Kevin Benedict is a TCS futurist, humorist and lecturer focused on the signals and foresight that emerge as society, geopolitics, economies, science, technology, environment, and philosophy converge.
The Great Energy Rethink with Expert David Carlin
Loops, Truth, and Tempo: The Strategic Genius of John Boyd, #12
Fighter pilots in dogfights have to track dozens of variables at once: the position of the sun blinding the canopy, the enemy’s angle of attack, the feel of the jet shuddering near a stall, the shrinking margin of fuel, the blur of tracers arcing past. Every second, the environment changes. Every second, new data floods in. The pilot who loops through that chaos faster seizes the initiative and forces the other to react on stale information. That is the heart of OODA—speed to truth.
Hype, Value and Future of AI with Gartner Expert Deepak Seth
Rome, OODA & the Importance of Loops, #11
Investing in Sustainability with Banking Americas' Marie Clara Buelligen
Tempo: The Operating System of Success, #10
When Scale Changes Everything, #9
The Future & Seventh Generation Principles, #8
Investors and Investing in Authentic Sustainability with Expert Eric Weitzman
John Boyd & The Art of Adaptation, #7
Change is hard. Managing in an uncertain world is hard, and winning in this environment is even harder. All of these things make it very difficult to keep your head in the game and to be competitive. John Boyd was an officer, military pilot, and a military strategist that dedicated much of his life to thinking about thinking. I find his ideas captivating and timely.
John Boyd, was a maverick U.S. Air Force colonel and fighter pilot, who never ran a company, yet his ideas have quietly shaped many of the world’s most adaptive organizations and leaders. His genius was not in tactics but in synthesis. He fused physics, philosophy, and human psychology into a unified theory of adaptation—showing that victory, in war or business, comes not from strength or scale, but from speed of learning.Boyd’s central revelation was simple but radical: survival and winning depends on the ability to adapt faster than the environment, and faster than your adversaries can disorient you. The organizations that thrive are not those that predict the future perfectly, but those that can sense, decide, and act faster and more coherently than competitors.
Interviews with Kevin Benedict
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Speed, Complexity, and Strategic Foresight We are living through a historic moment where velocity, convergence, and disruption accurately de...
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This article is a comprehensive exploration of Finland’s extraordinary achievement in becoming the world's happiest country, not once, b...
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In this engaging FOBTV episode, I have the opportunity to interview Zvi Feuer, CEO Siemens Industry Software Israel, about the transformativ...





