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Pre-Conference:

ADVANCING FUTURE EXPERTISE 

Approaches & Methods

 

Sunday 10 July 2005

SUPPLY AND DEMAND

Futuring is More than Strategic Planning

Chair: Pero Micic, President Advisory Board

13.45h

Patrik Sallner, Head of Insight & Foresight Nokia

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coming soon

14.05h

Matthias Horx: The Spirit of the Future
How does forecasting influence business, politics and minds?

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We’re all aware of the impossibility of simple forecasting. But what can we predict then and what not?
What is the mental and economic impact of forecasting? Matthias Horx will present a philosophical discourse, starting with the Delphi oracle, presenting the utopists of the 19th century and their visions, the think tanks in the 60’s as well as present foresight methods. His historical overview will outline – based on his recent research – the positive foresight as well as their implementation in strategic processes, from Shell on to the Think Tanks of Daimler Chrysler. He will focus on the core question: When did the Forecast turn out to be right, where were its limits. Its aim is a reflection on methods, ethos and function of modern futurology.

 

METHODS

How Futurists Actually Tell the Future - Improving Theory

Chair: Prof. Erzsebet Novaky, Vice President Advisory Board

16.00h

Dr. Marjolein van Asselt: Unblackboxing methodological myths

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How do professional futurists actually tell the future? What methodologies are actually in use and how are they used? How do futurists manage methodological challenges posed by uncertainty, potential
discontinuity and the plurality of legitimate points of view? These questions will be addressed based on 4-year ethnographic study with Dutch futurists in institutes that perform future telling on behalf of the Dutch government.

 

16.30h

Roland W. ScholzArnim WiekProf. Roland W. Scholz, Dr. Arnim Wiek: Applying Principles of Systems Theory in Scenario Planning - what is the added value?

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Although scenarios have been broadly used in scientific disciplines, business and consulting activities for over 25 years, there is still a lack of theory building on scenario planning methods. Specifically, no one would doubt that systems theory is an essential fundament of scenario planning, but sound research on the specific contribution is still at the beginning. This presentation focuses on the question, what principles of systems theory can be applied in concrete scenario planning processes and what is the added value of such applications.

 

REALITY (Breakout sessions part 1)

Empowering Organisations with Future Intelligence

Chair: Rohit Talwar, Member Advisory Board

17.00h Short Presentations of the Breakout sessions: << back

The workshops in the Breakout session promise to be beneficial for both sides: the future experts and the companies, countries and organisations presenting their actual future challenge.
Government of Liechtenstein, InterNutrition, Swisscom, Swiss Re and OECD face each specific future challenges, for which they are looking for solutions - either approaches or foresight. The participants (future experts) - after choosing their preferred case - constitute small groups and will look for answers and solutions for the specific case. That way  they learn from colleagues and teach colleagues.
For each case, the findings will be presented, giving the case presenter the chance to react.

17.30h Case 1: Government of Liechtenstein
Establishing a national foresight programme in a small state: how to establish the Foresight Programme for Liechtenstein?
Case Presenter: Dr. Tino Quaderer
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(Quest for Approach)

The Government of Liechtenstein established in October 2004 the Zukunftsbüro (Unit of Future Studies). It aims in evaluating relevant issues for a sustainable future of Liechtenstein’s economy, society, and environment. Among its tasks is the scanning of national and  international trends. It consults the Liechtenstein Government about future opportunities und risks and in cooperation with other units of the National Government defines relevant measures. In addition, the Zukunftsbüro is open to the people of Liechtenstein for their future concerns. It  shall coordinate future relevant quests of the government, the administration, the enterprises and other stakeholders. In this regard it shall build a national and international network of all parties interested and involved in Liechtenstein’s future.
The Zukunftsbüro is part of the Office of Economic Affairs of the National Government and is subordinated to the Prime Minister. Although Liechtenstein is a very rich country it is a small state with only 35’000 inhabitants. Therefore the Zukunftsbüro only has limited financial and personnel resources. The foresight programme for Liechtenstein has to take this general conditions into account.

  • What is the most effective structure?
  • What tools and methods should be used?
  • What are the most important topics?

 

17.30h

Case 2: Swisscom Innovations
How to create a vision for a complete Industry: What is the best methodology to create a 10-years ahead vision for a specific industry such as ICT world? 
Case Presenter: Nicolas Maesani

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(Quest for Approach)
The future is always ahead of you: the more you move forward, the more it moves away from you. Nevertheless Swisscom Innovations has taken up the challenge and we are proud to have elaborated our vision of the information and communication technology which highlights the most probable future among thousands of possibilities. We believe that in a constantly turbulent and competitive environment this vision helps us to understand and anticipate the key challenges in our world.

In this regard Swisscom Innovations has designed a vision built on six different concrete stories of an "average day in 2015". These situations are based on extensive research of the main disruptive innovations described in two technology maps. However, socio-economic factors have also been taken into account in the trends maps in order to understand the synergies between the different driving-forces that will lead the world. Last but not least we have analyzed the past, the history of telecommunication innovations, to better understand the (intangible) future. In this regard we often asked ourselves on how to build this vision of a complete industry. It is these questions that we propose to share and discuss:

  • What are the benefits of a vision for a corporate organization? 
    Which is the most adequate and profitable methodology for that purpose for a company?
  • Best practices: Which methodology to choose (i.e. scenarios, one-vision, conceptual model, statistical evolutions)? What are the related advantages and disadvantages?
  • How can an analysis of the past help us to learn about the future?
  • How to collect sound and quantitative facts for 2015?
  • How to justify the validity of a vision?
17.30h

Case 3: InterNutrition
Agriculture in Europe in the year 2025: what are the driving forces of further developments for the agriculture?

Case Presenter: Dr. Arthur Einsele

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(Quest for Forecast)

Agriculture in Europe is under pressure from different forces. Consumers are demanding enough food at a high quality and at affordable prices. Consumer behaviour is shifting towards more health and wellness and environmental concerns (organic food). NGO’s put pressure on the environmental behaviour of farmers too claiming a reduced application of fertilizers and pesticides. Simultaneously new technologies such as genetic engineering offer new opportunities for modern and visionary farming technologies. But European farmers are reluctant towards those new technologies and may therefore loose their competitiveness. International trade will put national or European agriculture and especially to small local farm units under growing pressure. Most farmers survive only due to subsidies. Can we afford this type of agriculture in 2025 or how will this develop?

 

The main factors to plan this future may be:

  • The quantity and quality of the food to be produced
  • The influence of the society: change in food habits, health concerns, organic food…
  • The financial situation: How  long can we afford an subsided agriculture?
  • The role of the environment: farmer as landscaping,
  • The role of NGO’s: pressure on the environmental behaviour
  • The role of new technologies as genetic engineering (or another technology)
  • The international trade: will it influence our nutrition and agriculture?

InterNutrition aims to provide the dialogue between nutrition-technology and the public. Several Biotechnology firms are combined e.g. Syngenta Basel, Nestlé Suisse S.A. Vevey, DSM Nutritional Products Kaiseraugst, FIAL Federation of the Swiss Food Industries Bern, Firmenich SA Genf, Novozymes Dittingen.

 

17.30h Case 4: OECD
What kind of long term tangible infrastructure do the OECD Countries need in order to generate social and economic benefits?
Case Presenter: Dr. Pierre-Alain Schieb
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(Quest for Foresight and Approaches)

In the years ahead, the infrastructure sector has the potential to generate significant economic and social benefits world-wide. Creating and maintaining a high level of quality in infrastructure services is a key enabling factor in both developed and less developed countries. However, the future development of the infrastructure sector faces serious economic, financial, regulatory, legal and institutional challenges that require urgent policy attention both at national and international levels.
While a number of recent reports from national and international authorities stress the growing need for more investment in the creation, rehabilitation and maintenance of (tangible) infrastructure in both OECD and non-OECD countries, it is not clear how these investments will be financed in the coming two to three decades. Current levels of investment in infrastructure look insufficient to cope with the situation -- the public sector is not in a position to invest massively, ODA has been on the decline recently, and the private sector is not investing at expected levels and, in some cases, is even retreating from the sector. There are also concerns that the longer term macro economic situation and the increasing competition from the social sector for scarce resources will not make the flow of investment into infrastructure any easier than it is today. Moreover, there is a growing feeling among experts that the policy and regulatory frameworks that currently govern infrastructure-related activities are unlikely to be able to meet the challenges of the future or to provide the necessary support to the further development of the sector.

This Project raises a number of challenges on a methodological, substantive and policy background:

1- Methodology: would scenarios be useful in this context, given that it is a time consuming process and might lead to inconclusive implications? How to measure needs and demand? What about the gaps between needs and actual demand? How to incorporate wild cards in the process? What is the possible impact of social values on technology options?

2- Substance: what are the economic justifications of investments in tangible infrastructure in the current or longer term context?  What about social infrastructure and implications of the so called knowledge economy (see Lisbon 2010 agenda in Europe)? What could be the role of the private sector?

3- Policies: when governments have lost control of public utilities and are submitted to more fiscal constraint, how to prioritise and regulate the sector?

 

17.30h

Case 5: Swiss Re

Risk perception in the future: will the young generation treat technology-related risks more utilitarian than their parent generation?

Case Presenter: Dr. Rolf Tanner, Christina Ulardic

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(Quest for Foresight)

Uncertainty about the long-term impact and risks led towards an overall critical attitude towards emerging and new technologies in the 1970s and 1980s. In many cases, this resulted in a comprehensive rejection of these technologies and fostered a 'zero-risk' attitude. However, indications suggest that the younger generations (born after 1980) does may develop a more utilitarian approach towards these technologies, weighing the risks and benefits more in the light of direct personal convenience and benefit. An example is mobile telephony: though health hazards associated with this technology have not been removed beyond doubt, the direct personal convenience and benefit of mobile telephony has made the young generation avid users of this technology inspite of remaining residual risks.

 

  • Marks this a paradigm shift, and will it apply to other emerging technologies, such as nanotechnology, or the often-cited convergence of different technologies (such as nano- and biotechnology) into one? Is there a more 'relaxed', i.e., more calculating approach towards risk in general?
  • And what will be the reaction if risks materialise in actual harm? Is there a new definition of actual harm (or, in insurance-speak, losses) emerging?
  • And what compensation, restitution etc. will be expected and acceptable?
17.30h

The Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies: Future Seminar

Creative Man

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Paradigms are tools for understanding the present and the potential future. So far the Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies (CIFS) has been categorising the development under the headings of hunter/gatherer, agricultural and industrial society. At present some say we are living in the information society. Whatever the right term for the present society may be it raises the question: what is the next paradigm going to be? The CIFS has - so far – produced two potential answers called Dream Society and Creative Man. Dream Society is focussing on consumption and the need in the richer part of the world to appeal to the emotions of consumers because the consumers are taking function for granted. This was published 5 years ago. The next suggestion - Creative Man - was issued last year (so far only in Danish) and points to the need for creativity in our part of the world. We have to and we want to and we will be able to be more creative in the future.  

 

 

Monday, 11 July 2005

FUTURES STUDIES

Chair: Dr. Wendy Schultz, Advisory Board

11.00h

Cutting Edge Methods of Foresight in the Futures Study Programs

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All European Universities, which run a Global Foresight/Futures Studies programme are invited to present their research projects and findings in improving the methodology of foresight and  forecasting.

According to the Survey of the Australian Foresight Institute (together with WFSF) these are the following universities:

- Corvinus University  Budapest
- Conservatoire Nationale des Arts et Metiers CNAM (LIPSOR), Paris
- Finland Futures Research Centre Turku School of Economics and 
  Business Administration (Finland Futures Academy) Turku
- Gregorian University, Rome

 

 

 

 

 

 

Main Conference:

BUSINESS GAINS FROM FUTURE THINKING

Foresight & Impact

 

Monday, 11 July 2005

FUTURE VISION

Knowing the Unknowable - What We Really Can Tell About the Future

Chair: Rohit Talwar, Advisory Board

14.30h

Dr. Patrick Dixon: Take Hold of Your Future
Key Trends Affecting the Future of Your
Business and Personal Life

 

 

Dr. Michael Jackson: Organisational Intelligence in a Digital Age

 

 

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Dr. Michael Jackson will paint the landscape of how forward-thinking businesses are adopting more foresight into their every day plans and actions.

The arrival of the knowledge economy has made decision-making by organisations increasingly complex. Simultaneously, the competitive environment in most industries has become highly dynamic. And, there is now increasing awareness that innovation and risk management are two key weapons in the search for future survival and success.

In response, enlightened organisations are learning to adopt more foresight techniques into their planning systems hence generating better pictures of possible longer term opportunities and issues.

16.30h

Prof. Adam Gordon: Critically Evaluating Forecasts

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Futures Studies has an ongoing credibility crisis in business and policy communities because of the many egregiously and consistently wrong predictions made in its name. This undermines excellent work done by many excellent practitioners. This session will offer insight into quality issues in the futures field and the lines along which quality standards may be developed, in order that the European futures community might avoid the mistakes and pain that its counterparts in America have suffered.

FUTURE CHANGE

The Future Is Not What You Think it Is

Chair: Ute von Reibnitz, Advisory Board

17.00h

Riel Miller: Making Change Happen

Futures Literacy for the 21st Century

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For a long time planned decision making has been considered superior to just-in-time choices. Leaving aside the valid but distinct fields of optimisation and contingency planning, Riel Miller wants to explore three questions. One is the extent to which socio-economic change might be enlarging the terrain for spontaneous decision making. Second, to what extent is this decision making dependent on the development of “futures literacy”. And third is it plausible that this non-planning form of “leadership” based on the diffusion of futures literacy is likely to produce futures that are consistent with our aspirations. Since after all the idea is still getting to where we want to go.

17.45h Bo Malmberg: How Europe can Prosper from a Global Demographic Dividend << back

Thanks to declining fertility, most developing countries are now entering a phase where the working age population is growing relative to dependent age groups. As has been demonstrated by Japan, Korea, Tawain, China and India and other countries, this demographic shift leads to drastically improved prospects for economic growth. Population-based forecasts of income growth thus points to rapid increases in per capita income across the developing countries, with Sub-Saharan Africa as the big exception.
Europe, where population aging leads to increasing dependency rates, cannot to the same extent rely on demography as a factor driving economic growth. The challenge here, instead, is to find  ways to prosper from the economic expansion outside Europe.

 

 

 

Tuesday, 12 July 2005

FUTURE TOOLS

Foresight Forming Better Decisions

Chair: Dr. Michael Jackson, Advisory Board

08.45h

Rohit Talwar: UK Government

Horizon scanning - improving the anticipatory capability, developing a quide in shaping "the day after tomorrow"

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The goal of Defra’s new horizon scanning programme is to improve the department’s capability to anticipate and prepare for new risks and opportunities through the systematic study of new developments in science and society. Horizon scanning encourages cross-cutting thinking that covers natural and social scientific activities and research.
Defra definition of horizon scanning: The systematic examination of potential threats, opportunities and likely future developments which are at the margins of current thinking and planning. Horizon scanning may explore novel and unexpected issues, as well as persistent problems or trends. Overall, horizon scanning is intended to improve the robustness of Defra’s policies and evidence base.

 

09.20h

Dr. Heinrich Stuckenschneider: Siemens

Managing Innovation in High Technology with Scenario Technique

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The performance of IT- and communication- solutions is continuously and strongly improving and offers tremendous potential for innovations.

As the quantity of technologically feasible opportunities is continuously increasing, a systematic search of those solutions that offer significant customer value and business impact becomes crucial. This speech describes an approach how with Siemens scenario techniques are used for the identification of attractive solutions and of requirements to their realization, thus establishing a foundation for the management of innovation.

10.30h

Francesco Morace: Future Concept Lab

The Six Trends in the Future of Consumption and the Methodologies to Conceive them
Trend analysis

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Future Concept Lab will illustrate the six most influential consumption trends and the way in which they impact the world of marketing and strategic planning. The presentation will provide a taste of the most important ingredients of each consumption trend. The macro socio-economic and political dynamics presented constitute the new platform of advanced thinking for company marketing efforts and the basis of the 6 trends in consumption analyzed: Convivial Shared Consumption; Arch-typical consumption, Transitive consumption and Transitional Products; Consumption of the Vital Memory, Occasional Consumption and DecontrActive Consumption.

The theory of each trend is going to be explained through a series of case studies drawn from contemporary market and presents a case history of a Company that is particularly representative for each area in exam. The 6 company case histories constitute as many successful examples of applications involving the proposed trends in as many areas of everyday human life: Eckes in the culture of drinking; illycaffé in the realm of food habits; Nokia in the sphere of interpersonal communication; Swarovski in the world of luxury products, Wella in the domain of physical beauty; and Whirlpool in the area of domesticity.

The institute will also provide indications on the methodology (e.g. cool-hunting, the work of our correspondents, our research program called MindStyle) but also the conceptual input coming from our sociological background.

11.05h

Raffael Jovine, Dr. Daniel F. Oriesek: BOOZ Allen Hamilton

Dynamic Simulations - case studies:

- HIV/AIDS in India

- Market Entry Strategy into UMTS World

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Dynamic Simulations are powerful tools that allow players to develop solutions to a given problem, to immediately experience other stakeholders’ reactions and to quantify benefits of these reaction chains.  By introducing repeatability in the analysis and allowing scenarios to be tested in a dynamic and interactive environment, players experience the impact of external events and their own behavior. By combining traditional war gaming methodologies and System Dynamics, the process excels at defining the ripple effect of dependencies between functions that are frequently considered independently.

We will illustrate the benefits of the tool and its wide range of applicability based on two examples:

The Dynamic Simulation on HIV/AIDS in India was designed to enable participants to achieve a better understanding of the long-term economic, political, and social impacts of HIV/AIDS, to identify areas for collaboration between the public and private sectors and to work out strategies for all sectors to develop an implementable national AIDS response.

The second example illustrates the applicability of the methodology to private sector strategy development. A mobile communication company used Dynamic Simulation to test its market entry strategy into the UMTS world. The objectives of the simulation were to test the existing strategy for stability and effectiveness against competitors’ and customers’ reactions, dependency on sales channels, partnerships and suppliers as well as drastic external changes resulting e.g. from regulation or public response.
 

FUTURE ACTION

What We Need to Do Today for Tomorrow

Chair: Prof. Prabhu Guptara, Executive Director Organisational Development, Wolfsberg (UBS)

14.30h

Europe 2020: Chances and Risk

Future Agenda panel

Ged Davis

Charles Kleiber

Prof. Norbert Walter

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Looking ahead is not about what we will do tomorrow. It must lead to action today – in order to build the future. The closing panel discussion will stipulate an agenda for growth in Europe. Questions to be discussed:What will shape Europe in the next 20 years?

  • What’s Europe’s prospective in a global  perspective?
  • What are the major challenges and how can we achieve a gain from them?
  • How will Europe answer to the shift to Asia?
  • What can be Europe’s answer to the demographic change?
  • Where are the chances and risks of the knowledge revolution
  • What needs to be done to secure social coherence within the societies?
15.45h Future Declaration - Conference findings: << back

The conference findings will be summarized in a Future Declaration, edited by the Advisory Board of the European Futurists Conference. The Advisory Board is the steering committee of  the European Futurists Conference Lucerne. Among its members are the directors and chairmen of leading futures studies organisations from 9 European countries.

 

 

 

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