods for determining a potential course of action are forecasting and backcasting. While forecasting starts in the present and projects forward into the future, backcasting starts with a future goal or event and works it’s way back to the present. In this method, the sequence of events or steps that led to that goal are imagined and defined, so that a roadmap to that desirable future is created. In either case, the scenarios generated serve to illuminate pathways to action.

–

Further Reading:

Futuring: The Exploration of the Future

Foundations of Futures Studies

The Art of the Long View

Thinking About the Future: Guidelines for Strategic Foresight

The Universal Traveler: A Guide to Creativity, Problem Solving & the Process of Reaching Goals

–

imagery found at Imaginary Foundation

Essential Skills for 21st Century Survival: Part 4: Foresight

15 Tuesday Jun 2010

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

consciousness

Add to FacebookAdd to DiggAdd to Del.icio.usAdd to StumbleuponAdd to RedditAdd to BlinklistAdd to TwitterAdd to TechnoratiAdd to Yahoo BuzzAdd to Newsvine

[This is part 4 in a 12 part series. The topics covered so far are Pattern Recognition, Environmental Scanning, and Network Weaving.]

::Foresight::

The ability to develop foresight is a cornerstone for forward thinking individuals and change agents. I can say that on the personal level in my own life, when I did not have a clearly defined goal or vision of what I wanted or where I was going, I floundered. My ability to “see” potential opportunities or pitfalls was clouded, and I fell into a rut or holding pattern in life. Then, when those wild cards and “black swan events” did occur, I was completely blindsided and unprepared to handle them. I think this applies at the individual as well as the organizational level.

So what exactly is foresight? Here are a few definitions from the wikipedia page on Foresight (Futures Studies): Continue reading →

3 Steps For Plotting Your Personal Future In An Uncertain World

21 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by Venessa Miemis in Uncategorized

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Tags

futures, personal development

1682043-poster-1280-future1-1024x576

this article originally appeared in FastCoExist

In today’s accelerating world of work, it’s easy to get distracted by the million shiny objects vying for our attention. All too often, we spend our time responding to the latest urgent priority, and forget who we are and what really matters to us. A sense of personal or professional mission fades, and our passion and potential goes dormant.

However, forward-focused people and organizations realize that a happy, productive workplace exists only when everyone is aware of their gifts and how to best align their contribution with a larger shared purpose.

 A happy, productive workplace exists only when everyone is aware of their gifts and how to best align their contribution with a larger shared purpose.

Below is a three-phase process to help get reconnected to your motivations, the unique value you offer the world, and a vision for your own long-term trajectory. Cultivating this foresight practice at both the personal and organizational levels can be a powerful way to develop our greatest assets: ourselves.


Continue reading →

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