Business

6 steps for using science fiction to envisage your company’s future

Image: Shutterstock.

Martin Reeves
Senior Partner, Boston Consulting Group and Chairman, BCG Henderson Institute, Boston Consulting Group
Adam Job
Director, Strategy Lab, BCG Henderson Institute
Share:
Our Impact
What's the World Economic Forum doing to accelerate action on Business?
A hand holding a looking glass by a lake
Crowdsource Innovation
Get involved with our crowdsourced digital platform to deliver impact at scale
  • Corporation imagination is constrained by ingrained thinking – instead we must envisage new ways to drive growth and advantage.
  • Science fiction offers companies a radically different way of approaching future possibilities.
  • We outline a six-step process for evolving your company’s mental models, leveraging science fiction to unlock innovation.

With the era of “free capital” having come to an end, the globalization premium stalling, and ecological constraints encroaching, companies can no longer rely on a rising tide to lift all boats. Instead, they will need to imagine new offerings and ways of doing things that will drive their future growth and advantage.

But corporate imagination is constrained by the way we see the present: for example, setting the goal of “developing the next version of our product line” confines innovation to existing products, which may mean overlooking opportunities to create entirely new offerings. Aiming to “grow market share by 2%” boxes companies into their current competitive arena.

Have you read?

To unleash their imagination, companies can take inspiration from science fiction. This article provides a step-by-step guide for doing so.

To imagine their futures, companies need to evolve their mental models

Our imagination can be constrained by entrenched mental models – simplified representations of reality our brain creates because the world is too complex to be fully encompassed. Mental models help us navigate everyday reality – when we join a project meeting, we have a shared understanding of roles, agenda items, and meeting norms, enabling us to collaborate efficiently.

However, current mental models also hold us back from discovering new possibilities. Organizational cultures, routines, and dynamics of groupthink make implicit assumptions and beliefs sticky. Stories of corporate downfalls are therefore often stories of entrenched mental models. For example, Kodak observed a rising demand for digital photography, but because it evaluated this information through the mental model of an analogue photography firm, it responded by doubling down on its core business rather than embracing the opportunity to capture a new market. How can your company avoid this fate and evolve its mental models?

Imagining new possibilities with science fiction

Let’s take a well-trodden, often uninspiring topic as an example: the future of work. For many, this will bring to mind familiar observations and arguments about virtual meetings, work-from-home, or the gig economy. Science fiction, however, paints a very different picture of work in the future – working hand-in-hand with robots, as in Asimov’s Caves of Steel, or earning money by hunting monsters in virtual worlds, like in Cline’s Ready Player One.

Such fantastical concepts are often beyond the realm of plausibility – and that is precisely why they are useful. Science fiction helps us break from our ingrained way of looking at things. By contemplating a radically different reality – unbounded by current feasibility constraints – as a starting point, we can more fully explore the possibilities of the future.

Science fiction also provides a coherent, holistic view of a possible future, not just an extrapolation of present trends. Immersing ourselves in such futures encourages counterfactual thinking – imagining “what is not, but could be.” Moreover, science fiction often paints worlds which mix elements of dystopia and utopia, inviting us to consider intended and unintended consequences. In doing so, it gives us agency, instead of merely trying to predict a future passively, we can imagine the futures we want to create and shape.

How to employ science fiction

We have developed a workshop format that can help evolve your company’s mental models, deliberately employing science fiction to spark your imagination. It proceeds along six steps:

1. Specify the issue

Identify an issue where your company or team needs to break the mould – it could be related to work models, product innovation, or the next strategy cycle.

2. Make your mental models explicit

Formulate the unspoken assumptions that underly current decision-making. In so doing, you make clear that they are just beliefs, which can be challenged and changed. For example, two key assumptions underlying the business model of traditional hotel chains may be “people want to rent rooms” and “we build properties with attractive rooms.” It’s easy to see how a company like Airbnb became successful by abandoning the latter assumption, which the incumbents had never questioned.

3. Create a spark

Identify science fiction works that could provide a spark for re-thinking the issue. Crucially, the movies, books, or other formats you pick do not have to be mainly about the theme – for example, Caves of Steel and Ready Player One are not about work, but they indirectly present a vision of it. You should not assume deep familiarity with the works – pick clips or passages that the participants can watch or read together.

4. Keep it simple

Focus on a few questions for participants to contemplate and discuss. Some proven examples are:

  • What is the vision (e.g., the future of work) inspired by this piece of science fiction? This question guides participants to make explicit the sparks of inspiration created by the work, and helps them establish a common base of understanding.
  • What are the utopian and dystopian aspects of this vision? This question guides participants to draw out desirable and undesirable aspects of the vision, increasing how much inspiration they can draw from a work.
  • What are the steps we should take today to work towards utopia, and avoid dystopia? This question confers agency to the participants and will ensure that actionable next steps can be extracted after the session.

5. Bring people in

Imaginative exercises benefit from a diversity of perspectives and experiences across the participants. Thus, involve people from beyond the function with the expertise most directly relevant to the topic, and across hierarchical levels.

6. Embrace the fun

Common barriers to imagination include a fear of ideas failing, of being judged by others, or being too immersed the day-to-day business. To overcome these barriers, treat this session as a game (and designate it as such). Make clear that there are no risks involved – this is just an exploration of ideas. Make sure there is no judgment and suspend hierarchy.

Reimagining the future

Companies can easily get stuck in their mental models – which hinders them from imagining their futures. Science fiction can provide a spark for breaking the mould – so leverage it, before reality overtakes the inspiration.

Contributing authors: Felix Rüdiger, Head of Content & Research at the St. Gallen Symposium, and Charikleia Kaffe, Project Leader at Boston Consulting Group. This article is inspired by the 2024 St. Gallen Symposium, a student-driven global platform for cross-generational dialogue involving senior and emerging leaders, to discuss pressing issues and enact change.

Loading...
Don't miss any update on this topic

Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.

Sign up for free

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

Related topics:
BusinessLeadership
Share:
World Economic Forum logo
Global Agenda

The Agenda Weekly

A weekly update of the most important issues driving the global agenda

Subscribe today

You can unsubscribe at any time using the link in our emails. For more details, review our privacy policy.

How to launch a corporate alumni programme

Jaci Eisenberg

August 13, 2024

About Us

Events

Media

Partners & Members

  • Sign in
  • Join Us

Language Editions

Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

© 2024 World Economic Forum