Turning the Customer Experience Trifecta into a Sure Thing

Turning the Customer Experience Trifecta into a Sure Thing

GUEST POST from Shep Hyken

If you go to the horse race, you can place a bet known as the trifecta. This is where you correctly predict which horses will finish first, second, and third, and in the specific order. The payout is typically big because, while it’s simple in theory and easy to explain, it is a hard bet to win.

Here’s a bet you can always win: taking care of your customers. And when you do it right, you hit the trifecta:

  • First, they come back.
  • Second, customers who come back will typically spend more every time.
  • Third, customers who come back also recommend you. We love it when customers do our advertising and marketing for us.

So, how can we define taking care of your customers? Here’s a simple definition:

Taking care of your customers means you consistently deliver on what they expect, and do it in a way that’s easy, respectful, and reliable every time.

So, let’s break down the important words within this definition:

  • Consistently: The experience must be predictable and consistent. Consistency creates confidence. Confidence creates trust, and that leads to repeat business, and ideally and ultimately, customer loyalty.
  • Expect: Customers want you to meet their expectations. If you consistently – there’s that word again – meet those expectations, you don’t leave your customers hoping for more. And once in a while, you can go “above and beyond” or “over the top” when the opportunity presents itself.
  • Easy: This is about convenience. Customers love doing business with a company or brand that is easy and convenient. I wrote an entire book on this one, The Amazement Revolution.
  • Respectful: In addition to treating customers with respect, also respect their time. Wasting someone’s time is a sign of disrespect.
  • Reliable: This goes along with consistency and expectations. The product must do what the customer paid for it to do. No matter how good the service is, if the product doesn’t work, even the friendliest customer service won’t get customers to come back.

When a customer chooses to do business with you, there’s an implied agreement. They give you money in exchange for a product or service, and they expect you to take care of them as I’ve defined it. It may seem like common sense, and it is, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy to implement. You need all employees on board with this simple concept. Everyone must understand how they contribute to the concept of taking care of the customer. Do that, and you’re not gambling. You’re betting on a sure thing. You’ll hit the trifecta!

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Aesthetics – Part One

Aesthetics - Part One

GUEST POST from Geoffrey A. Moore

The Infinite Staircase offers readers a metaphysics and an ethics shaped by the 21st century’s understanding of how the world came to be. It has little to say, however about esthetics, and that is too large a part of human experience to neglect. With that in mind, I am going to address the topic in two short essays.

The first essay, the one you have in hand, is an interaction with The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy’s entry on the topic. I found myself constantly quarreling with it, and I wanted to sort out why, hence this piece. What I see now is that I was clearing a space to dig deeper into the issues I truly care about. That’s what the second essay is intended to do.

Of course, this begs the question, do you even need to read this essay? I mean, just because I have to clear my throat before I speak doesn’t mean you have to listen to it. That said, if you are academically oriented, or have ever taken courses in philosophy, I suggest you do read this if only to clarify your own point of view. If, on the other hand, you are simply interested in the nature of the esthetic experience itself, feel free to ignore this piece, but do keep an eye out for the next essay.

Essay #1: A Dialog with Cambridge

NOTE: The format of the dialog is to present the Cambridge material in blockquote format and my responses to it in normal text.

Aesthetics: the branch of philosophy that examines the nature of art and the character of our experience of art and of the natural environment.

The purpose of esthetics, as of any academic discipline, is to investigate a body of forces in order to better understand its nature and determine how best to incorporate it into our strategies for living. In the case of esthetics, the forces under study create psychological experiences, and it is these experiences that provide the data upon which the discipline is based.

Because the concept of experience is central to the understanding of esthetics, we need to get clear about its meaning. In particular, we need to distinguish between two common understandings of the term, one of which is central, the other of which is tangential to our purposes.

Here are the two definitions, taken from the Oxford English Dictionary:

  1. The actual observation of facts or events considered as a source of knowledge.
  2. The fact of being consciously the subject of a state or condition, or of being consciously affected by an event.

Definition 2 is the one that is central to our purpose. We are interested in the impact of an object on a subject, what it is like to be “consciously affected,” something that depends very much on the properties of both the subject and the object. We investigate this experience first by examining the residue of its impact on the subject and then by seeking attributes in the object that account for it.

This is where Definition 1 comes in. It is a tactic we use in pursuing a better understanding of what is happening under Definition 2. But we need to be careful here as we cannot objectively observe the facts in question—they are inherently subjective and can only be contemplated internally or reported externally. That means there can be no purely objective basis for esthetics. We must keep both subject and object in view at all times, focusing specifically on what is happening when we are being internally affected by an externally occasioned event.

It emerged as a separate field of philosophical inquiry during the eighteenth century in England and on the Continent. Recognition of aesthetics as a separate branch of philosophy coincided with the development of theories of art that grouped together painting, poetry, sculpture, music, and dance (and often landscape gardening) as the same kind of thing, les beaux arts, or the fine arts.

The fine arts are indeed all within the scope of esthetics. As a group, however, they are highly refined. Their force tends to be more ethereal than many people can experience, particularly modern audiences that are more global and less privileged than the eighteenth century thinkers who created the concept initially. As a result, we should not position the fine arts as the centerpoint of our category but rather at one end of a more inclusive spectrum, albeit one we have as yet to define.

Baumgarten coined the term ‘aesthetics’ in his Reflections on Poetry (1735) as the name for one of the two branches of the study of knowledge, i.e. for the study of sensory experience coupled with feeling, which he argued provided a different type of knowledge from the distinct, abstract ideas studied by “logic.” He derived it from the ancient Greek aisthanomai (to perceive), and “the aesthetic” has always been intimately connected with sensory experience and the kinds of feelings it arouses.

“Sensory experience coupled with feeling” is as good a starting point as any for capturing the full spectrum of aesthetic experience. It is still too general, as there are many such experiences that are not aesthetic, but it gives us a point of departure. The challenge is that when we try to convert any such experience into knowledge, of necessity we must express ourselves in language, and this can be confusing because the experience itself is pre-linguistic.

That is, to use the framework of The Infinite Staircase, sensory experience coupled with feeling takes place on the stairs of desire, consciousness, values, and culture—all prior to the stairs of language, narrative, analytics, and theory. When we use these higher stairs to explain what is happening on the lower ones, we are prone to imposing their structure in ways that ride roughshod over the subtleties of the actual experience. This is reflected throughout the list of questions that follow.

Questions specific to the field of esthetics are: Is there a special attitude, the aesthetic attitude, which we should take toward works of art and the natural environment, and what is it like?

The answer is no. This is an example of analytics seeking to reposition experiences that arise from below by proposing that they descend from above. That is, the refined analytical intellect is positioning itself at the center of an experience during which it was not even present. This is a big mistake, one that implies aesthetic experiences are reserved for the few who possess refined sensibilities when in fact they are universal.

Is there a distinctive type of experience, an aesthetic experience, and what is it?

The answer is yes, and in the lexicon of philosophy, it falls into the category of qualia. The entry on qualia from Wikipedia provides a useful introduction, defining it as subjective conscious experiences, examples of which include the perceived sensation of pain of a headache, the taste of wine, and the redness of an evening sky. As qualitative characteristics of sensation, qualia stand in contrast to propositional attitudes, where the focus is on beliefs about experience rather than what it is directly like to be experiencing.

Now, to be fair, pain does not qualify as an aesthetic experience, but the taste of wine and the color of red certainly do. The key point is that all the examples stand in contrast to propositional attitudes, the domain of analytics, which can be about aesthetic experience but not integral to it.

Is there a special object of attention that we can call the aesthetic object?

Yes, there is. It is whatever body of forces that are creating the impact on the subject, be that the wine, the evening sky, a painting, a story, or a piece of wood. But the object alone cannot be said to be inherently aesthetic. Only after it has evoked a sensory experience coupled with feeling can it be so termed, and then only with respect to subjects in whom that experience has been evoked.

Finally, is there a distinctive value, aesthetic value, comparable with moral, epistemic, and religious values?

Yes, there is. To put things in perspective

  • Moral value consists of behavior that is beneficial to others and consistent with social norms.
  • Epistemic value consists of justified true beliefs that lead to effective action in the world.
  • Religious value consists of spiritual experiences and commitments that provide sacred and undeniable guidelines for life in the world.

In such a context, aesthetic value consists of pleasurable, contemplative, non-utilitarian, resonating experiences that we characterize as beautiful, refreshing, and inspiring.

Some questions overlap with those in the philosophy of art, such as those concerning the nature of beauty, and whether there is a faculty of taste that is exercised in judging the aesthetic character and value of natural objects or works of art.

The nature of beauty is indeed an elusive topic, one where we need to be humble, but with respect to the faculty of taste, we can be more assertive. In the eighteenth century, judgments of taste were appropriated by a social class that privileged refinement and intellect over sensibility and joy. In the nineteenth century, the Romantic movement aggressively worked to overthrow and reverse this polarity, and in the twentieth, cultural relativism worked to deny the validity of any aesthetic judgments that extended beyond the personal preferences of the person making them within the norms of the culture they are inhabiting. All three positions contain an element of truth, and none by itself does a good job of accounting for the overall nature of beauty. The good news is that they are not incompatible with one another, so a synthesis of all three can potentially provide a stable foundation for esthetic theory.

Aesthetics also encompasses the philosophy of art. The most central issue in the philosophy of art has been how to define ‘art’. Not all cultures have, or have had, a concept of art that coincides with the one that emerged in Western Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. What justifies our applying our concept to the things people in these other cultures have produced?

It is justifiable to apply our concepts to our experience of things other cultures have produced and how they stack up against our cultural norms. We just should not apply them to their experiences or the status of the things in their culture. The temptation to do so derives from seeking to locate the aesthetic force solely in the object. That is not a tenable claim.

There are also many pictures (including paintings), songs, buildings, and bits of writing that are not art. What distinguishes those pictures, musical works, etc., that are art from those that are not?

They do not evoke the pleasurable, contemplative, non-utilitarian, resonating experiences we call beautiful, refreshing, and inspiring.

Various answers have been proposed that identify the distinguishing features of art in terms of form, expressiveness, intentions of the maker, and social roles or uses of the object.

None of these topics is off limits, but each one can take us down a rabbit hole if we try to use it as definitive of what constitutes art. That begs the question of how we would define art, but we will leave that to the second essay.

Since the eighteenth century, there have been debates about what kinds of things count as “art.” Some have argued that architecture and ceramics are not art because their functions are primarily utilitarian, and novels were for a long time not listed among the “fine arts” because they are not embodied in a sensuous medium. Debates continue to arise over new media and what may be new art forms, such as film, video, photography, performance art, found art, furniture, posters, earthworks, and computer and electronic art. Sculptures these days may be made out of dirt, feces, or various discarded and mass-produced objects, rather than marble or bronze. There is often an explicit rejection of craft and technique by twentieth-century artists, and the subject matter has expanded to include the banal and everyday, and not merely mythological, historical, and religious subjects as in years past. All of these developments raise questions about the relevance of the category of “fine” or “high” art.

When discussing esthetics in general, over-rotating to fine or high art is simply a mistake. It is a valid subcategory, but not to the exclusion of other sensory experiences coupled with esthetic feelings. Once again, we see the analytical intellect overstepping its bounds, seeking to impose itself as an arbiter of aesthetic value when its proper role is to be an interpreter of aesthetic experience.

Another set of issues in philosophy of art concerns how artworks are to be interpreted, appreciated, and understood. Some views emphasize that artworks are products of individual efforts, so that a work should be understood in light of the producer’s knowledge, skill, and intentions. Others see the meaning of a work as established by social conventions and practices of the artist’s own time, but which may not be known or understood by the producer. Still, others see meaning as established by the practices of the users, even if they were not in effect when the work was produced. Are there objective criteria or standards for evaluating individual artworks?

All these views are legitimate in their own right, provided we surface the context in which the judgment is made. What is not legitimate is to overrule a rival approach, asserting one’s own as the only valid one. Overall, the goal is to get as much insight as possible into the body of forces at work in an esthetic experience, any way we can.

There has been much disagreement over whether value judgments have universal validity, or whether there can be no disputing about taste if value judgments are relative to the tastes and interests of each individual (or to some group of individuals who share the same tastes and interests). A judgment such as “This is good” certainly seems to make a claim about the work itself, though such a claim is often based on the sort of feeling, understanding, or experience a person has obtained from the work. A work’s aesthetic or artistic value is generally distinguished from simply liking it. But is it possible to establish what sort(s) of knowledge or experience(s) any given work should provide to any suitably prepared perceiver, and what would it be to be suitably prepared?

With respect to this question, we should acknowledge that university degree programs in the humanities do purport to teach this kind of knowledge and thereby suitably prepare the perceiver to appreciate the works being studied. As a practical exercise, this is invaluable. Where things can go astray is when the judgment “this is good” floats free of its moorings in culture-specific subject-object relationships and imposes itself as objective fact.

It is a matter of contention whether a work’s aesthetic and artistic values are independent of its moral, political, or epistemic stance or impact.

They are independent. Clearly works of art can have moral, political, or epistemic dimensions, but these are outboard of the aesthetic dimension. When criticism seeks to interpret art through these kinds of filters, be they Marxist, feminist, deconstructionist, or the like, we have left the realm of the humanities behind and ceded authority instead to the social sciences.

Philosophy of art has also dealt with the nature of taste, beauty, imagination, creativity, representation, expression, and expressiveness; style; whether artworks convey knowledge or truth; the nature of narrative and metaphor; the importance of genre; the ontological status of artworks; and the character of our emotional responses to art.

The paragraph above represents a laundry list of what for me are all the interesting topics. It warrants an entire essay of its own. That will be the subject of the essay to follow.

Work in the field has always been influenced by philosophical theories of language or meaning, and theories of knowledge and perception, and continues to be heavily influenced by psychological and cultural theory, including versions of semiotics, psychoanalysis, cognitive psychology, feminism, and Marxism.

Here we see more ceding of authority to the social sciences. It is not that they have nothing to add. It is that they are appropriating the aesthetic experience to promote another agenda. That agenda may indeed be worthwhile, but it cannot substitute for aesthetic analysis.

Some theorists in the late twentieth century have denied that the aesthetic and the “fine arts” can legitimately be separated out and understood as separate, autonomous human phenomena; they argue instead that these conceptual categories themselves manifest and reinforce certain kinds of cultural attitudes and power relationships. These theorists urge that aesthetics can and should be eliminated as a separate field of study, and that “the aesthetic” should not be conceived as a special kind of value. They favor instead a critique of the roles that images (not only painting, but film, photography, and advertising), sounds, narrative, and three-dimensional constructions have in expressing and shaping human attitudes and experiences.

And this is the ultimate ceding of authority to the social sciences, to which I am viscerally opposed.

That’s what I think. What do you think?

Part Two coming soon!

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The Agentic Paradox

Why Giving AI More Autonomy Requires Us to Give Humans More Agency

LAST UPDATED: April 10, 2026 at 7:11 PM

The Agentic Paradox

by Braden Kelley and Art Inteligencia


The Rise of the Machine “Doer”

For the past few years, we have lived in the era of Generative AI — a world of sophisticated chatbots and creative assistants that respond to our prompts. But as we move deeper into 2026, the landscape has shifted. We are now entering the age of Agentic AI. These are not just tools that talk; they are autonomous systems capable of executing complex workflows, making real-time decisions, and acting on our behalf across digital ecosystems.

On the surface, this promises the ultimate efficiency. We imagine a future where the “busy work” vanishes, leaving us free to innovate. However, a troubling Agentic Paradox has emerged: as we grant machines more autonomy to act, many humans are finding themselves with less agency. Instead of feeling liberated, workers often feel like they are merely “babysitting” algorithms or reacting to a relentless stream of machine-generated outputs.

This disconnect creates a high-stakes leadership challenge. If we focus solely on the autonomy of the machine, we risk creating an “algorithmic anxiety” that stifles the very human creativity we need to thrive. To succeed in this new era, leaders must realize that the more powerful our AI agents become, the more we must intentionally “upgrade” the agency, authority, and strategic focus of our people.

The Thesis: The goal of innovation in 2026 is not to build the most autonomous machine, but to build a human-centered ecosystem where AI agents manage the tasks and empowered humans manage the intent.

The Hidden Cost: The Cognitive Load Crisis

The promise of Agentic AI was a reduction in workload, but for many organizations, the reality has been a shift in the type of work rather than a reduction of it. This has birthed the Cognitive Load Crisis. While an autonomous agent can process data and execute tasks 24/7, it lacks the contextual wisdom to understand the nuances of organizational culture or ethical gray areas. This leaves the human “orchestrator” in a state of perpetual high-alert.

Instead of performing deep, meaningful work, leaders and employees are becoming trapped in the Supervision Trap. They are forced to manage a relentless firehose of machine-generated notifications, approvals, and “check-ins.” This creates a fragmented mental state where the human mind is constantly context-switching between different agent streams, leading to a unique form of 2026 burnout — digital exhaustion without the satisfaction of tactile achievement.

Furthermore, as AI agents take over more of the “doing,” we see an erosion of Deep Work. When every minute is spent verifying the output of an algorithm, the quiet space required for radical innovation and strategic foresight vanishes. We are effectively trading our long-term creative capacity for short-term operational speed.

  • Notification Fatigue: The mental tax of being the constant “emergency brake” for autonomous systems.
  • Loss of Intuition: The danger of becoming so reliant on agentic data that we lose our “gut feel” for the market.
  • The Feedback Loop: A system where humans spend more time managing machines than mentoring people.

To break this cycle, we must stop treating AI agents as simple productivity tools and start treating them as entities that require a new architecture of human attention. If we don’t manage the cognitive load, our most talented people will eventually shut down, leaving the “Magic Makers” of our organization feeling like mere cogs in a machine-led wheel.

Agentic Paradox Spectrum Infographic

Redefining Roles: From “The Conscript” to “The Architect”

As the landscape of work shifts, so too must our understanding of how individuals contribute to the innovation ecosystem. In my work on the Nine Innovation Roles, I’ve often highlighted how different archetypes fuel organizational growth. In this agentic age, we are seeing a dramatic migration of these roles. If we are not intentional, our best people will default into the role of The Conscript — those who are merely drafted into service to support the AI’s agenda, performing the monotonous tasks of verification and data cleanup.

The goal of a human-centered transformation is to automate the role of the “Conscript” and elevate the human into the role of The Architect or The Magic Maker. When the AI handles the heavy lifting of execution, the human is finally free to focus on Intent. This is where true agency resides. Agency is not the ability to do more; it is the power to decide what is worth doing and why it matters to the human beings we serve.

However, there is a dangerous “Agency Gap” emerging. If an organization implements AI agents without redefining human job descriptions, employees lose their sense of ownership. When the machine becomes the primary creator, the human “spark” is extinguished. We must ensure that AI serves as the support staff for human intuition, not the other way around.

The Migration of Value

The AI Agent Role The Human Agency Role
The Conscript: Handling repetitive execution and data synthesis. The Architect: Designing the systems and ethical frameworks for the AI.
The Facilitator: Coordinating schedules and managing basic workflows. The Revolutionary: Identifying the “radical” shifts the AI isn’t programmed to see.
The Specialist: Performing deep-dive technical analysis at scale. The Magic Maker: Applying empathy and storytelling to turn data into a movement.

By clearly delineating these roles, leaders can close the Agency Gap. We must empower our teams to move away from “monitoring” and toward “orchestrating.” This transition is the difference between a workforce that feels obsolete and one that feels essential.

Agentic Workforce Migration Infographic

FutureHacking™ the Cognitive Workflow

To navigate the complexities of 2026, organizations cannot rely on reactive strategies. We must use FutureHacking™ — a collective foresight methodology — to map out how the relationship between human intelligence and agentic automation will evolve. This isn’t just about predicting technology; it’s about engineering the “Human-Agent Interface” so that it scales without crushing the human spirit.

The core of this approach involves identifying the Innovation Bonfire within your team. In this metaphor, the AI agents are the fuel — abundant, powerful, and capable of sustaining a massive output. However, the humans must remain the spark. Without the human spark of intent and empathy, the fuel is just a cold pile of logs. FutureHacking™ allows teams to visualize where the “fuel” might be smothering the “spark” and adjust the workflow before burnout sets in.

By engaging in collective foresight, teams can proactively decide which cognitive territories are “Human-Core.” These are the areas where we intentionally limit AI autonomy to preserve our creative agency and cultural identity. It’s about choosing where we want the machine to lead and where we require a human to hold the compass.

  • Mapping the Friction: Identifying which agent-led tasks are creating the most mental “drag” for the team.
  • Defining Non-Negotiables: Establishing which parts of the customer and employee experience must remain 100% human-centric.
  • Intent Modeling: Shifting the focus from “What can the agent do?” to “What outcome are we trying to hack for the future?”

When we FutureHack our workflows, we move from being passive recipients of technological change to being the active architects of our organizational destiny. We ensure that as the machine gets smarter, our collective human intelligence becomes more focused, not more fragmented.

Framework: The “Agency First” Operating Model

Building a resilient organization in the age of Agentic AI requires more than just new software; it requires a new operating philosophy. We must move away from a model of Machine Management and toward a model of Intent Orchestration. This framework provides three critical steps to ensure that human agency remains the primary driver of your business value.

1. Cognitive Offloading, Not Task Dumping

The goal of automation should be to reduce the mental noise for the employee, not just to move a task from a human to a machine. If a human still has to track, verify, and worry about every step the agent takes, the cognitive load hasn’t decreased — it has merely changed shape.
The Strategy: Design “set and forget” guardrails that allow agents to operate within a defined ethical and operational “sandbox,” only alerting the human when a decision falls outside of those parameters.

2. The “Human-in-the-Loop” Upgrade

We must shift the role of the worker from Monitor to Mentor. In the old model, the human checks the machine’s homework for errors. In the “Agency First” model, the human coaches the agent on why certain decisions are better than others, treating the AI as an apprentice. This reinforces the human’s position as the source of wisdom and authority, preventing the “Conscript” mentality.

3. Intent-Based Leadership

Management must evolve to focus on the Intent rather than the Activity. In a world where agents can generate infinite activity, “busyness” is no longer a proxy for value. Leaders must empower their teams to spend their time defining the “Commander’s Intent” — the high-level objectives and human-centered outcomes that the AI agents must then figure out how to achieve.

Intent Based Leadership Blueprint Infographic

The Agency Audit: Ask your team this week: “Does this new AI agent give you more time to think strategically, or does it just give you more machine-generated work to manage?” The answer will tell you if you are facing an Agentic Paradox.

Conclusion: Leading the Human-Centered Revolution

The true test of leadership in 2026 is not how quickly you can deploy autonomous agents, but how effectively you can protect and amplify the human spirit within your organization. As we navigate the Agentic Paradox, we must remember that technology is a force multiplier, but it requires a human “integer” to multiply. Without a clear sense of agency, even the most advanced AI becomes a source of friction rather than a source of freedom.

By addressing the Cognitive Load Crisis and intentionally moving our teams out of “Conscript” roles and into “Architectural” ones, we do more than just improve efficiency — we future-proof our culture. We ensure that our organizations remain places of meaning, creativity, and purpose.

The “Year of Truth” demands that we be honest about the mental tax of automation. It calls on us to use FutureHacking™ not just to map out our tech stacks, but to map out our human potential. The companies that win the next decade won’t be those with the smartest agents; they will be the ones that used those agents to give their people the time and agency to be truly, radically human.

“Innovation is a team sport where the machines play the support roles so the humans can score the points.”

Are you ready to hack your agentic future?

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the primary difference between Generative AI and Agentic AI?

Generative AI focuses on creating content (text, images, code) based on human prompts. Agentic AI goes a step further by having the autonomy to execute multi-step workflows, make decisions, and interact with other systems to complete a goal without constant human intervention.

How can leaders identify if their team is suffering from the Agentic Paradox?

Look for signs of the “Supervision Trap,” where employees spend more time managing and verifying machine outputs than performing strategic work. If your team feels busier but reports a decline in creative output or “Deep Work,” they are likely experiencing the paradox.

What role does FutureHacking™ play in managing AI integration?

FutureHacking™ is a collective foresight methodology used to visualize the long-term impact of AI on organizational roles. It helps teams proactively define “Human-Core” territories, ensuring that as AI scales, it supports rather than smothers human agency and innovation.

Image credits: Google Gemini

Content Authenticity Statement: The topic area, key elements to focus on, etc. were decisions made by Braden Kelley, with a little help from Google Gemini to clean up the article, add images and create infographics.

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Five Elements of the Changemaker Mindset

Five Elements of the Changemaker Mindset

GUEST POST from Greg Satell

Chances are, you work in a square-peg business, because that’s the best way to make money. You work diligently to improve the pegs and to get them to where they need to go better, faster and cheaper. It is through quality and consistency that you can best serve your customers, beat your competition and win in the marketplace.

The problem comes when your square-peg business meets a round-hole world. When that happens, following traditional best practices will only result in getting better and better at doing things people care about less and less. Round holes don’t concern themselves how good your square pegs are or how efficiently you can produce them.

Make no mistake. Eventually, every business eventually finds itself in a round-hole world. That’s why good companies fail. Not because they become stupid and lazy, but because the world changes and they lose relevance. Clearly, in the midst of disruption the only viable strategy is to adapt and shift from a traditional manager mindset to a changemaker mindset.

1. Don’t Look For A Great Idea, Identify A Good Problem

“Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door,” Ralph Waldo Emerson is said to have written and since that time thousands of mousetraps have been patented. Still, despite all that creative energy and all those ideas, the original “snap trap,” invented by William Hooker in 1894, remains the most popular.

We’ve come to glorify ideas, thinking that more of them will lead to better results. This cult of ideas has led to a cottage industry of consultants that offer workshops to exercise our creative capabilities. They walk us through exercises like Brainstorming and SWOT analysis. We are, to a large extent, still chasing better mousetraps with predictably poor results.

The truth is that every great change leader starts out with a problem they just couldn’t look away from. Change doesn’t begin with an idea. It starts with identifying a meaningful problem. That’s why it’s so important that before you start an initiative you ask questions like, “What problem are we trying to solve? Is there a general consensus that it’s a problem we need to solve? How would solving it impact our business?

Make no mistake. Change isn’t about ideas. It’s about solving meaningful problems that people care about.

2. Anticipate Resistance

The biggest misconception about change is that if everyone just understood it, they would embrace it. That’s almost never true. Make no mistake, if you intend to create genuine impact, you will get pushback. Some people will hate it with every fiber of their being. Not for any rational logic, necessarily, just because for whatever reason, it offends their dignity, their identity, their sense of self.

In Rules for Radicals, the legendary activist Saul Alinsky observed that every revolution inspires a counterrevolution. That is the physics of change.

Every action provokes a reaction because, if an idea is important, it threatens the status quo, which never yields its power gracefully. Clearly, if you intend to influence an entire organization, you have to assume the deck is stacked against you and anticipate resistance.

A simple truth is that humans form attachments to people, ideas and other things and, when those attachments are threatened we tend to lash out in ways that don’t reflect our best selves. As much as we may hate to admit it, we all do it from time to time. Anyone who has ever been married or part of a family knows that.

That’s why anytime you ask people to change what they think or what they do, there will always be those who will work to undermine what you are trying to achieve in ways that are dishonest, underhanded and deceptive. Once you are able to internalize that, you can begin to move forward.

3. Identify A Keystone Change

Every change effort begins with some kind of grievance: Costs need to be cut, customers better served, or employees more engaged. Wise managers transform that grievance into a “vision for tomorrow” that will not only address the grievance but also move the organization forward and create a better future.

This vision, however, is rarely achievable all at once. Tough and significant problems have interconnected root causes, so trying to achieve an ambitious vision all at once is more likely to devolve into a long march to failure than it is to achieve results. That’s why it’s crucial to start with a Keystone Change, which represents a clear and tangible goal, involves multiple stakeholders, and paves the way for bigger changes down the road.

​​For example, when Paul O’Neill set out to turnaround Alcoa in the 1980s, he started by improving workplace safety, which also paved the way to improvements in operational excellence. At Experian, when CIO Barry Libenson set out to move his company to the cloud, he started with internal APIs. In both cases, the stakeholders who were won over in achieving the keystone change also played a part in bringing about the larger vision.

Focusing on a keystone change allows you to get out of the business of selling an idea and into the business of selling a success. When people see that something is working, even at a small scale, they want to be involved. They can bring in others who can bring in others still. That’s how you can grow your initiative to create the critical mass that moves the system toward widespread change.

4. Mobilize People To Influence Institutions

In the early 1990s, writer and activist Jeffrey Ballinger published a series of investigations about Nike’s use of sweatshops in Asia. People were shocked by the horrible conditions that workers—many of them children—were subjected to. In most cases, the owners lived outside the countries where the factories were located and had little contact with their employees.

At first, Nike’s CEO, Phil Knight, was defiant. “I often reacted with self-righteousness, petulance, anger. On some level I knew my reaction was toxic, counterproductive, but I couldn’t stop myself,” he would later write in his memoir, Shoe Dog. He pointed out that his company didn’t own the factories, that he’d worked with the owners to improve conditions and that the stories, as gruesome as they were, were exceptions.

The simple truth is that change rarely, if ever, starts at the top because it is people with power that create the status quo. They are attached to what they’ve built and take pride in their accomplishments, just like the rest of us. That’s why, to bring about genuine change—change that lasts—you need to mobilize people to influence institutions (or those, like Knight, who yield institutional power).

Eventually, that’s what happened at Nike. The protests took their toll. “We had to admit,” Knight remembered, “We could do better.” Going beyond its own factories, the company established the Fair Trade Labor Association and published a comprehensive report of its own factories. Today, the company’s track record may not be perfect, but it’s become more a part of the solution than a part of the problem.

If you want to create change in your organization, think about the institutions—both internal and external—that can bring it about. Which departments have budgets that can be deployed in service of change? Which external organizations, whether those are partners, suppliers, customers, industry organizations or regulators that could impact your change environment? Then think about who you can mobilize to influence those institutions.

5. Shift Your Mindset

Most of the time, we operate with a manager mindset and that works fine. We build consensus and execute with predictable outcomes. Our colleagues are motivated, customers are satisfied and everybody is happy. However, in an era of disruption it’s only a matter of time until we need to adapt and drive transformation. That’s never easy.

To pull it off we need to shift from a manager mindset to a changemaker mindset in which we no longer assume an environment of predictability, but explore unknowns in an atmosphere of uncertainty. Not everybody will be willing to make the journey with us, so rather than relying on a consensus, we will need to build a coalition and leave some people behind.

We start not by trying to convince skeptics, but by going to where there is already energy in favor of change. Once we identify those who are already enthusiastic about change, we can empower them to succeed and build on that success until we hit a tipping point (about 10%-25% of the organization) and the transformation becomes self-sustaining.

What makes our current era so challenging is that we often need to operate with both mindsets simultaneously. We can’t afford to put everything on hold while changes are underway, so we need to approach some things as managers and some as changemakers. It can be difficult and stressful, but it’s what needs to be done.

Perhaps most of all, we need to internalize the reality, proven time and time again, that transformation is not only possible, but that it does not have to come from the top. Anyone, anywhere can achieve enormous change. But first, you need to adopt a changemaker mindset.

— Article courtesy of the Digital Tonto blog
— Image credit: Unsplash

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Four Steps to the Future

Announcing the Newest FREE Addition to the FutureHacking™ Toolkit

Four Steps to the Future

LAST UPDATED: April 12, 2026 at 5:07 PM

by Braden Kelley and Art Inteligencia


The Signal vs. Noise Dilemma

In an era defined by rapid technological shifts and global volatility, the modern professional is often drowning in “trends” but starving for actionable intelligence. The challenge is no longer a lack of information, but the overwhelming volume of it.

The FutureHacking™ Philosophy posits that finding signals isn’t enough — you must be able to connect them to your specific industry, country, and competitive landscape to create value. A signal in isolation is just data; a signal in context is a roadmap.

To bridge this gap, we are thrilled to introduce the FutureHacking Signal Picker. Built specifically for the global Innovation, Futurology, and Experience Design community, this tool moves beyond passive observation. It empowers you to filter out the noise and focus on the high-leverage insights that allow you to move from simply watching the future to actively influencing it.

The Power of Finding, Connecting, and Influencing

Strategic foresight is not a spectator sport. To gain a competitive advantage, organizations must master the triad of Finding, Connecting, and Influencing. The FutureHacking Signal Picker is engineered to facilitate this shift from discovery to impact.

Precision Finding

The first hurdle is moving beyond the “obvious” trends that everyone else is already tracking. By utilizing inputs for specific industries and — crucially — adjacent industries, the Signal Picker uncovers the cross-pollination points where true disruption often begins. It helps you look where your competitors aren’t looking.

Connecting through Multiplied Impact

A signal only matters if it carries weight. Our tool utilizes a proprietary formula to rank signals based on a multiplied impact, uncertainty, and timing factor. This quantitative approach allows you to see the “connective tissue” between a signal’s potential power and its proximity to your current business model, visualized instantly through a dynamic radar chart.

Influencing the Outcome

The ultimate goal of FutureHacking is to shift the organizational mindset from asking “What will happen to us?” to “What can we make happen?” By identifying high-impact signals early, you gain the lead time necessary to shape the market, influence consumer expectations, and design experiences that define the next era of your industry.

The Four Simple But Powerful FutureHacking™ Steps

The FutureHacking Signal Picker is more than a standalone tool; it is the catalyst for a comprehensive strategic journey. By automating the initial discovery phase, it accelerates your ability to move through the proven FutureHacking™ methodology.

STEP ONE: Picking the Signals That Matter

This is where the Signal Picker does the heavy lifting. By inputting your industry, country, competitors, and adjacent sectors, you generate a prioritized list of the top ten signals. The Radar Chart visualization provides an immediate snapshot of the landscape, while the downloadable PDF ensures that these insights are ready to be shared with leadership to drive immediate alignment.

STEP TWO: Mapping Signal Evolution

Once you have identified your primary signals, the next phase is tracking their trajectory. Using FutureHacking tools, you can map how these signals are evolving — whether they are converging with other trends, gaining velocity, or shifting in uncertainty. This step prevents you from being blindsided by the speed of change.

FutureHacking Infographic

STEP THREE: Choosing the Possible, Probable, and Preferable Future

With the signals ranked by impact and timing, you can begin to construct scenarios. We move beyond simple forecasting to ask: What is possible? What is probable? And most importantly, what is our Preferable Future? The tool’s data points provide the objective foundation needed to define where your organization wants to go.

STEP FOUR: Making Your Preferable Future a Reality

The final step is the bridge to action. By analyzing the strategic implications provided by the Signal Picker, you can design the specific innovations and human-centered changes required to manifest your chosen future. It turns foresight into a tangible roadmap for Experience Design and organizational transformation.

Strategic Implications & Competitive Edge

The true value of the FutureHacking Signal Picker lies not just in the data it unearths, but in the strategic clarity it provides. By shifting from a generic “trend watching” approach to a focused signal analysis, organizations can develop a more resilient and proactive posture.

Finding Opportunity in the Adjacencies

Most organizations suffer from industry myopia — they only look at what their direct competitors are doing. The Signal Picker’s inclusion of adjacent industries acts as a secret weapon. It forces a wider lens, identifying how shifts in unrelated sectors — such as a breakthrough in biopharmaceuticals affecting the insurance market — might create a “ripple effect” that becomes your next big opportunity or threat.

Quantifying the Horizon

Strategy often fails when it is based on gut feeling alone. By ranking signals through a multiplied factor of impact, uncertainty, and timing, the tool provides a quantitative justification for innovation investment. It allows teams to visualize their “blind spots” on the radar chart, ensuring that resource allocation is balanced between defending the core and exploring the frontier.

Fostering a Future-Ready Culture

Launching this tool within your organization or community changes the conversation. It transforms strategic planning from a static, annual event into a continuous pulse. When teams can quickly download a PDF of ranked signals and implications, it democratizes foresight, allowing Human-Centered Innovation and Experience Design professionals to lead with data-backed authority and use the report as a jumping off point to input into the deep research tools that AI companies are now offering.

Conclusion & Call to Action

The future isn’t a destination that we passively reach; it is a landscape that we actively co-create. The launch of the FutureHacking Signal Picker marks a significant milestone for the global community of innovators, futurists, and designers, providing the essential “first spark” for the Human-Centered Innovation™ journey.

Join the Global FutureHacking Community

We invite you to step beyond the noise of generic trends and start tracking the signals that will actually define your industry’s next decade. Whether you are navigating digital transformation, crafting next-generation experiences, or leading organizational agility, the right signals are the foundation of your success.

Ready to Hack the Future?

Put the FutureHacking Signal Picker to work today. Input your industry parameters, download your custom Radar Chart, and take the first of the Four Simple But Powerful FutureHacking™ Steps toward making your preferable future a reality.

Access the Signal Picker Tool Now
… and then contact us when you’re ready for the full toolkit and training.

FutureHacking Signals Picker

Remember: The most effective way to predict the future is to design the signals that influence it. Let’s start hacking.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the Signal Picker rank the top ten signals?

The tool uses a proprietary “Multiplied Impact Factor.” Instead of looking at trends in isolation, it calculates the product of three critical dimensions: Impact (the scale of potential disruption), Uncertainty (the degree of volatility), and Timing (how soon the signal will manifest). This ensures that the signals at the top of your list are both highly relevant and urgent.

Why does the tool ask for “Adjacent Industries”?

Innovation rarely happens in a vacuum; it often “leaks” from one sector to another. By analyzing adjacent industries, the Signal Picker identifies cross-industry signals that your direct competitors are likely overlooking. This provides a broader perspective necessary for the Step Two: Mapping Signal Evolution phase of the FutureHacking™ methodology.

What is the benefit of the downloadable Radar Chart?

The Radar Chart provides an immediate visual map of your strategic horizon. It allows stakeholders to see the balance between short-term certainties and long-term disruptions at a glance. By downloading the PDF, Human-Centered Innovation and Experience Design professionals can instantly present data-backed visualizations to leadership to gain buy-in for future-proofing initiatives.


Image credits: Google Gemini

Content Authenticity Statement: The topic area, key elements to focus on, etc. were decisions made by Braden Kelley, with a little help from Google Gemini to clean up the article, add images and create infographics.

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Artificial Intelligence Powered Teamwork

Artificial Intelligence Powered Teamwork

GUEST POST from David Burkus

Over the past year, leaders have been asking the same questions trying to leverage AI-Powered teamwork: “What should I be doing with ChatGPT?” “How should we be rolling this out to our team?” “What does this mean for the future of work?”

They’re important questions, but they all kind of miss the mark. Because they treat AI like it’s just another IT rollout. Like that time your company moved from email to Slack. Or when everyone was forced to learn a new payroll system. But AI isn’t just another piece of software.

AI isn’t a tool. AI is a teammate.

And until we start treating it that way, we’re going to keep missing the real opportunity.

Why “Tool Thinking” Falls Short

Most people respond to AI in one of three ways. They see it as a threat. They see it as a tool. Or they see it as a teammate.

If you see AI as a threat, you’re going to hesitate. And hesitation is the enemy of progress. You’ll wait. You’ll hold back. But AI isn’t slowing down. And the people who do embrace it — whether they’re colleagues in your department or competitors across the industry — are only going to get better, faster, and more efficient. That puts your performance at risk by comparison. Compared to those using AI, you will performer slower.

If you see AI as a tool, you’re on slightly better footing. You’ll look for ways to automate the repetitive stuff. Email summaries. Meeting notes. Draft responses. All helpful. All productive. But you’re still missing the big value. You’re simplifying, not improving. You’re staying in neutral.

But if you treat AI as a teammate, that’s where transformation starts.

That’s when AI becomes a collaborator. A partner in decision-making. A quiet force that helps your team think more clearly, solve problems faster, and deliver better outcomes.

That’s when you start to unlock the full potential of AI-powered teamwork. That’s when it truly makes you smarter.

Step One: From Slower to Simpler

The first mindset shift is from threat to tool. From slower to simpler. Think about the annoying parts of your job. The copy-paste chores. The tedious admin. The stuff you’re way too smart to be wasting time on. AI can take that off your plate today.

Summarize the endless email chain. Done. Draft that status report. Done. Transcribe your meeting and highlight key action items. Double done.

Not sure where to start? Try this: open whatever AI platform you prefer — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, doesn’t matter — and type:

“Here’s what I do in my job every day. Ask me questions to understand it better, then show me how you could help.”

It will ask follow-ups. It will start mapping your workflows. It will suggest ways to make your day easier, your output faster, and your mind a little clearer.

Congratulations! You’ve moved from slower to simpler.

Step Two: From Simpler to Smarter

Once you’re using AI to simplify tasks, it’s time to use it to sharpen your thinking. Because smarter teams don’t just offload work. They upgrade their decision-making. They collaborate with AI, not just delegate to it.

How? Try turning AI into a devil’s advocate. Feed it your current strategy or plan, then ask:

“Tell me why this could fail.”

You’re not asking it to make decisions. You’re using it to challenge assumptions. To highlight blind spots. To play the role of critic — without the ego. AI provides friction without awkwardness. No one gets defensive when a bot questions your logic.

Want to go deeper? Try these prompts:

  • “What are we overlooking?”
  • “What assumptions might not be true?”
  • “Give me three stronger alternatives to this approach.”

Want to make the feedback even more useful? Ask the AI to role-play:

  • “Think like a strategic consultant.”
  • “Respond like a customer.”
  • “What would a competitor say?”

This is how AI-powered teamwork gets smarter, not just simpler. You’re not just getting a second opinion. You’re getting sharper thinking, without the politics.

Step Three: Make It a Team Habit

And here’s where the real breakthrough happens: when AI becomes a shared part of your team’s workflow — not just your personal productivity hack.

Use it in meetings to take notes. To draft action items. To highlight decisions made.

But also, use it before meetings. Drop your agenda into the chatbot and ask what you’re missing. Run your strategy plan through it and ask for feedback before your next off-site.

This only works if the whole team adopts it. And that’s where leaders come in.

Leaders need to be intentional. Because while AI can streamline collaboration, it can also introduce risks. If team members outsource their attention to a bot, they may stop listening. If everything’s recorded, people may speak up less. The quiet voices might go even quieter.

That’s why leadership still matters. Psychological safety? Still your job. Empathy? Still your job. Motivation and morale? Still your job.

AI can’t do that for you. But what it can do is give you more time to focus on it. Because when the bots handle the mechanics, you can focus on the human side of leadership — the part that never gets automated.

The Future of AI-Powered Teamwork

So, where’s your team right now? Are you stuck in “slower,” resisting change? Are you in “simpler,” just automating inbox chores? Or are you starting to work “smarter,” using AI to enhance how your team thinks and collaborates?

Wherever you are, there’s room to grow. Don’t just ask what AI can do. Ask how your team can do better work with it. Try a prompt. Test an idea. Challenge a plan. Start treating AI like a teammate, not a tool. Because the future of AI-powered teamwork isn’t about tech. It’s about trust. It’s about how you use new capabilities to build better teams, make better decisions, and do work that actually matters.

And that’s something worth getting smarter about.

Image credit: Google Gemini

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The Augmented Mind

Beyond Recall: The Strategic Evolution of Human Digital Memory

LAST UPDATED: April 10, 2026 at 3:39 PM

The Augmented Mind

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia


The Dawn of the Extended Mind

For decades, we have treated our digital devices as external filing cabinets — places where we “put” information to be retrieved later. However, as the volume of data we consume shifts from a manageable stream to an overwhelming deluge, the traditional boundaries of the human mind are being tested. We are now entering a profound transition from Information Management to Cognitive Partnership.

The “Cognitive Crisis” is no longer a future threat; it is our current reality. Traditional search functions and folder-based storage hierarchies are failing the modern knowledge worker because they rely on perfect recall of where a file was placed or exact matching of keywords. When our biological hardware reaches its limit, our productivity and creativity suffer.

Digital Memory Augmentation represents a fundamental shift. It moves us beyond simple backups and toward active, AI-driven cognitive extensions. This isn’t about replacing human thought with an algorithm; it is a human-centered design opportunity to create a digital scaffold for our intellect. By augmenting our memory, we free the brain from the mundane task of storage, allowing it to return to its highest and best use: imagination, synthesis, and meaningful connection.

The Three Pillars of Augmented Memory

To move beyond simple storage and into true augmentation, we must look at how digital systems interface with our lived experience. This evolution is built upon three foundational pillars that transform raw data into a functional extension of our intellect.

1. Seamless Capture

The greatest friction in traditional memory management is the act of “saving.” When we have to pause our flow to take a note, bookmark a page, or file a document, we break our cognitive momentum. Seamless Capture shifts the burden from the user to the environment. Through “digital exhaust” — the ambient collection of our meetings, readings, and interactions — augmentation systems ensure that the “sparks” of insight are never lost simply because we were too busy to write them down.

2. Contextual Resonance

A memory is useless if it exists in a vacuum. Traditional systems rely on folders or tags, which require us to remember how we categorized information in the past. Contextual Resonance uses semantic analysis to understand the “why” and “how” behind a piece of information. By linking a data point to a specific project, a person, or even an emotional state, the system mimics the associative nature of the human brain, making retrieval feel like a natural thought rather than a database query.

3. Proactive Synthesis

The ultimate goal of augmentation is to move from reactive searching to proactive assistance. Proactive Synthesis is the stage where the system acts as a true partner. Instead of waiting for a prompt, the “Second Brain” identifies patterns across years of data and surfaces relevant insights at the moment they are most useful. It creates “digital serendipity,” connecting a conversation you had this morning with a research paper you read three years ago, fueling innovation through automated cross-pollination.

Reimagining the Innovation Lifecycle

Innovation is rarely the result of a single “Eureka!” moment; it is a cumulative process of gathering sparks, connecting dots, and refining concepts over time. By integrating digital memory augmentation, we transform the innovation lifecycle from a fragile, hit-or-miss endeavor into a robust, high-velocity engine for growth.

1. The End of “Lost Ideas”

How many breakthrough concepts have been lost to the ether simply because they occurred in the shower, during a commute, or in the middle of a casual conversation? Memory augmentation ensures that the “sparks” — the messy, early-stage thoughts and sketches — are captured in real-time. By removing the friction of documentation, we preserve the raw materials of innovation before they can be overwritten by the next urgent task.

2. Cross-Pollination at Scale

The most powerful innovations often come from combining ideas from two completely unrelated fields. However, our biological memory is prone to “siloing” information by department or project. A digital memory layer can scan across decades of organizational history and disparate personal interests to find hidden links. It allows an engineer to see how a solution from a 2015 project might solve a 2026 problem, facilitating a level of cross-pollination that was previously impossible for a single human mind to manage.

3. Accelerating Mastery

In a world of hyper-specialization, the “time-to-expertise” is a major bottleneck for innovation. Memory augmentation acts as a cognitive scaffold, allowing individuals to rapidly navigate complex institutional knowledge and technical documentation. By having a “Second Brain” that remembers the technical nuances and past failures of a specific domain, innovators can stand on the shoulders of their own past experiences (and those of their predecessors) much faster, shifting their energy from learning the foundation to building the future.

Designing for Trust and Human Agency

As we integrate digital memory more deeply into our lives, the design challenge shifts from technical feasibility to ethical responsibility. If we are to treat a digital system as an extension of our own mind, that system must be designed with an uncompromising focus on the user’s autonomy, privacy, and long-term cognitive health.

1. The Privacy Imperative

For digital memory augmentation to be successful, the “Second Brain” must be a private sanctuary. Users will only record their raw thoughts, private conversations, and vulnerable moments if they have absolute certainty that their data is not being used for advertising or surveillance. Designing for trust means prioritizing on-device processing and end-to-end encryption — ensuring that the user remains the sole owner and curator of their digital history.

2. Combatting Cognitive Atrophy

A significant concern with augmentation is the risk of “cognitive laziness.” Just as GPS has weakened our innate sense of navigation, there is a risk that total recall tools could weaken our ability to focus or synthesize information independently. Human-centered design must focus on augmentation, not replacement. The goal is to build tools that act as a “cognitive bicycle” — strengthening our ability to connect ideas and think critically by offloading the low-value task of rote memorization.

3. The Ethics of Perfection

Human memory is naturally fallible; we forget, we forgive, and we move on. A world where every mistake, every awkward comment, and every outdated opinion is preserved with photographic clarity presents a psychological challenge. We must design systems that allow for the “right to be forgotten” and the ability to prune our digital archives. True augmentation should support the human capacity for growth and evolution, rather than chaining us to a static version of our past selves.

The Ecosystem: Titans and Trailblazers

The landscape of memory augmentation is currently a race between established tech giants integrating AI into our daily operating systems and agile startups building dedicated hardware for total recall. By 2026, the market has moved beyond experimental prototypes to functional, cross-platform tools that are reshaping how we interact with our own history.

1. Established Platforms

  • Apple (Apple Intelligence): Apple has positioned itself as the “Privacy-First” memory partner. By leveraging on-device processing and Private Cloud Compute, iOS 26 and macOS Sequoia allow users to search for specific moments across photos, emails, and notes using natural language — creating “Memory Movies” and surfacing context-aware suggestions without ever exposing raw data to the cloud.
  • Microsoft (Windows Recall & Copilot): Despite early privacy hurdles, Microsoft has refined “Recall” into a sophisticated enterprise tool. It creates a searchable photographic timeline of everything you’ve seen and done on your PC, allowing professionals to instantly jump back to a specific slide, website, or conversation from weeks prior.
  • Meta (Ray-Ban Meta & AI): Meta is utilizing hardware to move memory augmentation into the physical world. Their smart glasses act as ambient “eyes and ears,” allowing users to ask, “Hey Meta, what was the name of that restaurant I walked past yesterday?” or “What did my colleague say about the project deadline?”

2. Disruptive Startups

  • Limitless (The Pendant): Limitless has become the go-to for “Total Recall” hardware. Their wearable AI pendant records and transcribes in-person meetings and impromptu conversations, utilizing “Automatic Speaker Recognition” to create smart summaries and reminders that sync across all productivity suites.
  • Mem.ai: Moving beyond traditional note-taking, Mem 2.0 has evolved into an “AI Thought Partner.” It eliminates the need for folders by using a self-organizing knowledge graph that automatically links new thoughts to past research, surfacing relevant context as you type.
  • Heirloom (Heirloom.cloud): Focused on the bridge between analog and digital, Heirloom uses AI to digitize, contextualize, and narrate family histories and personal archives, ensuring that legacy memories remain searchable and meaningful for future generations.
  • The Neural Frontier (Neuralink & Synchron): While still largely focused on clinical applications for motor and speech restoration, the successful 2025-2026 human trials for Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) have laid the groundwork for future direct-to-brain memory retrieval and cognitive offloading.

Case Studies: Augmentation in the Real World

To move from the theoretical to the practical, we must look at how digital memory augmentation is already solving deep-seated organizational and individual challenges. These two case studies illustrate how extending our cognitive capacity directly translates into business value and human safety.

Case Study 1: Resolving the “Institutional Memory” Gap in Professional Services

The Challenge: A global management consulting firm was suffering from “reinventing the wheel.” With over 10,000 consultants globally, teams were frequently spending hundreds of hours on research and analysis that had already been performed by colleagues in different regions or years prior. Internal surveys showed that senior partners were spending 25% of their time simply trying to remember who had the specific “tribal knowledge” needed for a new pitch.

The Approach: The firm implemented a semantic memory layer that indexed all past white papers, anonymized project summaries, internal Slack discussions, and recorded client debriefs. Unlike a traditional database, this system used a “Second Brain” interface that allowed consultants to ask conversational questions like, “What were the specific regulatory hurdles we faced during the 2022 retail merger in Singapore?”

The Result: Within the first twelve months, the firm reported a 35% increase in project velocity and a significant reduction in duplicate research costs. More importantly, the ability to surface “deep-context” insights during client meetings led to a 15% higher win rate on new business pitches.

Case Study 2: Adaptive Learning and Safety in Complex Engineering

The Challenge: An aerospace manufacturing leader faced a massive demographic shift. As their most experienced engineers reached retirement age, they were struggling to transfer decades of “feel” and undocumented maintenance nuances to junior engineers working on legacy aircraft systems — some of which were designed 40 years ago.

The Approach: The company deployed a wearable AR-and-memory system. As a junior engineer looked at a specific engine component, the system utilized computer vision to recognize the part and instantly surfaced the “ambient memory” associated with it: past repair notes from retired masters, video snippets of successful fixes, and warnings about specific bolt-tension issues that weren’t in the official manual.

The Result: The facility saw a 50% reduction in error rates during complex maintenance cycles. The “time-to-expertise” for new hires was cut by four months, as their digital memory augmentation acted as an on-demand mentor, bridging the gap between theoretical training and institutional wisdom.

Conclusion: The Future of Being Human

We are standing at a pivotal crossroads in our evolution as a species. Digital memory augmentation is not merely a technological upgrade; it is a shift in the very nature of human cognition. As we move from a world of “Search” to a world of “Knowing,” we must be intentional about how we design these systems and what we choose to do with our newly reclaimed mental energy.

1. From “Search” to “Knowing”

When the friction of retrieval disappears, our relationship with knowledge changes. We no longer have to wonder if we know something; we simply have access to it. This transition allows us to shift our focus from the logistics of information management to the higher-level pursuit of empathy and understanding. When we are not struggling to remember the facts, we have more capacity to listen to the story, to understand the nuance, and to build deeper connections with those around us.

2. The Human-First Mandate

As a thought leader in human-centered innovation, my message is clear: Technology should never outpace our humanity. While we build smarter memories and more powerful cognitive scaffolds, we must ensure we don’t lose the “wisdom” that comes from human reflection, the growth that comes from our mistakes, and the beauty of our fallibility. Our goal should be to use digital memory to amplify our potential — not to automate our souls.

The future of being human is not about being “replaced” by silicon; it is about being empowered by it to reach new heights of creativity and compassion. Let us design for that future today.

Key Insight: Digital memory augmentation isn’t about building a better hard drive; it’s about building a better bridge between what we experience and what we can achieve.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is Digital Memory Augmentation?

It is the use of AI-driven tools and hardware to seamlessly capture, organize, and surface personal and professional information, acting as a “second brain” to extend human cognitive capacity.

2. How does memory augmentation impact privacy?

Privacy is the core pillar of these systems. Modern solutions prioritize on-device processing and end-to-end encryption to ensure that the user remains the sole owner of their digital history.

3. Does using a “Second Brain” lead to cognitive atrophy?

When designed correctly, these tools act as a “cognitive bicycle” — offloading the low-value task of rote memorization so the human brain can focus on higher-level creativity and complex problem-solving.

Disclaimer: This article speculates on the potential future applications of cutting-edge scientific research. While based on current scientific understanding, the practical realization of these concepts may vary in timeline and feasibility and are subject to ongoing research and development.

Image credits: ChatGPT

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Validate Business Models Before Building Them

Validate Business Models Before Building Them

GUEST POST from Mike Shipulski

One of the best ways to learn is to make a prototype. Prototypes come in many shapes and sizes, but their defining element is the learning objective behind them. When you start with what you want to learn, the prototype is sure to satisfy the learning objective. But start with the prototype, and no one is quite sure what you’ll learn. When prototypes come before the learning objective, prototypes are inefficient and ineffective.

Before staffing a big project, prototypes can be used to determine viability of the project. And done right, viability prototypes can make for fast and effective learning. Usually, the team wants to build a functional prototype of the product or service, but that’s money poorly spent until the business model is validated. There’s nothing worse than building expensive prototypes and staffing a project, only to find the business model doesn’t hold water and no one buys the new thing you’re selling.

There’s no reason a business model can’t be validated with a simple prototype. (Think one-page sales tool.) And there’s no reason it can’t be done at the earliest stages. More strongly, the detailed work should be held hostage until the business model is validated. And when it’s validated, you can feel good about the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. And if it’s invalidated, you saved a lot of time, money and embarrassment.

The best way to validate the business model is with a set of one-page documents that define for the customer what you will sell them, how you’ll sell it, how you’ll service it, how you’ll train them and how you’ll support them over the life of your offering. And, don’t forget to tell them how much it will cost.

The worst way to validate the business model is buy building it. All the learning happens after all the money has been spent.

For the business model prototypes there’s only one learning objective: We want to learn if the customer will buy what we’re selling. For the business model to be viable, the offering has to hang together within the context of installation, service, support, training and price. And the one-page prototype must call out specifics of each element. If you use generalities like “we provide good service” or “our training plans are the best”, you’re faking it.

Don’t let yourself off the hook. Use prototypes to determine the viability of the business model before spending the money to build it.

Image credit: Google Gemini

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This One Thing Could Cost You 1/3 of Your Customers

This One Thing Could Cost You 1/3 of Your Customers

GUEST POST from Shep Hyken

If your customers reach out to you for customer support or for problems to be resolved, this is must-have information. In my annual customer experience research, we asked more than 1,000 U.S. consumers if they had ever stopped doing business with a company or brand because self-service options were not provided. Thirty-four percent said yes, which means:

Not offering self-service options for customer support could cost you one-third of your customers.

Age makes a difference. When you break it down by generations, more than twice as many Gen-Z customers (43%) than Baby Boomers (20%) have stopped doing business with a company because it didn’t offer self-service options for customer support.

Traditional Customer Support

The majority of all customers (68%) prefer the phone to self-service options. While the phone may be the first choice, it does have its drawbacks. Often, customers experience wait times. While the friendly recorded message may indicate the customer’s call “is very important,” a long wait time sends a different message. Sometimes customers become frustrated with being transferred, having to repeat their story to multiple customer support agents, language barriers and more.

Self-Service Options

Self-service customer support options are available to customers 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. They typically handle simple questions and problems, and in some cases, are interactive, allowing customers to complete simple transactions. Customers using self-service appreciate how quickly they can get answers to questions and get their problems resolved without wait times and the hassle of authentication procedures that customers view as time wasters. Some of these options include:

  • Frequently Asked Questions: This is typically on a website and provides brief answers or articles related to the most common customer inquiries.
  • Video Tutorials: These are often found on a website, and many companies and brands also host these videos on YouTube, which means that they are potentially searchable by using Google to ask the question.
  • Interactive Voice Response (IVR) Systems: This is a phone-based automated system that allows customers to navigate menu options to find simple answers or complete easy transactions.
  • AI-Fueled Chatbots: Similar to traditional IVR systems (but usually better), chatbots can message back and forth with customers. With the latest ChatGPT-type technology, it can seem as if you’re communicating with a human.
  • Customer Portals: Access on a company’s website allows customers to log in and check orders, make payments, set appointments and much more.
  • Mobile Apps: If a customer is willing to download the company’s app on their mobile phone/device, they may have access to an easier experience that provides many or all of the above options.

A warning: Just because some customers are demanding self-service options doesn’t mean they won’t be as frustrated (or even more) than with traditional phone support. If they don’t get their answers or you waste their time, they won’t be happy. For example, even though 39% of customers would rather clean a toilet than contact live customer support, 76% say they have been trapped in an automated menu system (IVR) and repeatedly screamed into the phone, “Agent” or “Representative,” and eventually hung up out of frustration. While these findings may seem funny, there’s a lot of truth in humor.

Demand For Self-Service Increases

In 2025, 34% of customers demand that companies provide self-service options or they will seek out a competitor, up from 26% in 2024. That’s a 30% increase. If the trend continues at that pace, we’re less than two years away from more than half of customers walking away because of the lack of self-service options.

Final Words

Self-service is about convenience, and customers love convenience. In 2025, 91% of customers said convenience is important to them, and 73% are willing to pay more if the experience is more convenient. Self-service options, when done right, deliver exactly that: convenience. They give customers control, save time and are available 24/7. Companies that provide excellent self-service can earn customer loyalty by proving they respect their customers’ time and preferences.

But, self-service options aren’t enough. Not every question or problem can be handled through self-service, which is why the best companies provide a blend. A powerful self-service option allows customers to easily and seamlessly transfer to a live agent, and rather than forcing the customer to start over, the agent can see why the customer is contacting support.

The companies that win in the future won’t be those that choose between self-service and human support. They’ll be the ones that blend both to create a customer support experience that makes customers say, “I’ll be back!”

Image Credit: Google Gemini

This article was originally published on Forbes.com.

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Unlocking Trapped Value from the Technology Adoption Lifecycle

Unlocking Trapped Value from the Technology Adoption Lifecycle

GUEST POST from Geoffrey A. Moore

For some time now I have been making the case that investment decisions, be they made by customers engaging with a new product and vendor or private equity firms backing a new technology and entrepreneur, should begin with finding the intersection between the innovation at hand and a pool of trapped value it can release, thereby creating the return on investment. That said, one of the core principles of investing is called risk-adjusted returns, meaning that the greater the risk you take, the higher the return needs to be. My expertise is in the risks related to technology adoption, where the risk factors change over the course of a new technology’s deployment. With that thought in mind, here is how the trapped value thesis needs to risk-adjust to adapt:

  • Early Market: very high technology adoption risk. The prize here has to be quite large indeed. Typically it will come in one of two forms. For B2B investments, it will be like an oil reservoir that, if tapped correctly, will produce a gusher. Regulated industries have pockets of trapped value all over the place that fit the bill. Also, industries like automotive and real estate, which are restructuring their relationships with dealers and agents, would qualify. By contrast, B2C investments tap into trapped value that looks more like shale oil—no deep pockets, but incredibly broad presence. Media, transportation, and hospitality have funded extraordinary returns for Netflix, Uber, and Airbnb, not because the trapped value was severe but because it was so pervasive. The point is, early-stage venture investing needs to target home-run bets to warrant the risks it takes. Same goes for visionary customers in B2B markets who are the early adopters of these technologies. They are taking on significant risk so they need to be targeting outstanding rewards.
  • Crossing the Chasm: high technology adoption risk, but readily mitigated. The challenge here is that the technology has great potential for any number of use cases but needs some additional support in every case to achieve the desired end result. The chasm-crossing playbook focuses on a single use case in a single industry and geography in order to create a killer “whole product” that nails the use case and to build a coalition of customer references and partner successes that will keep the market growing even as the technology vendor expands into other segments. Here the trapped value should be intense but narrowly confined, designed to meet three critical success factors:
    1. Big enough to matter (it should be able to generate 10X your current year’s billings target)
    2. Small enough to lead (if you crush your plans, you should get 50% segment share)
    3. Good fit with your crown jewels (if you win, nobody is going to displace you).

    As you can see, there is risk here, but it is manageable through market focus and disciplined execution, the key risk reduction factor being how compelling is the customer’s reason to buy.

  • Bowling Alley: modest adoption risk. The challenge here is to expand beyond your first “beachhead” vertical into adjacent use cases with the same segment as well as adjacent segments with the same use case. Part of the source of reduced risk is that you have a working playbook from the first vertical. Much of the source, however, comes from the emergence of local ecosystems of partners who complete the whole product solutions for each use case. These partners make their living supplementing the technology vendor’s product or platform, and their extra talent, domain expertise, and segment focus represent a major risk reduction. As a result, the trapped value rewards have a lower hurdle to clear to garner investor interest and customer buy-in.
  • Tornado: low adoption risk. The risk here is the opposite—getting left behind as the world embraces the shift to a new normal. The trapped value that drives a tornado is released by “killer apps.” These apps may not release the most trapped value, but they represent a sure winner to start with, making the buying decision a no-brainer. The point is, if you want to get any traction in the tornado, you have to lead with a killer app, a no-regrets offering that delivers simple-to-consume rewards and gets everyone onto the new platform. That means the trapped value must be easy to target and the value of releasing it must be obvious to all, especially to the end users who will be the prime beneficiaries.
  • Main Street: very low adoption risk. The primary adoption challenge here is converting conservative end users who simply do not want to switch to yet another new technology. The trapped value now exists in nuisances, little bits of inefficiency that have workarounds but are annoying. From the point of view of productivity, the cost savings from eliminating them are minimal. But in terms of the user experience, as well as customer satisfaction, the impact can be substantial. B2C enterprises spend most of their R&D here focused either on eliminating “hygiene” issues or innovating with new “delighters,” both of which can increase demand, the cornerstone for volume operations success. B2B enterprises use six-sigma analytics to scout their value chains for bottlenecks that increase latency, something that adds risk without adding value, and frustrates even their most loyal customers.

The key takeaway is that there are different kinds of trapped value, each occupying a different sweet spot in the Technology Adoption Life Cycle. As a vendor and potential leader of a go-to-market ecosystem, you must be crystal clear about the kind of trapped value you are targeting, the kind of risk-taking it warrants, and the kinds of solutions that will get the most traction.

That’s what I think. What do you think?

Image Credit: Unsplash

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