I’m listening to the first episode of the Exponential Wisdom podcast and heard an absolutely astounding prediction.
In the next decade, we’ll see a 1,000X (AKA 100,000%) increase in information, an important measure of change.
The hosts, Peter Diamandis and Dan Sullivan, went on to predict that same would happen in the subsequent decade, and in the one after that … the very definition of “exponential”.
Diamandis also predicted that “every company, every product, every service – every single one – will become disrupted, will become “obsoleted.”
What would thousand-fold (10 years), million-fold (20 years) or billion-fold (30 years) change actually look like? How do you get your brain around that? It’s an important question because if you can conceptualize this, you can better position your business and yourself to prosper.
When you think forward, 30 years seems like an infinitely long time. To get perspective, look backwards instead. Remember dearly departed Prince’s song (Party Like It’s) 1999? Don’t worry, that song is not 30 years old. No, last September it turned 36! Ouch. Take a short break to listen to it and contemplate the passage of more than one-third of a century.
I wondered, if Diamandis is right, the 10X-per-decade growth in information / change must already be happening. I should be able to find evidence of it. So, I went looking and found some dazzling examples.
You’re thinking that my sister-in-law is Warren Buffett. Unfortunately, she’s not. Instead, over 1.5 decades, the cost of DNA sequencing has changed by a factor of 38,599,000. Today, you can get it done for just $69.95.
Look back 10 years and I bet you can find dozens of similar examples. Indeed, we can start to understand what 1,000X change looks like having just lived through it. And we can also appreciate how fast 10 years (or thanks to Prince, 35 years) happens. So now we can better contemplate the next 10 years using … drum roll again … “Dave’s Implications Exercise”.
Get a smart team together to brainstorm:
Step 1: Pick a scenario, such as “energy cost goes to zero”, or “autonomous vehicles become pervasive”, or “image recognition gets 1,000X better/faster/cheaper”, or “video screens get so cheap and thin that they can be part of product packaging or wallpaper”, or “computers achieve consciousness”, or “labor cost goes to zero (robots)”, or “the unemployment rate goes to almost 100%”, any other scenario of interest to you.
Step 2: Enumerate the implications of that scenario. There are typically dozens or hundreds of implications. For example, if energy cost goes to zero, desalination becomes economically affordable. Population growth in the teeth of a long-term drought in the Western US becomes a non-issue.
Step 3: List the resulting opportunities and decide which ones you want to pursue. I predict that the market for desalination systems is going to be huge!
We’ve been through 1,000X change on countless dimensions during the past decade. That gives us a 0.1% understanding of what the next decade will be like, so at least we’ve got our toehold. Diamandis advises, “You either are going to disrupt yourself or someone else will.” The key question is: what are you doing about it?
Ready for more? Browse additional articles in Technology, Vistage Expert Speakers!