"Coolhunting: Chasing Down the Next Big Thing" by Peter Gloor & Scott Cooper, AMACOM, New York, 2007. Review.
Reading this bright book is a recommended experience. For three main reasons.
First, it contains a refined abstraction of the human and social mechanisms that by far from we are in existence are the basis of human evolution. That is to point that at the individual side it is not just information exchange that determines the growing patterns of culture and civilization, what we call "trends", but the interaction experience of the "ego" in reality; and, at the collective side, the awareness to be part of a continuously changing collective universe that makes this process the "world experience". As far as we can predict from individual experience the individual evolution in personality, attitudes, choices and performance, from this collective sense of interaction we can track the processes and dynamics that are the premises of the world of tomorrow. We can predict the future.
So the first simple revelation of the work is right a truth: every role we are going to have in the process of trends emersion, leaders or followers, writers or readers, speakers or listeners, observers or proposers, we are all part of it, inevitably. Awareness is the first point.
Second, the authors develop very further these assumptions in a really concrete way.
The choice, they say, of the role to have in the collective interaction experience relies not only on who we are, our personal characteristics, attitudes and natural instinct.
It may be a conceived rational choice, that starts from the awareness of the creativity developed in a "swarm dimension" toward the owning of the way of managing, rather then following, the process. That is the choice to follow palely emerging ideas, or to look for the emerging new trends, or to create actually new trends by cultivating new ideas.
This is the second revelation the authors explain, followed by the introduction of the appropriate scientific, methodological and technical tools to support our mental model improvement requested for what they call "coolhunting" and "coolfarming".
Third, the authors argue a flowing stream of interesting considerations coming from their own different backgrounds that guide in a easy bright way through a path of evidence about a sort of "intellectual energy" emerging now as in the past, that was the basis for great world changes, inventions, creations, renewed during the last years in shape, speed, accessibility and terms, thanks to new technologies and cultures that reduced space and time, giving a new dimension to the new small world.
Making evidence from a rich variety of relevant examples and cases, coming from about science, democracy, wisdom, collaboration, as much as business, education and art, they built a really thought provoking logical architecture.