Skip to content

Innovation Trends and Technology Trends for 2016 S11 Ep 39

Phil McKinney
Phil McKinney
2 min read
CES technology trends innovation trends

This weeks show is the annual "prediction" of what will be at the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) and what that means for the innovation trends and technology trends for 2016.

Some of the innovations and technologies discusses include:

  • Next generation TV's and displays
  • Virtual Reality (VR) and what to expect for content
  • Wearable's such as watches and medical devices
  • Drones
  • Security and Privacy
  • Autonomous and connected cars
  • ... any many more technology trends and innovation trends to watch for 2016.

[powerpress]

Killer Question:

[shareable]What products will I need to develop and offer to stay ahead of my competition in the next five years?[/shareable]

On October 4, 1957, Russia launched a beach-ball-sized satellite named Sputnik, which orbited the Earth in just over ninety-six minutes. The previous front runner in the space race, the United States, was now the runner up. Our only competitor had trounced us, seemingly out of nowhere. A month later the Russians sent up Laika, a small stray terrier collected from the streets of Moscow, in Sputnik II. The dog became the first living creature sent into space, and an instant celebrity back on Earth.

The “Sputnik moment” ended up being a huge benefit for our long-term space goals.

The US government was shocked and embarrassed that Soviet Russia managed to beat us into space. President Kennedy retaliated by greatly increasing funding for space travel. In 1958 NASA was founded, and the United States has led the way ever since.

We all need Sputnik Yes, they can be alarming, but they are also invigorating.A Sputnik moment is the catalyst for change because seeing your enemy get ahead is the greatest motivator there is. It makes you see that you have to seriously improve your game if you want to win. A Sputnik moment makes you realize that if you don’t change, you’re going to get left behind—and soon.

Have you ever had a Sputnik moment?

Sparking Points

  • What future predictions can you make based on the innovation rate for your industry (e.g., Moore’s law in the computer industry)?
  • What decisions would you make today if you knew that the rate of innovation would double?
  • What “impossible” idea (product, service, solution) have you been ignoring because it can’t happen? What would need to be done to make it happen?
Studio SessionsPast ShowsCESInnovationpredictionTechnologytrends

Phil McKinney Twitter

Phil McKinney is an innovator, podcaster, author, and speaker. He is the retired CTO of HP. Phil's book, Beyond The Obvious, shares his expertise and lessons learned on innovation and creativity.


Related Posts

How to Improve Your Weak Signal Judgment

Noticing a trend is easy and almost worthless. Predicting which one reshapes a market, and acting early, is where innovation pays.

How to improve your judgement on which weak signal to act on

How to Improve Your Second-Order Thinking Skills

The most expensive failures don't announce themselves. They start as weak signals somebody noticed once and explained away. Second-order thinking is how you stop being that somebody.

Second-order thinking

How to Improve Your Inversion Thinking Skills

Most innovation tools teach you how to win. Inversion thinking teaches you how to lose on purpose, so you catch the failure while you can still change course.

Image of inversion thinking - showing Phil McKinney inverted.