How To Put On Your Cape-abilities
In this post, you’ll continue to find strategies that you can use to shake up your thinking and unleash your innovation super powers. Each post in this series defines a tool you need, gives you a summary of what that tool can do for you, some questions that stir your thinking, and an exercise to get you started using the tool. You can either use the tools from start to finish to understand all the tools in your toolkit or you can pick up any tool — play around, use it, and discover how it works for you.
The next ability in our Cape-ability series is … Predictability
Vocabulary.com defines Predictability as capable of being foretold.
I define Predictability as Foreseeability – visioning.
Predictability has only one meaning, but it can be considered good or bad depending on the context. The predictability of sunrise and sunset is extremely helpful. If a mystery novel, however, suffers from predictability, there probably won't be very much "mystery" involved and no one will want to read it.
Can we predict the needs and wants of our audience? We need insights. How might any insights we collect from the target market inform solutions? We can’t make assumptions that we know what the target needs or wants. We must collect the data and make some hypotheses grounded in knowledge.
Being able to anticipate business opportunities based on insights is one way to get ahead of the competition. The more information you have from many sources, the better. Studying the target market in their own environments — where they live, work, play and interact can lead to many insights on behavior that can be leveraged for possible solutions.
“Predictability is not how things will go, but how they can go.”
― Raheel Farooq
Provocative Q’s to ask yourself:
Exercises for predicting based on insights:
In a blog post from Glen Heimstra from Futurist.com, he writes that The most distinguishing feature of humans is that we contemplate the future. We are built to be futurists. This is the conclusion drawn from recent scientific work, according to Martin E.P. Seligman and John Tierney in the New York Times. In their article, “We aren’t Built to Live in the Moment,” they note that…
A more apt name for our species would be Homo prospectus, because we thrive by considering our prospects. The power of prospection is what makes us wise. Looking into the future, consciously and unconsciously, is a central function of our large brain, as psychologists and neuroscientists have discovered — rather belatedly, because for the past century most researchers have assumed that we’re prisoners of the past and the present.
Citing the work of animal behaviorists, current psychology, and most interestingly recent brain imaging research, we now know that “your brain is continually recombining information to imagine the future, a process that researchers were surprised to discover when they scanned the brains of people doing specific tasks like mental arithmetic.”
In other words, in all kinds of situations people engage in a kind of thought, rather automatically, in which they create future simulations, which then guide emotions and behaviors.
Humans have the capacity, as I have often noted, to remember the past, live in the present, and anticipate the future. It turns out we spend more time anticipating the future than we may have suspected. We became homo sapiens (the wise man) by “learning to see and shape his future, and he is wise enough to keep looking straight ahead.”
The challenge we have is to channel this innate capacity to see and shape the future into conscious creation of preferred futures. It’s exciting to know this can come naturally. And that, my friends, is predictability! Practice predictability and keep thinking about where things might go!!
In my next blog post, we will be covering our next ability, which is Possibility!
--gert--
Test 11
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