In their 1982 title Megatrends, Patricia Aburdene and her former husband John Naisbitt talked about the birth of the Information Economy; in Megatrends 2000, published in 1990, they predicted the networked, technology-driven Internet era. The coming megatrend, Aburdene asserts, will not be driven by external, social, or technological forces so much as "the internal dimension of change" that will reinvent free enterprise. And she's predicting that this spiritual megatrend will take firm hold of the American way of business by, say, 2010.
In seven chapters the book identifies the major facets of the new megatrend, including:
* The Power of Spirituality - From Personal to Organizational
* The Dawn of Conscious Capitalism
* Leading from the Middle
* Spirituality in Business
* The Values-Driven Consumer
* The Wave of Conscious Solutions
* The Socially Responsible Investment Boom
Along the way, Aburdene offers many intimate portraits of the people behind the spiritual evolution in business, from meditating CEOs to value-driven consumers and socially responsible investment counselors. In "Leading from the Middle," Aburdene suggests that conscious capitalism will spell an end to the era of high-profile CEOs who are outrageously overpaid not only to provide symbolic leadership of corporations, but to take virtually all the credit and blame for their companies' fortunes.
The question is what this and all the other "conscious capitalism" trends really portend for the future of American commerce. To Patricia Aburdene, this future will be one in which "the spiritual transformation of capitalism" will shift the American way of doing business "from greed to enlightened self-interest, from elitism to economic democracy, from the fundamentalist doctrine of `profit at any cost' to the conscious ideology that espouses both money and morals." If the author is overly optimistic, one hopes that she's not too far off the mark. In a time when natural disasters and accelerating environmental decline are colluding with exceptional political ineptitude to stress the great American experiment as never before, it might just be the approaching enlightenment of capitalism that illuminates a sane, sustainable path ahead for us all. -- From the Fearless Spotlight Review by D. Patrick Miller
If you were to read three books that delivered the most accurate insight into the pulse of the business industry in the last few decades, they would have to be Megatrends, Megatrends 2000 and now Megatrends 2010.
Megatrends, published in 1982, predicted what authors Aburdene and Naisbitt termed the "information economy". In 1990, this husband and wife team went a step further with Megatrends 2000 and forecast the massively technology-driven age of the internet and its far-reaching consequences. Megatrends 2010, written solely by Patricia Aburdene, asserts that business will not be driven by external, social, or technological forces so much as "the internal dimension of change". What she's predicting is a spiritual megatrend that will define and take firm hold of business as we know it.
Aburdene's projected megatrend looks at ethics, values and spirituality in business as well as socially-responsible investing. It explains why firms are taking a stand for corporate social responsibility and why so many people are choosing to buy from companies who share or reflect their values and lifestyle choices. She sees both new-economy and old-guard companies alike, tapping into the "rise of conscious capitalism" in order to do any or all of the following: clean up the corporate image, save the environment, help the less fortunate, and, of course, boost the bottom line.??
What I find most heartwarming about Aburdene's inspired vision is the overwhelming numbers of dedicated meditation practices popping up in corporation after corporation, in large and small companies all over North America. A trend she sees growing and deepening. Ahhh...
In seven chapters the book identifies the major facets of the new megatrend, including:
* The Power of Spirituality - From Personal to Organizational
* The Dawn of Conscious Capitalism
* Leading from the Middle
* Spirituality in Business
* The Values-Driven Consumer
* The Wave of Conscious Solutions
* The Socially Responsible Investment Boom
Along the way, Aburdene offers many intimate portraits of the people behind the spiritual evolution in business, from meditating CEOs to value-driven consumers and socially responsible investment counselors. In "Leading from the Middle," Aburdene suggests that conscious capitalism will spell an end to the era of high-profile CEOs who are outrageously overpaid not only to provide symbolic leadership of corporations, but to take virtually all the credit and blame for their companies' fortunes.
The question is what this and all the other "conscious capitalism" trends really portend for the future of American commerce. To Patricia Aburdene, this future will be one in which "the spiritual transformation of capitalism" will shift the American way of doing business "from greed to enlightened self-interest, from elitism to economic democracy, from the fundamentalist doctrine of `profit at any cost' to the conscious ideology that espouses both money and morals." If the author is overly optimistic, one hopes that she's not too far off the mark. In a time when natural disasters and accelerating environmental decline are colluding with exceptional political ineptitude to stress the great American experiment as never before, it might just be the approaching enlightenment of capitalism that illuminates a sane, sustainable path ahead for us all. -- From the Fearless Spotlight Review by D. Patrick Miller
If you were to read three books that delivered the most accurate insight into the pulse of the business industry in the last few decades, they would have to be Megatrends, Megatrends 2000 and now Megatrends 2010.
Megatrends, published in 1982, predicted what authors Aburdene and Naisbitt termed the "information economy". In 1990, this husband and wife team went a step further with Megatrends 2000 and forecast the massively technology-driven age of the internet and its far-reaching consequences. Megatrends 2010, written solely by Patricia Aburdene, asserts that business will not be driven by external, social, or technological forces so much as "the internal dimension of change". What she's predicting is a spiritual megatrend that will define and take firm hold of business as we know it.
Aburdene's projected megatrend looks at ethics, values and spirituality in business as well as socially-responsible investing. It explains why firms are taking a stand for corporate social responsibility and why so many people are choosing to buy from companies who share or reflect their values and lifestyle choices. She sees both new-economy and old-guard companies alike, tapping into the "rise of conscious capitalism" in order to do any or all of the following: clean up the corporate image, save the environment, help the less fortunate, and, of course, boost the bottom line.??
What I find most heartwarming about Aburdene's inspired vision is the overwhelming numbers of dedicated meditation practices popping up in corporation after corporation, in large and small companies all over North America. A trend she sees growing and deepening. Ahhh...