Table of Contents
Future Scan 2000 and Beyond
Future Scan 2000 and Beyond
Tools of Anticipatory Management
Purpose of Anticipatory Management
Gather Strategic Intelligence
The Tool: Environmental Scanning
Change DriversForces of Change
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Future Scan 2000 and Beyond
Social Trends
The New Realities of Tomorrow
World Population
Since Mid-Century
Share of World PopulationThat is Urban
Urban Population in Industrial & Developing Countries
Average Annual Growth Rate of World Population
Number of Older Americans to Experience Fastest Growth (1990 to 2000)
High Immigration & Fertility May Spur Faster Rate of Population Growth
The Baby Boom Is For Real
Minority Children to Increase Most Rapidly in 1990’s...
Percent Distribution of US. Population by Race and Origin
Over One-Third of Homeless Are Families With Children
% of Illegitimate Births
Non-Family Households to Become Increasingly Common
The Shrinking Middle Class
Illiteracy
The Social Nature of the Issue
Social Nature of the Issue
Social Nature of the Issue
Economics of the Issue
Economics of the Issue
More young people are attending school...
More young people are completing high school and college
Top problems in public schools 1940 & 1990
More College Students to Be OlderOne in Four Will Be Age 35+ By 2001
Violent Crime RatePer 100,000
State and Federal Prison Populations Continue to Rise
What are your nominations in the social area?What are the implications for your business?
Technological
What Lies Ahead in Technology
Development of the integrated circuit (1950s) has permitted an ever-increasing amount of information to be processed or stored on a single microchip. This is what has driven the Information Revolution.
Communication technology is radically changing the speed, direction, and amount of information flow, even as it alters work roles all across organizations. Case in point: the number of secretaries decreased 521,000 from 1987 to 1993.
Since 1983, the U.S. work world has added 25,000,000 computers. The number of cellular telephone subscribers has jumped from zero in 1983 to 16,000,000 by the end of 1993.
The cost of computing power drops roughly 30% every year, and microchips are doubling in performance power every 18 months.
Computer power is now 8,000 times less expensive than it was 30 years ago.
In 1991, companies spent more money on computing and communications gear than the combined monies spent on industrial, mining, farm, and construction equipment.
Say you are going to a party. You buy a greeting card that says “Happy Birthday” when opened. The next day the card is tossed into the trash, throwing away more computer power than existed in the entire world before 1950.
You give the birthday kid a Saturn, made by Sega, the gamemaker. It runs on a higher-performance processor than the original 1976 Cray supercomputer.
Today’s average consumers wear more computing power on their wrists than existed in the entire world before 1961.
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Hypertext
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The Web as a Learning Tool
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The Web as Publisher
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The Web as a Service Tool
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What nominations/comments do you have?What are the implications for your business?
Economic
During the early 1900’s, 85% of our workers were in agriculture. Now agriculture involves less than 3% of the workforce.
In 1950, 73% of U.S. employees worked in production or in manufacturing. Now less than 15% do.
The Department of Labor estimates that by the year 2000 at least 44% of all workers will be in data services (e.g., gathering, processing, retrieving, or analyzing information).
Goods SectorJob Growth in Thousands, 1988-2000
Projected Employment Growth, 1990-2005
Jobs Requiring College Education
Ethnic Makeup of Projected New Additions to the Labor Force Through Year 2000
Women to Comprise Increasing Share of U.S. Work Force
Temporary Workers: A Growth Industry
From 1980 to 1994, the U.S. contingent workforce—temps, self-employed, consultants—increased 57%
In 1991, nearly 1 out of 3 American workers had been with their employer for less than a year, and almost 2 out of 3 for less than 5 years.
Percent of Firms Downsizing by Business Category
Of the 100 largest U.S. companies in 1900, only 16 exist today.
During the decade of the 80’s, 46% of the companies listed in the “Fortune 500” disappeared.
Average Workforce Reduction by Business Category
Job Elimination by Employee Level
Going are the 9-5 workdays, lifetime jobs, predicable, hierarchical relationships, corporate culture security blankets, and, for a large and growing sector of the workforce, the workplace itself (replacedby a cybernetics “workspace”).
Constant training, retraining, job-hopping, and even career-hopping will become the norm.
Working Out of House and Home
More U.S. Households Own Computers
Gross World Product
World Exports
Exports from Industrial & Developing Countries
Trade Continues to Be Dynamic Element in World Economy
Foreign Direct Investment in U.S. Continues to Rise
Research and Development Spending by U.S. Firms Increasing Faster Overseas
What are your nominations?What are the implications for your business?
Environmental Trends
Stages of Environmentalism I
Stages of Environmentalism II
Stages of Environmentalism III
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010 - AIR
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010 - WATER
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010 - WASTE
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010 - BIODIVERSITY
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010 - LAND USE
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - 1995-2010 - PRODUCTS
Global Warming Projected to Accelerate - 1980-2050
Global Average Temperature
World Carbon Emissions from Fossil Fuel Burning
World Automobile Fleet
World Bicycle & Automobile Production
Wind Generating Capacity
World Photovoltaic Shipments
Average Factory Price for Photovoltaic Modules
World Electrical Generating Capacity of Nuclear Power Plants
World Nuclear Reactor Construction Starts
Pollution
What are your nominations in the social area?What are the implications for your business?
Political
State Governments Fund Increasing Share of Public Education
National Health Care Costs Projected to Escalate Sharply
Estimates of HIV Infections Worldwide
Health Spending
State Spending On Medicaid Could Double By 1995
U.S. and Soviet Nuclear Warheads
What are your nominations in the social area?What are the implications for your business?
Change DriversForces of Change
The Maturation of America
The Mosaic society
Redefinition of Individual and Societal Roles
The Information-Based Economy
Globalization
Economic
Personal and Environmental Health
Family and Home Redefined
Implications for Anticipatory Educational Managers
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