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To Organizational Futurists: Enter the Fray!

September 1, 2012 by Andy Hines Leave a Comment

An interesting learning from my dissertation on the role of organizational futurists in integrating foresight into organizations was that my early hunch about the political nature of the role indeed seems promising. My advisor at Leeds Metropolitan University, Jeff Gold, steered me toward the work of social constructionists, such as Ken Gergen, John Shotter, Vivien Burr and many others. The social constructionists suggest that people jointly construct meaning about the world. If you will reality itself is socially constructed. I had dabbled with these ideas with Berger and Luckmann’s 1967 classic The Social Construction of Reality, and now count myself persuaded!

The organizational futurist role, as I’ve characterized it, suggests an insider approach [see “Which type of futurist are you?”] but recognizes that other approaches, such as the provocateur, are viable and useful as well –but not as appropriate to this role. The key rationale is that the socially constructed nature of meaning-making in the organization (and for that matter of the future itself) involves a high degree of dialogue and negotiation that is difficult to effectively participate in from outside the organization (i.e., in a consulting futurist role). The organizational futurist benefits from being “closer” to the inner workings of organization.

Three quotes illustrate how dialogue, rhetoric and argumentation are central to this meaning-making process, and the need for participation is vital.

  • Cunliffe (pp.653-654), suggests “knowledge is ephemeral, indeterminate, embedded, and reflexive, thus one must be present with it.”
  • Gergen (1985, p.267) notes that “the process of understanding is not automatically driven by the forces of nature, but is the result of an active, cooperative enterprise of persons in relationship.”
  • Shotter (1999, p. 371) adds that…”our actions are, to an extent, responsively shaped by what occurs around us.”

If an organizational futurist accepts this argument, it suggests that rather than shrinking from organization life and its accompanying politics, it must be embraced. In other words, enter the fray to advance the cause of integrating foresight into your organization! Andy Hines

References

Cunliffe, A. (2011) Crafting qualitative research: Morgan and Smircich 30 years on. Organizational Research Methods, 14 (4), pp.647-673.

Gergen, K. (1985) The social constructionist movement in modern psychology. American Psychologist, 40 (3), pp. 266-275.

Shotter, J. (1999) A third way: from units and categories to dialogically structured, responsive, practical understandings. Human Development, 42, pp.369-375.

Filed Under: Foresight Tagged With: Berger, Burr, Cunliffe, foresight, futurists, Gergen, Luckman, organizational futurist, politics, reality, Shotter, social constructionism

Sandrine: A Poster Child for Emerging Values Shifts

January 10, 2011 by Andy Hines 2 Comments

In researching the emerging values shifts for my upcoming book with No Limits Publishing, I’m always eager to come across “real life” examples. Meet Sandrine Gressard Bélanger, who had hired me for a speaking gig several years back. My memory of her was as a positive, energetic, and hard worker — someone on the fast track to success.

We recently caught back up, and she relayed some significant changes in her life. She and her husband took over an Inn in the country called Auberge des Beaux Cantons, which they run as a ranch and wellness center with workshops, conferences, and performances around happiness and well-being. Her production company, Jasabel productions just launched a new motivational audio CD on Happiness with 8 songs and 10 spoken tracks. She helps people to focus on the positive in their lives and to find the happiness inside them. Not stopping there, she wants this happiness work to form the basis for working towards a society model in order to go into politics. She thinks politics can be done very differently. Her overall goal, “is to get people to reduce the economic factor from their lives and instead focus on their potential and create their lives using that and unconditional love. Then, abundance always follows and finds its way into their lives.”

There’s more (e.g., presiding over a Business Women’s Network) but you get the idea. The essence here is how value shifts are leading consumers (aka people) to increasingly make career and lifestyle choices that favor quality-of-life, self-expression, and making a difference over the old model of accumulating materials goods, wealth, and success-at-all costs. Andy Hines

Filed Under: Values, Work Tagged With: happiness, making a difference, meaning, politics, self-expression, society, values, wellness, work

Not Thinking the Unthinkable….is Not Thinking

January 5, 2011 by Andy Hines 2 Comments

While I will rarely comment on current politics, I was moved and disappointed to see today’s “A Reversal on End-of-Life Planning. It is sad, troubling, fill-in-your-favorite descriptor to see that discussion around important future issues such as end-of-life planning has been effectively shut down. It reminded me of the roots of futures studies when Herman Kahn introduced scenario planning as a policy tool enabling the discussion of difficult issues, such as the various policy options for dealing with the possibility of nuclear annihilation, aka “thinking the unthinkable.” Today, it seems, rather than discuss difficult policy options, they are simply removed. Doubleplusbad. Andy Hines

Filed Under: Values Tagged With: health care, issues, kahn, New York Times, politics, scenario, values

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