Shape of Tomorrow

Episode 182 - The Death of Traditional Expertise

30 min · 24. apr. 2026
episode Episode 182 - The Death of Traditional Expertise cover

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In this episode of Shape of Tomorrow, I explore a major shift in how expertise is defined in a world where knowledge is no longer scarce. As AI makes answers instantly accessible, the advantage is moving toward those who can think critically, frame problems, and apply judgment in complex situations. I also examine what this looks like in practice, particularly in education, where professionals are using AI not to transform their work, but to manage growing demands and system pressures. This episode connects these ideas to help you understand where real value is emerging and how to position yourself and your organization moving forward.

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Alle episoder

187 episoder

episode Episode 185 - Building an AI Roadmap When Budgets Are Tight cover

Episode 185 - Building an AI Roadmap When Budgets Are Tight

In Episode 185 of Shape of Tomorrow, I explore the growing disconnect between the AI conversations happening at conferences and the realities organizations are facing inside boardrooms and budget meetings. I break down how I think leaders should approach AI roadmaps when budgets are constrained, pressure is high, and credibility matters more than hype. I walk through a practical framework focused on small, measurable experiments that can prove value within 90 days, rather than massive multi-year transformation initiatives. Along the way, I discuss KPI-driven thinking, sponsorship, data readiness, pilot design, and how organizations can build long-term AI capability through disciplined experimentation and strategic focus.

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episode Episode 184 - Why Successful Organizations Still Miss the Future cover

Episode 184 - Why Successful Organizations Still Miss the Future

In this episode of Shape of Tomorrow, I explore why so many successful organizations still struggle to adapt when disruption begins at the edges. Drawing from ideas in my upcoming book Strategic Surface Area, I walk through three practical actions leaders can take to avoid falling into the innovator’s dilemma and build organizations that are better at detecting signals, protecting experimentation, and responding to change before it is too late. I also dive into a fascinating new development from Anthropic around AI memory and “dreaming,” and why I believe the future of artificial intelligence may depend less on raw intelligence and more on how systems manage continuity, context, and memory over time. I unpack what happens when AI agents evolve across thousands of interactions and why memory architecture could become one of the most important battlegrounds in AI.

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episode Episode 183 - Designing What’s Next, Rewiring Work, and Apple’s Innovation Crossroads cover

Episode 183 - Designing What’s Next, Rewiring Work, and Apple’s Innovation Crossroads

In this episode, I explore three timely and thought-provoking topics shaping how we think about the future of work, education, and innovation. I begin with entrepreneurship in schools, unpacking why there is strong agreement on its importance, yet so many programs struggle to take hold. The real challenge is not belief. It is design. Next, I examine Amazon’s recent hiring and layoffs, and what it reveals about how organizations are redefining talent in an AI-driven world. This is not contraction. It is a shift toward a different kind of workforce. Finally, I take a closer look at Apple through the lens of the innovator’s dilemma, exploring what happens when a company known for disruption must confront the risk of disrupting itself. Three distinct conversations, each offering insight into how change is unfolding across institutions and industries.

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