04 Futures Wheel
04 Futures Wheel
04 Futures Wheel
Jerome C. Glenn
IV. Strengths and Weaknesses of the Method V. Use in Combination with other Methods VI. Frontiers of the Method Endnotes and References
Futures Wheel
Acknowledgments The paper has been enhanced by the special contributions of David Pearce Snyder, President of the futurist consulting firm Snyder Family Enterprise, Bethesda, Md. and Dr. Joseph Coates, President of Coates & Jarratt of Washington, D.C. and member of the steering committee for the Millennium Project Feasibility Study. I wish to acknowledge helpful comments and insightful remarks provided by the peer reviewers of the first draft report. In particular, the suggestions and insightful comments furnished by Noriaki Funada and Hirotoshi Komoda, Densu Institute of Human Studies, Tokyo, Japan; Bernard Cazes, Commissariat General du Plan, Office of the Prime Minister, France; Chris Dede, Professor, George Mason University; Terrance O'Donnell, Professor, Salem State College; and Peter Bishop, Professor, Program for the Study of the Future, University of Houston. And finally, special thanks to Elizabeth Florescu and Neda Zawahri for project support, Barry Bluestein for research and computer operations, and Sheila Harty for editing.
Futures Wheel
Trend or Event
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The original Futures Wheel is one of the most commonly used methods among futurists, because it is an extremely easy way to engage people's thinking about the future. Futurists find it easy to use the wheel to think through the implications of, and organize their thoughts about possible future events or trends. As the least expensive technique to use, its also flexible for use in advanced situations as well as in primary school classrooms. After identifying trends or possible future events, some futurists ask their clients, "If this event occurs, then what happens next?" Or they may ask, "What necessarily goes with this event or trend?" Or, "What are the impacts or consequences?" These impacts compose a mental map of the future, acting as a feedback mechanism to stimulate new thinking.
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Futures Wheel
III. HOW TO DO IT
A. Basic Futures Wheel A group decides to brainstorm about a trend, idea, future event, or value. The subject is written in the middle of a piece of paper, a flip chart, black board, or on an overhead projector transparency. For example: Increasingly smaller and less expensive computer communications devices
Stores selling such items Increased speed and complexity of daily living
Figure 2. Example of primary impacts of trend Next, the leader of the brainstorming session draws an oval around the item and asks the group to say what necessarily goes with this item. As impacts or consequences are offered by the group, the leader draws short wheel-like spokes out from the central oval and writes these impacts at the end of each spoke. For example:
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Figure 3. Example of primary and secondary impacts of a trend Ovals are drawn around each of the primary impacts. A ring can be drawn connecting the primary impacts. Next, the leader asks the group to forget about the original item in the middle of the Futures Wheel and to give the most likely impacts for each of the primary impacts of the first ring of primary consequences. As these secondary impacts are offered by the group, the leader draws two or three short spokes out from each of the ovals around the primary impacts to form a second ring and writes the name of these secondary impacts at the end of each spoke and draws ovals around them. For example: At first, this process goes quickly, with participants listing second, third, and fourth order consequences with little or no evaluation. After the group feels its thinking is represented on the wheel, they can evaluate and edit the wheel to be more "realistic." This step is similar to the clarification part in other brainstorming processes. Alternatively, the impacts of an event or trend can be processed more slowly and deliberately by accepting criticism prior to entering anything on the wheel. In this approach, the group discusses the plausibility of every impact. If an impact is judged plausible by all, then it is entered; otherwise, not. Peter Wagschal refers to this as the "rule of unanimity." He argues that making sure everyone agrees is one way of ensuring that the impacts are reasonable: "The Futures Wheel process leads rapidly to unexpected consequences and, thus, requires a restriction on the group to prevent them from arriving at conclusions that are so speculative as to be of little worth in assessing alternative futures."
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Sometimes people may want to pursue sequential chains of impacts radiating out in a linear fashion from the initial trend or event. This variation is referred to as Mind Mapping. The Futures Wheel, in contrast, completes each ring in concentric circles. Mind Mapping is good for
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exploring one's thoughts, but does not necessarily make distinctions between primary, secondary, and tertiary impacts relative to other impacts radiating out in time.
B. Distinguishing Between Consequences The Futures Wheel can show distinctions between primary, secondary, and tertiary consequences in another way. Instead of rings, one can draw single lines from the central oval to the primary impacts, double lines between the primary and secondary impacts, and triple lines between the secondary and tertiary impacts. Using this approach, the Futures Wheel shown below (Fig. 4) illustrates the possibility of cross linkage of impacts. For example, "increased funds required for software" is a primary consequence of the National Security Agency (NSA) experiencing "growing costs for and dependence on acquisition and maintenance of software," a secondary consequence of "increased dependency on contractors," and a tertiary consequence of "increased costs" in general.
Figure 4. A Futures Wheel, developed during futures consulting in 1985 with the U.S. National Security Agency, illustrates the use of single, double, and triple lines to represent primary, secondary, and tertiary impacts (reprinted with permission of the author, David Pearce Snyder)
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C. Creating Forecasts within Alternative Scenarios The Futures Wheel can also be used as a method to create forecasts within alternative scenarios. In this application, one selects a scenario and an item in that scenario to explore. For example, one could forecast the future of the videocassette recorder (VCR) within the post-information age scenario of "conscious technology," (i.e., the Post-Information Age in which distinctions between technology and consciousness blur). One could imagine that the VCR is a conscious entity capable of communicating; then identify what features would be required to make this "real." The Futures Wheel could show a different variation of how to design the product as more "conscious" or more immediately responsive to the user. Each new product feature could have spokes that identify what new elements need to be incorporated in the new design.
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In the Futures Wheel below (Fig. 5), the new designs for the VCR would include voice activation so that you could tell it what to do. This implies that a microphone and voice recognition program would be added to future VCRs. The future VCR might also search TV programs or remote visual data banks by computer communications and match your previously computer-stored preferences. If a fee were involved, payment by computer communications and electronic funds transfer could be transacted. The VCR could also be equipped with a computer program to analyze your viewing patterns and make recommendations. This Futures Wheel shows the more "conscious" VCR of the future and what new product features are likely to bring it to market. This variation is similar in function to decision trees and morphological analysis (see paper by that title in this series).
Figure 5. Example of a Futures Wheel by the author in 1987 exploring the future of a technology within a specific scenario. 7
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Wheel can help to identify them. However, one must guard against making dangerously premature judgments. The output of a Futures Wheel should be used as a basis for further thinking, for more systematic exploration, and for the application of other techniques for probing the future. Put simply, the Futures Wheel is a creative tool that generates input to futures thinking.
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If one is not disciplined in using the Futures Wheel, one can end up with some messy "intellectual spaghetti" that makes the implications of the trend or event more difficult to see clearly. The use of primary, secondary, etc. rings is one way to help prevent the problem; another is the use of the single, double, etc., lines to organize the linkages among the impacts.
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A "Version 3 Futures Wheel" would add the dimension of historic forces, current correlations, and future implications in a cone-like fashion. This approach has the advantage of providing a space for linkages or consequences that don't always fit in Versions 1 and 2. Some people want to discuss how a trend evolved, while others want to talk about more current impacts, and still others are more future-oriented. Version 3 is more complex, requiring more time, but can capture much of the essential of thinking about a trend or event into one graphic.
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A Version 3 Futures Wheel could be carried out by three different teams. One team could identify the key historical trends or events leading to the item to be studied; the second team the key contemporary impacts; and the third, the key future impacts or consequences. The results of the teams can be put into one Version 3 Futures Wheel. Unfortunately, it may be difficult to graph if confined to a two-dimensional piece of paper. If done with computer software that allows for rotation (such as computer-assisted design software) and or in hypertext software (imbedding information under terms that are not seen until requested by the user), the Version 3 Futures Wheel becomes more visually manageable. Variations of Versions 2 and 3 could well be as diverse as those that grew from the original Future Wheel. Software variations as sub-routines within strategic planning and futures research packages seem inevitable. Finally, a more speculative use of the Futures Wheel could be for a Delphi exercise through international telecommunications. An international panel could assemble asynchronously to systematically construct a Futures Wheel:
Round 1: Ask and international panel to rate a list of events or trends for use with a Futures Wheel and or ask for additional suggestions; Round 2: Feed back the panel's responses for further refinement, clarification, and ranking;
Round 3: Request respondents to list primary consequences of the trends or events of highest ranking; Round 4: Display results as a Futures Wheel with just the primary ring of impacts; the size of the oval around each primary impact could represent the frequency with which the panel identified it; then ask for the secondary impacts; and Round 5: Display primary impacts as first ring, and secondary impacts as a second ring; again, the size of the ovals (or some other graphic device) could represent the frequency of response.
This version of a Futures Wheel could be assisted by "tele-groupware" (software that facilitates group interaction at a distance) which collects and displays the panel's views on the impacts in the graphic of a Futures Wheel.
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10. Ibid. 11. "Integrating Socio-Political Developments into the Management Process: New York Telephone's Experience," The Diebold Corporate Issues Forum, March 4, 1980. (New York: The Diebold Corporation). 12. The Institute for Alternative Futures (IAF) in Alexandria, Virginia, has used the Version 2 Futures Wheel in its visioning process. See IAF's monograph, "Creating Community Health Visions: A Guide for Local Leaders."
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