Tag: systems Filter Filter by All AI Automation Blog Commerce Creativity Data Future Innovation Leadership Management Media Metaverse Purpose Sustainability Trends close The age of multiple endings: when everything that stands begins to fall By Martin Recke Are we witnessing the end of modernity? The post-war order, neoliberal globalisation, shared truth, and work are dissolving. We inhabit the interregnum. The Five Horsemen of the Permacrisis By Adam Tinworth Stability is a distant dream, as the 2020s turn into a decade of permacrisis. Here are the biggest factors driving it. Quantum computing: what CMOs need to know By Adam Tinworth Quantum computing excels at simulating complex systems. It’s exactly the technology we need to handle the complex systemic problems our companies are facing. Here’s why. Geopolitics and resilient systems By Martin Recke The long honeymoon of global business is over, geopolitics is back on the corporate agenda. Our systems will change to become more resilient. The systemic paradox By Martin Recke Despite stress and shocks, systems appear remarkably resilient. It’s the paradox of systemic evolution: change to ensure continuity. Another systemic shock By Martin Recke We can't go back to normalcy. Two years into a global pandemic, the war in Ukraine is another systemic shock with massive consequences. Systemic changes By Martin Recke The changes we face today are systemic, and they are tearing apart the fabric of our late-modernity lives. Time to shift our perception. A systemic crisis? By Martin Recke Systems have the ability to evolve, and they do so to survive. Applying linear measures to a nonlinear crisis leads to a systemic crisis. Here's what that means for our future. The systems thinking secret in “think global, act local” By Adam Tinworth The challenges facing us in business and in life feel overwhelming. How can we change anything? The answer lies in remembering that we are, ourselves, part of systems — and we can influence them. Uncertainty and the end of business as usual By Martin Recke Uncertainty has become the norm. That's the end of business as usual.