The document discusses the need for transformative solutions to address environmental challenges. It notes that:
1. Many planetary boundaries have been crossed and ecosystems are collapsing, requiring an 80% reduction in human impact.
2. Transformative solutions are needed, rather than incremental changes, as political and scientific agreement indicates the situation has passed the point where gradual changes are sufficient.
3. Companies in the 21st century need to focus not just on reducing their own direct emissions to zero, but on enabling emission reductions through innovative solutions in their sector, with a goal of enabling a 15-30% total reduction by 2030.
The document discusses the opportunities for information and communication technology (ICT) companies to become heroes and leaders in sustainability solutions in the 21st century. It notes that we have crossed several planetary boundaries and ecosystems are collapsing. There is agreement that we need to reduce our environmental impact significantly. ICT can play a key role by providing transformative solutions that enable major reductions in resource use across sectors like transportation, energy, and manufacturing. Trillions of dollars will be invested in infrastructure over the next 30 years, presenting a huge opportunity for ICT solutions. The document calls on ICT companies to seize this opportunity to become heroes and help solve the biggest challenges facing humanity and the planet.
Rekayasa sistem informasi mencakup proses perencanaan, pengembangan, dan implementasi sistem informasi dengan menggunakan metode dan teknologi tertentu untuk menyelesaikan masalah bisnis dan organisasi. Proses ini meliputi analisis kebutuhan, desain sistem, pembangunan perangkat lunak, pengujian, pelatihan, dan perawatan sistem.
Launch of Transformative Cluster Platform (Beta 1) 17th of March 2014dennispamlin
Launch: 17 March 2014
Address: VIC studio, KTH, Stockholm http://vicstudion.se/directions/
Language: All presentations in Swedish except from foreign guests
Time: 09.00-17.00 + mingle/demo
Morning refreshments 09.00 – 09.30
Welcome 09.30 – 09.45
Welcome to a day where we welcome the winners in the 21st Century Dennis Pamlin & Madeleine Enarsson, The Cluster Platform for Transformative Solutions
Supporting entrepreneurs in the 21st Century 09.45 – 10.00
The need for entrepreneurs and new approaches Lena Roth, Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth
Introduction to the cluster platform and the day's agenda: Madeleine Enarsson & Dennis Pamlin, The Cluster Platform for Transformative Solutions
The global need for transformative solutions 10.00 – 10.45
Next 20 years : The need for tomorrow 's solutions today Anders Wijkman. Club of Rome
Companies in the 21st Century (video message in English) Seema Aurora, Confederation of Indian Industries
Starting a company with transformative solutions and a global perspective Hans Hassle, Plantagon
Complexity, connectivity and collaboration 10.45 – 11.15
The possibilities that a connected world gives us Mattias Höjer, Centre for Sustainable Communications
Internet of Things as Cybersyn 2.0
Rob van Kranenburg, Coordinator of Activity Chain 8: Societal at IERC IoT Research Cluster of the EU Commission
Collaboration on the cluster platform for transformative solutions 11.15 – 11.30
The Cluster Platform
Refreshments 11:30 – 11:45
Addressing challenges in the 21st Century 11:45 – 12:30
Sustainability in the Anthropocene Epoch: a new step
Bo Kjellén, Former Chief Climate Negotiator, Sweden
Building labs and platforms for transformative solutions in the 21st Century Jen Morgan, Finance LAB
Panel Discussion 12.30 – 12.55
Introducing the lunch 12.55 – 13.05
Lunch 13.00 – 13.45
A healthy, beautiful, “ten billion” meal by transformative entrepreneurs
Demo and launch of platform 13.45 – 14.15
Cities / regions leading the way with clusters 14.15 – 15.30
Transformative Solutions for Mobility / Transport, Nutrition / Food and Building / Spaces
Refreshments 15.30 – 16.00
Identifying, creating & working with transformative clusters 16.00 – 16.55
Entrepreneurs from the platform
Wrapping up and next steps 16.55 – 17.00
Mingle/cluster shaping & demo of the equipment in the lab 17. 00 – 19.00
The document discusses the opportunities for information and communication technology (ICT) companies to become heroes and leaders in sustainability solutions in the 21st century. It notes that we have crossed several planetary boundaries and ecosystems are collapsing. There is agreement that we need to reduce our environmental impact significantly. ICT can play a key role by providing transformative solutions that enable major reductions in resource use across sectors like transportation, energy, and manufacturing. Trillions of dollars will be invested in infrastructure over the next 30 years, presenting a huge opportunity for ICT solutions. The document calls on ICT companies to seize this opportunity to become heroes and help solve the biggest challenges facing humanity and the planet.
Rekayasa sistem informasi mencakup proses perencanaan, pengembangan, dan implementasi sistem informasi dengan menggunakan metode dan teknologi tertentu untuk menyelesaikan masalah bisnis dan organisasi. Proses ini meliputi analisis kebutuhan, desain sistem, pembangunan perangkat lunak, pengujian, pelatihan, dan perawatan sistem.
Launch of Transformative Cluster Platform (Beta 1) 17th of March 2014dennispamlin
Launch: 17 March 2014
Address: VIC studio, KTH, Stockholm http://vicstudion.se/directions/
Language: All presentations in Swedish except from foreign guests
Time: 09.00-17.00 + mingle/demo
Morning refreshments 09.00 – 09.30
Welcome 09.30 – 09.45
Welcome to a day where we welcome the winners in the 21st Century Dennis Pamlin & Madeleine Enarsson, The Cluster Platform for Transformative Solutions
Supporting entrepreneurs in the 21st Century 09.45 – 10.00
The need for entrepreneurs and new approaches Lena Roth, Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth
Introduction to the cluster platform and the day's agenda: Madeleine Enarsson & Dennis Pamlin, The Cluster Platform for Transformative Solutions
The global need for transformative solutions 10.00 – 10.45
Next 20 years : The need for tomorrow 's solutions today Anders Wijkman. Club of Rome
Companies in the 21st Century (video message in English) Seema Aurora, Confederation of Indian Industries
Starting a company with transformative solutions and a global perspective Hans Hassle, Plantagon
Complexity, connectivity and collaboration 10.45 – 11.15
The possibilities that a connected world gives us Mattias Höjer, Centre for Sustainable Communications
Internet of Things as Cybersyn 2.0
Rob van Kranenburg, Coordinator of Activity Chain 8: Societal at IERC IoT Research Cluster of the EU Commission
Collaboration on the cluster platform for transformative solutions 11.15 – 11.30
The Cluster Platform
Refreshments 11:30 – 11:45
Addressing challenges in the 21st Century 11:45 – 12:30
Sustainability in the Anthropocene Epoch: a new step
Bo Kjellén, Former Chief Climate Negotiator, Sweden
Building labs and platforms for transformative solutions in the 21st Century Jen Morgan, Finance LAB
Panel Discussion 12.30 – 12.55
Introducing the lunch 12.55 – 13.05
Lunch 13.00 – 13.45
A healthy, beautiful, “ten billion” meal by transformative entrepreneurs
Demo and launch of platform 13.45 – 14.15
Cities / regions leading the way with clusters 14.15 – 15.30
Transformative Solutions for Mobility / Transport, Nutrition / Food and Building / Spaces
Refreshments 15.30 – 16.00
Identifying, creating & working with transformative clusters 16.00 – 16.55
Entrepreneurs from the platform
Wrapping up and next steps 16.55 – 17.00
Mingle/cluster shaping & demo of the equipment in the lab 17. 00 – 19.00
For the most time of human history, life was local and linear. Local in the way that anything that happened was close by, a least within a walking distance. Linear in the way that your life was the same as your parents and your children. Nothing ever changed.
Just like the evolution of man, technology improvements follow an evolutionary progress. New ideas or products are to begin with immature and fragile with slow improvements. Then the progress accelerates until the products become mature and taken for granted. Then the cycle repeats and a new layer of technology is added to the previous. This process is exponential. One such observation of exponential is Moore’s Law.
We will explore what exponential means. We look at Moore´s law and The Law of the Accelerating returns.
Robin Murray spoke on the topic of the crisis and the new social economy at the Euclid Network AGM on 18 September 2009, drawing from this essay, which argues that the early years of the 21st century are witnessing the emergence of a new kind of economy that has profound implications for the future of public services as well as for the daily life of citizens.
Geoff Mulgan delivered the keynote presentation at Socitm 2009. There is a summary of this presentation and a short interview with Geoff free-to-view at www.socitm09.net.
For the most time of human history, life was local and linear. Local in the way that anything that happened was close by, a least within a walking distance. Linear in the way that your life was the same as your father and your childs. Nothing changed.
Just like the evolution of man, technology improvements follow an evolutionary progress. New ideas or products are to begin with immature and fragile with slow improvements. Then the progress accelerates until the products become mature and taken for granted. Then the cycle repeats and a new layer of technology is added to the previous. This process is exponential. One such observation of exponential is Moore’s Law.
We will explore what exponential means. We look at Moore´s law and The Law of the Accelerating returns.
This document discusses the evolution of different forms of communication and their impacts on human culture and society. It notes that:
- Speech enabled tribes with 10^7 bits of information, while writing enabled larger city cultures with 10^11 bits through the printing press and Renaissance, leading to the industrial society.
- The digital age now handles 10^25 bits but the long term impacts on culture are still unknown. While technology has advanced rapidly, human brains still primarily operate at the level of speech and learning. Major trends like climate change, demographics, global networks and new technologies are reshaping societies in fundamental ways.
The document argues that we are in the early stages of a new digital revolution that will transform social
This document discusses the evolution of design from the 19th to 21st centuries. In the 19th century, engineers exploited energy resources like coal to power industry for the minority. In the 20th century, marketers understood consumer desires to fuel mass production. Now in the 21st century, designers aim to empower individuals by creating simple, fair, and beautiful solutions through collaborative digital technologies. The document argues that designers must think differently by imagining user experiences first before developing technical solutions, in order to design a future where everything is connected through ubiquitous sensors and computing.
The document discusses the evolution of different forms of communication and their impacts on human culture and society.
Speech enabled tribes with 10^7 bits of information, while writing led to city cultures with 10^11 bits enabled by printing and the Renaissance. The digital age now provides 10^25 bits but the impact on culture is still unknown. ICT is transforming work and requiring new skills while also enabling new forms of leaderless social movements and revolutions organized through social media. Overall technology and information availability is accelerating changes to society and culture at an increasing pace.
This document provides an essay planning template comparing the impacts of the industrial and digital revolutions. The template outlines that the essay will discuss 1) communication methods before and after each revolution and 2) transportation changes from carriages to modern forms of transport, with the industrial revolution starting innovations that the digital revolution built upon. The template suggests the industrial revolution made a bigger social impact by starting transformations in communication and transportation.
Computers have transformed from room-sized machines to pocket-sized devices, profoundly impacting modern life. The document traces the evolution of computing from mechanical calculators to early electronic computers that filled entire rooms. Personal computers in the 1970s empowered individuals by shifting to smaller, more accessible devices. The internet truly connected the world by allowing computers to share information through Tim Berners-Lee's creation of the World Wide Web.
The document discusses the regeneration of the London Docklands from the 1960s to the late 20th century. It describes how the area declined as shipping moved downstream and manufacturing declined. In the 1950s-60s, poor quality housing like tower blocks were built. The London Docklands Development Corporation (LDDC) was set up in 1981 to regenerate the area economically by attracting private investment and improving infrastructure and living conditions. The LDDC attracted businesses to the area through tax breaks and new developments like Canary Wharf, transforming the Docklands.
World's Best Mining Companies to Watch In 2022 December2022.pptxInsightsSuccess4
This edition features a handful of business Best Mining Companies leaders across several sectors that are at the forefront of leading us into a digital future
This document discusses innovation and innovative connections. It provides an overview of innovation, what innovation is and is not, and how inventions become innovations through networks and connections between individuals, firms, and organizations. Examples are given of innovative individuals and companies throughout history that achieved success through these connections, as well as the importance of both past and present knowledge in innovation. The implications of radical innovations that have shifted economic systems are also discussed, along with the challenges of global warming and the need for a new style of capitalism focused on sustainability.
The document discusses pressures facing cities of London and Shanghai in different ways. For London, it mentions problems of transport and communications, wealth disparity, and environmental quality. For Shanghai, it shows maps demonstrating the city's expansion from 1992 to 2009, increasing wealth, and growing road congestion problems. The document provides context on London's expansion after World War 1 and how the city's growth was curtailed by the establishment of the Metropolitan Green Belt, as well as how London is now expanding again in population.
keynote at Irish HCI, Limerick, 2nd Nov 2018
http://alandix.com/academic/talks/IHCI-deep-digitality-2018/
We constantly hear about disruptive technology, but how radical is the change due to digital technology?
In the hills and mountains of the South Wales coal valleys, rivers radiate out and then south toward the sea. This seems reasonable until you learn that the geology beneath is a syncline a basin-shaped structure of rock strata. The current rivers form a superimposed drainage pattern, the routes the rivers ran before the geology changed. As the ground rose and sank below, the rivers maintained their old courses, a relic of a one hundred million year past.
In reality digital technology is often like this, largely reinforcing the existing structures of power and organisation in government, commerce and health. The digital geology is changing beneath our feet and yet digital technology cuts the same paths.
Can we reimagine industry and civic society if digital technology had come first, before the industrial revolution and maybe even before the rise of the mercantile class?
Despite immense achievements by 1900, the following decades witnessed more technological advancements over a wide range of activities than all of previously recorded history. The two World Wars were the most important drivers of technological and political change, hastening developments from "little science" to "big science" through large government-sponsored research teams. Notable 20th century inventions included airplanes, computers, the Internet, plastics, lasers, transistors, televisions and more, creating an unprecedented era of possibilities and dangers.
New school vs old school media communication slideshare versionPPMSM
1. The passage discusses the evolution of communication technologies over time, from smoke signals and drums to the modern internet and multimedia communications.
2. It emphasizes that students now need to be skilled in expressing ideas through multiple technologies, not just printed text, as the internet allows for participation and user-generated content through sites like Wikipedia, YouTube, and Flickr.
3. The passage quotes that more innovations will be introduced in the next decade than throughout all of previous human history, and that literacy in the future will mean the ability to learn, unlearn and relearn constantly.
The document discusses the role of hype in new technologies and predicting their futures. It argues that (1) hype is necessary to create "bubbles" that inflate investment in new innovations and allow them to overcome resistance to change, (2) bubbles signify a change from old to new systems and mark the transition from high growth to slower growth, and (3) while it is difficult to predict technology futures precisely, there are broader patterns and laws such as Moore's law that provide some guidance.
For the most time of human history, life was local and linear. Local in the way that anything that happened was close by, a least within a walking distance. Linear in the way that your life was the same as your parents and your children. Nothing ever changed.
Just like the evolution of man, technology improvements follow an evolutionary progress. New ideas or products are to begin with immature and fragile with slow improvements. Then the progress accelerates until the products become mature and taken for granted. Then the cycle repeats and a new layer of technology is added to the previous. This process is exponential. One such observation of exponential is Moore’s Law.
We will explore what exponential means. We look at Moore´s law and The Law of the Accelerating returns.
Robin Murray spoke on the topic of the crisis and the new social economy at the Euclid Network AGM on 18 September 2009, drawing from this essay, which argues that the early years of the 21st century are witnessing the emergence of a new kind of economy that has profound implications for the future of public services as well as for the daily life of citizens.
Geoff Mulgan delivered the keynote presentation at Socitm 2009. There is a summary of this presentation and a short interview with Geoff free-to-view at www.socitm09.net.
For the most time of human history, life was local and linear. Local in the way that anything that happened was close by, a least within a walking distance. Linear in the way that your life was the same as your father and your childs. Nothing changed.
Just like the evolution of man, technology improvements follow an evolutionary progress. New ideas or products are to begin with immature and fragile with slow improvements. Then the progress accelerates until the products become mature and taken for granted. Then the cycle repeats and a new layer of technology is added to the previous. This process is exponential. One such observation of exponential is Moore’s Law.
We will explore what exponential means. We look at Moore´s law and The Law of the Accelerating returns.
This document discusses the evolution of different forms of communication and their impacts on human culture and society. It notes that:
- Speech enabled tribes with 10^7 bits of information, while writing enabled larger city cultures with 10^11 bits through the printing press and Renaissance, leading to the industrial society.
- The digital age now handles 10^25 bits but the long term impacts on culture are still unknown. While technology has advanced rapidly, human brains still primarily operate at the level of speech and learning. Major trends like climate change, demographics, global networks and new technologies are reshaping societies in fundamental ways.
The document argues that we are in the early stages of a new digital revolution that will transform social
This document discusses the evolution of design from the 19th to 21st centuries. In the 19th century, engineers exploited energy resources like coal to power industry for the minority. In the 20th century, marketers understood consumer desires to fuel mass production. Now in the 21st century, designers aim to empower individuals by creating simple, fair, and beautiful solutions through collaborative digital technologies. The document argues that designers must think differently by imagining user experiences first before developing technical solutions, in order to design a future where everything is connected through ubiquitous sensors and computing.
The document discusses the evolution of different forms of communication and their impacts on human culture and society.
Speech enabled tribes with 10^7 bits of information, while writing led to city cultures with 10^11 bits enabled by printing and the Renaissance. The digital age now provides 10^25 bits but the impact on culture is still unknown. ICT is transforming work and requiring new skills while also enabling new forms of leaderless social movements and revolutions organized through social media. Overall technology and information availability is accelerating changes to society and culture at an increasing pace.
This document provides an essay planning template comparing the impacts of the industrial and digital revolutions. The template outlines that the essay will discuss 1) communication methods before and after each revolution and 2) transportation changes from carriages to modern forms of transport, with the industrial revolution starting innovations that the digital revolution built upon. The template suggests the industrial revolution made a bigger social impact by starting transformations in communication and transportation.
Computers have transformed from room-sized machines to pocket-sized devices, profoundly impacting modern life. The document traces the evolution of computing from mechanical calculators to early electronic computers that filled entire rooms. Personal computers in the 1970s empowered individuals by shifting to smaller, more accessible devices. The internet truly connected the world by allowing computers to share information through Tim Berners-Lee's creation of the World Wide Web.
The document discusses the regeneration of the London Docklands from the 1960s to the late 20th century. It describes how the area declined as shipping moved downstream and manufacturing declined. In the 1950s-60s, poor quality housing like tower blocks were built. The London Docklands Development Corporation (LDDC) was set up in 1981 to regenerate the area economically by attracting private investment and improving infrastructure and living conditions. The LDDC attracted businesses to the area through tax breaks and new developments like Canary Wharf, transforming the Docklands.
World's Best Mining Companies to Watch In 2022 December2022.pptxInsightsSuccess4
This edition features a handful of business Best Mining Companies leaders across several sectors that are at the forefront of leading us into a digital future
This document discusses innovation and innovative connections. It provides an overview of innovation, what innovation is and is not, and how inventions become innovations through networks and connections between individuals, firms, and organizations. Examples are given of innovative individuals and companies throughout history that achieved success through these connections, as well as the importance of both past and present knowledge in innovation. The implications of radical innovations that have shifted economic systems are also discussed, along with the challenges of global warming and the need for a new style of capitalism focused on sustainability.
The document discusses pressures facing cities of London and Shanghai in different ways. For London, it mentions problems of transport and communications, wealth disparity, and environmental quality. For Shanghai, it shows maps demonstrating the city's expansion from 1992 to 2009, increasing wealth, and growing road congestion problems. The document provides context on London's expansion after World War 1 and how the city's growth was curtailed by the establishment of the Metropolitan Green Belt, as well as how London is now expanding again in population.
keynote at Irish HCI, Limerick, 2nd Nov 2018
http://alandix.com/academic/talks/IHCI-deep-digitality-2018/
We constantly hear about disruptive technology, but how radical is the change due to digital technology?
In the hills and mountains of the South Wales coal valleys, rivers radiate out and then south toward the sea. This seems reasonable until you learn that the geology beneath is a syncline a basin-shaped structure of rock strata. The current rivers form a superimposed drainage pattern, the routes the rivers ran before the geology changed. As the ground rose and sank below, the rivers maintained their old courses, a relic of a one hundred million year past.
In reality digital technology is often like this, largely reinforcing the existing structures of power and organisation in government, commerce and health. The digital geology is changing beneath our feet and yet digital technology cuts the same paths.
Can we reimagine industry and civic society if digital technology had come first, before the industrial revolution and maybe even before the rise of the mercantile class?
Despite immense achievements by 1900, the following decades witnessed more technological advancements over a wide range of activities than all of previously recorded history. The two World Wars were the most important drivers of technological and political change, hastening developments from "little science" to "big science" through large government-sponsored research teams. Notable 20th century inventions included airplanes, computers, the Internet, plastics, lasers, transistors, televisions and more, creating an unprecedented era of possibilities and dangers.
New school vs old school media communication slideshare versionPPMSM
1. The passage discusses the evolution of communication technologies over time, from smoke signals and drums to the modern internet and multimedia communications.
2. It emphasizes that students now need to be skilled in expressing ideas through multiple technologies, not just printed text, as the internet allows for participation and user-generated content through sites like Wikipedia, YouTube, and Flickr.
3. The passage quotes that more innovations will be introduced in the next decade than throughout all of previous human history, and that literacy in the future will mean the ability to learn, unlearn and relearn constantly.
The document discusses the role of hype in new technologies and predicting their futures. It argues that (1) hype is necessary to create "bubbles" that inflate investment in new innovations and allow them to overcome resistance to change, (2) bubbles signify a change from old to new systems and mark the transition from high growth to slower growth, and (3) while it is difficult to predict technology futures precisely, there are broader patterns and laws such as Moore's law that provide some guidance.
1. Akt 3 har börjat
vem är med, vem tittar på och vem stretar mot
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers Dennis Pamlin, Founder and CEO, 21st Century Frontiers
Stockholm 2011, 10 November 2011
7. 1. Var är vi?
2. Hjältar i ett nytt århundrande
3. Att ta ledningen, inte stå och titta på (hantera de som stretar mot)
4. Möjliga steg framåt
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
9. Where are we?
At the end of the road
http://www.maweb.org/en/index.aspx 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
10. Where are we?
Past the end of the road for the planet
1. There are planetary boundaries. And
many of them have been crossed.
2. The ecosystems have started to
collapse and conflicts are increasing.
3. Political and scientific agreement that
we need to reduce our impact by a
factor five/80% as soon as possible
(incremental improvements are not
enough).
The Stockholm Resilience Centre 二十一世纪新前线
Global Footprint Network
IPCCC
21st Century Frontiers
11. Where are we?
At a time when transformative solutions are needed
Transformative solutions
Transformative Solution Leadership 二十一世纪新前线
http://transformative-solutions.net/2.0/files/material/LCL_Transformative_Solutions.pdf
21st Century Frontiers
12. Where are we?
In the middle of the next industrial/cultural revolution
1771- Two different phases of each technological revolution
The industrial
revolution INSTALLATION DEPLOYMENT
1829-
Steam, coal, iron
& railways
Turning
1875- point
Steel & heavy
engineering
1908-
Automobile, oil,
mass production More efficiently Applying paradigm to
solving old problems innovate across society
1971- - winners among old – new winners
players Time
IT &
20-30 years
telecommunication
Based on Ericsson material quoting Professor Carlota Perez, 二十一世纪新前线
Universities of Cambridge, Tallinn and Sussex 21st Century Frontiers
13. Where are we in this country?
Sweden in a dangerous space of boringness
SWEDEN
http://www.global-ict-leadership.net/ 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
19. Hunting the villain
What is called “green” today is often either mainly moving the problem
or is not enough (not always bad, but not enough and often actually bad)
Fluxes of Emissions Embodied in Trade (Mt CO2 y-1)
From dominant net exporting countries (blue) to dominant net importing countries (red).
http://www.globalcarbonproject.org/carbonbudget/ 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
20. ACT 3
The Hero
Remember, remember the2009/11 => 2011
The solution era 5th of December
http://www.transformative-step.net/ 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
22. Few understand how much money that must change direction
New ways to provide the solutions we need must be acknowledged
and new business successes welcomed.
$350 trillion
to be invested in construction and use of urban infrastructures
over the next 30 years to provide basic services such as
mobility, heat, lighting, etc. 7 times current annual GDP
Booz and Co. 2010 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
23. BIG PROBLEMS
Too many good solutions, that are too good in too many areas
http://www.pamlin.net/new/?p=463 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
25. Approach
Direct emissions/ local Embedded emissions/ low carbon Solutions/ global development
reductions trade
Reduce/move Address the Develop
direct problems Full Life-Cycle Global Solutions
Transformative Solution Leadership 二十一世纪新前线
http://transformative-solutions.net/2.0/files/material/LCL_Transformative_Solutions.pdf
21st Century Frontiers
26. Being a company in the 21st century: Problems
Company’s/Sectors own emissions
FOCUS ON ZERO
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
27. Being a company in the 21st century: Solutions
Company’s/Sectors own emissions
(e.g. ICT sector)
FOCUS ON DRIVERS
FOR INNOVATION
The emissions the solution company/sector can
help reduce
(The ICT sector 15 to >30% by 2030)
FOCUS ON
EXPONENTIAL GROWTH
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
29. Identify and lobby for transformative thresholds
Relevance/how easy
different solutions are to The opportunity hook
implement Threshold levels for transformative change
Relevance for old ways
Threshold level
of providing a service
Relevance for
transformative ways of
providing a service
Difficulty to implement
solution
0-25 25-75 75-90 90-100
% Change needed compared with baseline
31. Fun!!
1. Think about what you already do
Enjoy being a leader, but get the numbers in place (magnitudes)
2. Participate
Transformative step of the day, track out of the box on Twitter, etc
3. Use the nine billion filter
Help drive innovation and export of smart services
4. Legacy
Create/join a transformative teams to be proud of:
• Digital Alexandria
• 21st Century Office
• Plus Buildings
• 24/7 Health
5. Set planet positive targets
Help the planet get what it needs, reduce the footprint in the rest of
the world and make sure that the money spent goes to those
reinvesting it for the 21st century…
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
33. “Det finns saker man
måste göra, även om
det är farligt. Annars är
man ingen människa,
utan bara en liten lort.”
34. Being a company in the 21st century: new clusters
The 21st century infrastructure: The internet of things
(>50 billions 2020)
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
35. Being a company in the 21st century: 0 to 9 bil
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
36. Push for a move from problems to new solutions
Incremental improvements Technology Transformative
in existing systems leaps solutions
二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers
37. Long-term GDP trends
Goldman Sachs
50000 China
US
40000
Japan
30000
$USbn
Germany
20000 UK
France
10000
Italy
0 India
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
2035
2040
2045
2050
EU-4
Goldman Sachs: The Long-Term Outlook for the BRICs 二十一世纪新前线
21st Century Frontiers