Identifying Trends to Make Better Decisions, Manage Uncertainty, and Profit from Change
Author:
Adam Gordon
ISBN:
9780814409121
Format:
Hardback
Price:
$24.95
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Overview
A critical roadmap that helps companies turn "future shock" into "future
savvy".
In order to succeed in their industries, decision-makers today need to
anticipate the future outcomes not only in their own industry but also
in society and technology as well. The better their view of the future,
the better their decisions--and the bigger their profits-will be.
Future
Savvy is a hands-on, how-to book on evaluating the business, social,
and technology forecasts that appear in everyday communications such as
newspapers and business magazines, as well as in specialized sources
like government and think-tank forecasts, consultant reports, and
stock-market guides. Futures analyst Adam Gordon has spent his career
deciphering changes and trends in a variety of industries. Now, he shows
business leaders how to gain a clearer view of the future, as well as:
• Recognize potential trends and outcomes more effectively
• Discount poor and biased forecasts more confidently
• Anticipate relevant opportunities and potential threats earlier
About the Author
Adam Gordon (Cardiff, Wales) is an expert in the field of industry
foresight and future studies. He has been an analyst, consultant,
facilitator, and professor, and has appeared on NPR's Morning Edition
and CNN World Report. Gordon writes, teaches, and trains in-company
strategy teams, and teaches industry foresight methods in various
prominent Executive and MBA programs around the world. He was previously
a Senior Associate at Coates & Jarratt, a future strategy consulting
think-tank in Washington D.C.
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About the Author
Adam Gordon BA, MS, MBA (INSEAD) is an expert in strategic foresight and
its application to real-world industry and policy leadership. He has
been an analyst, consultant, planner, facilitator, and professor in the
field, and his work has been featured on NPR's Morning Edition and CNN
World Report. Adam was previously a Senior Associate at Coates &
Jarratt, Inc., a futures consulting firm in Washington, D.C. He now
lives in the UK with his wife and three children.
?
The author maintains a blog forum on topics related to Future Savvy
at www.futuresavvy.net
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Which Predictions Should You Take Seriously?
There's no shortage of predictions available to organizations looking to
anticipate and profit from future trends. Apparently helpful forecasts
are ubiquitous in everyday communications such as newspapers and
business magazines, and in specialized sources such as government and
think-tank forecasts, consultant reports, and stock-market guides. These
resources are crucial, but they are also of very mixed quality. While
everyone knows a future-focus is crucial for strategic vision and
organizational readiness, what information from the endless sea of
sources is valid? How do you know which predictions to take seriously,
which to be wary of, and which to throw out entirely? Which ones do you
let guide your decisions?
?
Future Savvy provides a hands-on approach to judging predictive
material of all types, including a battery of critical tests to apply to
any forecast to assess its validity, and judge how to fit it into
everyday management thinking. In sifting through predictions, readers
will now be able to:
- Distinguish between future-aligning and future-influencing forecasts;
those that seek to anticipate situations and those that seek to change
them
- Know when data-driven forecasting is an appropriate approach and when
it is not
- Understand how frictional forces in the economy and society delay and
shape technology-driven change
- See through a forecast to the motivations behind it and make
allowances for the effect of perceptual biases
- Understand the role of systemic forces, and judge when a
scenario-based approach is valid.
?
In an entertaining, thought-provoking book filled with real-world case
studies and examples, Adam Gordon synthesizes critical
information-gathering skills and future-studies tools into a single
template. This allows managers to apply systematic "forecast filtering"
to reveal strengths and weakness in the predictions they encounter on a
regular basis. As leaders sharpen their view of the future, they are
able to make better -- and more profitable -- decisions. Future Savvy
empowers them to use forecasts wisely and so improve their judgment in
anticipating opportunities, avoiding threats, and managing uncertainty.
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Review Quotes
"
Future Savvy …will help you become a better consumer of
forecasts, from economists, governments, think tanks and, yes, even
journalists."
The Globe & Mail (Toronto)
"a book that will make fascinating reading for anyone involved in
forecasting" --Foresight Magazine
"If you care at all about preparing for the future, read this book.? -- Online
Magazine
"Given recent developments in the US economy and their implications and
probable impact insofar as the global economy is concerned, the
publication of this book is indeed timely." -- Dallas Business
Commentary Examiner
"...a guide for prognosticators and scenario planners, a set of warnings
against such common errors as overreliance on numbers, overlooking your
own bias, and ignoring the oscillations of history…? -- Strategy+Business
"… offers a great deal of common sense that often gets left behind in
analytics and forecasting…? -- Inland Empire Business Journal
"...Gordon's book will be a useful primer and refresher on the art of
proper forecasting and on detecting the artifice and subtlety of
persuasion via anticipatory declaration." --Research Technology
Management
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Cover Copy
Why do some business predictions seem to "hit the nail on the head?
while other miss their mark so badly? Do some companies and analysts
have a crystal ball that affords them a clearer view of the future? Or
do they just seem to ride a tide of good luck?
?
While circumstance, fortuitous timing, and good fortune may occasionally
play into eventual outcomes, more often than not the quality of business
forecasting is directly aligned with the care taken in its design,
implementation, and interpretation.
?
Future Savvy shows how to evaluate—more objectively and thoroughly—the
business, technology, marketing, and cultural forecasts that flood the
media daily, and reveals the strengths and shortcomings of think-tank
and consultant reports, stock market analysis, government forecasting,
and more. Gordon presents a clear, proven, repeatable methodology for
"separating the wheat from the chaff? when researching and analyzing
trends and data. A frank and illuminating guide to finding truths often
obfuscated by hype and misinformation, Future Savvy takes a hard look at
the factors that most often push potentially good forecasting off
course. Pulling no punches and leaving a streamlined and constructive
critical methodology, the book presents a comprehensive array of pointed
questions that must be aimed at any predictive process in order to gauge
its validity and the probability of its success.
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Jacket Copy
There is no shortage of forecasting available to businesses looking to
anticipate and profit from future trends. But what information, from the
endless sea of sources, is valid? How do you know which predictions to
take seriously, which to be wary of, and which to throw out entirely?
Most important, which ones do you let guide your business's decisions?
?
As huge an industry as business forecasting is, it's a wonder how
amorphous it remains. As explained by author Adam Gordon, there is
virtually no regulation, no serious accountability, and no quantifiable
track record. "There is no accepted conceptual framework, agreed
professional standards, or guidelines for application to policy or
business decision making.? In fact, there's not even a clear
definition of what forecasting is.
?
That said, it is unwise to discount the importance of forecasting. After
all, your company's decisions will play out not in the present, but in a
future that is bound to be different. What will the financial landscape
be months or years from now? How will technology affect your company and
your industry? What factors will shape the demand for your product or
service? Understandably, it is imperative that you attempt to predict
the future business environment, lest you be caught flat-footed by the
ever-increasing pace of change.
?
Future Savvy gives you a battery of critical tests to apply to any
forecast in order to assess its validity and its relevance to your
business's strategic decisions. In sifting through the endless reams of
information you receive in the form of predictions, you will now be able
to:
Distinguish between (and apply) future-aligning versus
future-influencing forecasting
Combine short-, medium-, and long-term forecasting to create a
three-dimensional model of the future
Decrease reliance on so-called "hard? data that may not be as
inarguable as you think
See through biases in research, consider the source and motivation
behind any analysis, and approach information from the perspective
most relevant to your organization's needs
Assess the value of forecasting as it pertains to the nature and
timing of specific outcomes
Avoid the common pitfalls in trend-based forecasting and use better
alternatives
Develop multiple future scenarios
And more
?
The author synthesizes all of these powerful analytical tools into a
template that allows you to apply "forecast filtering,? a systematic
deconstruction that accounts for all possible sources of inconsistency,
fallibility, or bias in any presentation of predictive information.
?
Remember, the information you receive is only as solid as the approach
you take to its interpretation. If your decisions are ill-informed, no
one will blame the forecasters, whoever they may have been. Using the
approaches in Future Savvy, you stand a much better chance of parlaying
information into strong results, and "when you come across yet another
breathless article about the latest new thing, you will have the tools
to keep your head when all about you are losing theirs.?
?
Adam Gordon is an expert in the field of industry foresight and future
studies. He has been an analyst, consultant, facilitator, and professor,
and has appeared on NPR's Morning Edition and CNN World Report. He also
writes, teaches, and consults for The Future Studio and was previously a
Senior Associate at Coates & Jarratt, Inc., a future strategy consulting
organization in Washington. Mr. Gordon lives in Cardiff, Wales.
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Excerpt
INTRODUCTION
This book is about how to evaluate forecasts and extract value from
them. It is written to help decision makers in commercial, policy, and
nonprofit sectors, as well as ordinary people in daily life, make better
judgments about predictions they read and hear, so they can
appropriately plan for and profit from the future.
Predictive statements are all around us: in the newspapers, on TV, at
conference presentations, in industry reports, consulting documents,
think tank studies, and so on. All claim to be valid, but the record
shows that few are. So while forecasts are a crucial decision-success
resource, they are not in themselves valuable. they are only valuable
alongside a clear way to separate the wheat from the chaff. What's
valuable is being able to critically judge this torrent of information
and to be able determine which ideas are worth taking seriously—worth
planning for and investing in.
This book sets out to communicate tools and approaches that the
forecast consumer can use to filter and evaluate statements about the
future and thus judge what the real threats and opportunities are. It
summarizes and orders the problems common in forecasting, as well as
best practices, so that managers and decision makers of all types may be
better able to critically interact with the barrage of forecasts that
compete for their attention and resources and discriminate between
worthy and unworthy ones.
Teaching a Donkey to Talk: Why Forecasts Can't Be Trusted
There's an ancient Uzbek parable about a con man who promised a local
nobleman he could teach a donkey to talk—for a large fee—but it would
take twenty years. Of course, in twenty years the con man, the nobleman,
or the donkey would be dead.1 Predicting is safe for the same spurious
reason. By the time outcomes emerge, there is almost never anybody
around to say, "Hey, that never happened!? And even where there is
anyone who remembers the tarnished pearls of predictive wisdom, there is
of course no penalty for being wrong. There's no skin in the game. The
predictor may feel a twinge of embarrassment perhaps, but then, who can
get it right all the time?
Not only is there no recourse, but putting predictions out into the
world is ridiculously easy to do. Anyone can read a few articles, gather
the direction of technology and social trends, and make projective
links. The forecasting field is not regulated. There is no accepted
conceptual framework, accepted methods, agreed professional standards,
or guidelines for application to policy or business decision making.2
There is no oversight board or council or licensing mechanism, no
organization to which one must belong, no minimum qualifications, no
agreed or standard curriculum in teaching forecasting. Anyone with a
keyboard or a microphone, it seems, is welcome to babble on about
digital media or nanotechnology or climate change or any other hobby
horse, and before we know it, we are knee-deep in predictive wishful
thinking, scare-mongering, or blatant self-promotion, much of which is
not worth our attention.
Part of the lack of standardization means there is no agreed definition
of terms. In this book, I've used forecasting, foresight, predictions,
and future studies more or less interchangeably to refer to works that
look to and try to interpret the future. Some analysts use "forecasting?
to refer to technical mathematical approaches, and "foresight? to refer
to more impressionistic approaches.
Why We Don't Ignore Forecasts: Why the Future Matters
Rapid change is a constant, ubiquitous feature of our lives. We have
seen eye-popping developments across society, technology, institutions,
and products and services in the last generation; this will surely
continue into the future. But change is not merely interesting. It is
competitive. This is because success always implies congruence between
decisions and the world in which those decisions play out. If we decide
today to launch a product, buy a house, study for a degree, build a new
light rail system, or take any similar decision of significance, the
environment of tomorrow will be a key factor in the success or failure
of that decision. What we do will be tested by the future conditions
that emerge. Where there is a good "fit? between the initiative and the
environment it plays out in—"the right product at the right time?—we can
expect success. If not, we should expect to fail. Our decisions are only
as good as the view of the future they rest on. All opportunities and
successes and profits are realized in the future. All threats, failures,
and losses are in the future.
In a fast-moving world, we know that the future environment will be
different to that of today in big or small ways. New technologies,
market shifts, changes in legislation, or evolving social values damage
or destroy the traditional good fit we have between ourselves and the
world. To achieve "future fit? we therefore use forecasts to position
ourselves and our organizations, creating (or renewing) the fit between
our initiatives and environment. In some cases we may be strong enough
also to influence future events and outcomes for our own future benefit,
and forecasts help us do this too. Either way, the earlier and clearer
we see future circumstances, the better we will be able to benefit by
changing our current recipes for success to keep up with the changes in
the world. The better managers' view of the future, the better their
decisions will turn out to be.
All enterprises benefit from narrowing down what they must adapt to and
plan for—all effort spent preparing for a future that will not emerge is
a waste of personal or organizational resources. Good forecasts are a
key ingredient in limiting the vagaries of uncertainty, and therein
working smarter not harder, avoiding surprises, exploiting new
opportunities and plugging weaknesses in fitting in with the future, and
where possible influencing the future to suit the organization. This is
true not only of business. People and institutions of all types position
themselves for success by anticipating and adapting to events, or
shaping them. Whether it is an NGO raising money for developing-world
children, an urban planner advocating a light rail system, a homeowner
deciding to sell a house, or a student making a career choice, identical
principles apply—a higher-quality reading of the future operating
environment in which these decisions will play out is what separates
winners from losers. We should all be vitally concerned with forecasts
as we are all effectively betting significant resources on their
validity.
So, as individuals and organizations, we are all faced with the task of
grappling with the changing world under competitive conditions. Little
surprise, then, that we appear "hard-wired? to seek information about
changing circumstances and manifest a desire to peer ahead or absorb the
insight of those who do. To be competitive we must be reading and
listening to forecasts and factoring them into our world view and our
plans. We cannot afford to ignore the forecast chatter. This is
compounded by the rapid growth of information. The days of the panoptic
amateur intellect are over. There's just too much to know in too many
specialized fields. Whether we need to consider decisions concerning the
future in healthcare, transport, education, or any one of a thousand
areas, we find we are often required to call on specialists in those
areas. Being forced to build our picture of the world on the expertise
of others, we are, whether we like it or not, retail consumers of
others' forecast perceptions.
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Table of Contents
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
INTRODUCTION 1
CHAPTER 1: Recognizing Forecast Intentions 17
CHAPTER 2: The Quality of Information: How Good Is the Data? 39
CHAPTER 3: Bias Traps: How and Why Interpretations Are Spun 61
CHAPTER 4: Zeitgeist and Perception: How We Can't Escape Our Own Mind 83
CHAPTER 5: The Power of User Utility: How Consumers Drive and Block
Change105
CHAPTER 6: Drivers, Blockers, and Trends 133
CHAPTER 7: The Limits of Quantitative Forecasting 153
CHAPTER 8: A Systems Perspective in Forecasting 173
CHAPTER 9: Alternative Futures: How It's Better to Be Vaguely Right than
Exactly Wrong 197
CHAPTER 10: Applying Forecast Filtering 215
CHAPTER 11: Questions to Ask of Any Forecast 263
FURTHER READING 285
INDEX 289
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