futures studies podcast

Three Horizons Framework & Futures Wheel Explained

There's a reason some organizations consistently seem to see disruption coming — and it's usually not because they're smarter or better funded. It's because they've built structured habits of thinking about change in multiple time horizons simultaneously, and they've learned how to trace the cascading consequences of a single shift before it becomes a crisis.

Two of the oldest and most reliable tools for doing exactly that are the Three Horizons Framework and the Futures Wheel. In this episode of Modem Futura, hosts Sean Leahy and Andrew Maynard break both down in accessible, conversational detail — and show what becomes possible when you use them together.

The Three Horizons Framework

Originally developed by Bill Sharpe and widely used in professional foresight and strategic planning, divides the landscape of change into three overlapping zones. Horizon 1 represents the dominant present — the systems, structures, and assumptions that govern how the world works today. Horizon 3 is the emergent fringe: weak signals, nascent ideas, and early-stage shifts that are observable but not yet mainstream. And Horizon 2 is the transitional space between them — turbulent, hard to define, and full of both opportunity and risk.

The model doesn't tell you what the future will bring. What it offers is a way of *positioning* trends, signals, and innovations in relation to change — helping individuals and organizations understand what to watch, what to act on, and what to prepare for.

The Futures Wheel

Developed by Jerome Glenn in 1971, works differently but complementarily. Starting from a specific change or trend, it maps outward through first, second, and third-order consequences — building a rich, networked picture of how a single shift might ripple through a system over time. It's a brainstorming and sense-making tool, not a prediction engine, and it's at its most powerful when used with diverse groups who bring different perspectives to the same question.

Used individually, each tool offers genuine insight. Used together, they offer something more: a way of understanding not just *what* a signal might do, but *when* and *through which pathways* it might do it.

Whether you're a founder trying to figure out which wave to ride, a strategist scanning for disruption, or simply someone trying to make better decisions in an uncertain world, these tools are worth adding to your thinking practice.

🎧 Listen to the full episode wherever you get your podcasts, or watch on YouTube.


Subscribe and Connect!

Subscribe to Modem Futura wherever you get your podcasts and connect with us on LinkedIn. Drop a comment, pose a question, or challenge an idea—because the future isn’t something we watch happen, it’s something we build together. The medium may still be the massage, but we all have a hand in shaping how it touches tomorrow.


🎧 Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/4sosMdQ

🎧 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/58Fdc2SrWodBTbwfxK8Pwm?si=leiCnhRsQxuv-_hnxEeNjQ

📺 YouTube: https://youtu.be/eVk6L_VfAkY

🌐 Website: https://www.modemfutura.com/   

Power, Probes, and the Post-Human Horizon: What the Kardashev Scale Reveals About Us

On the surface, this episode of Modem Futura is an excuse to have fun. It's a spring break Futures Improv — Sean and Andrew throwing speculative scenarios at each other and seeing where things land. And it is fun. But somewhere between Dyson Spheres and the Fermi Paradox, it becomes something else: a quiet meditation on what humanity actually wants when we talk about mastering energy, exploration, and the cosmos.

The conversation begins with the Kardashev Scale, proposed by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Kardashev in 1964 as a way to rank civilizations by their energy use. A Type 1 civilization controls its planet's full energy output. Type 2 controls its star. Type 3 commands a galaxy. Humans, for context, are not yet a Type 1 civilization. We harness a fraction of what's available to us on Earth alone.


The question the hosts bring to this framework isn't just can we get there — it's what would we do once we did? Would abundance resolve our deepest conflicts, or would we simply carry our scarcity mindset into a new era? Andrew draws on Maslow's hierarchy of needs to make the point: remove the bottom layers of the pyramid — hunger, shelter, survival — and what remains is a different kind of human problem. The need for meaning, status, belonging, and always — always — a little more.

From there, the conversation ranges widely across some of the most provocative concepts in speculative science:

Dyson Spheres — hypothetical megastructures built around a star to harvest its complete energy output. Theoretical, yes, but not quite as theoretical as they once seemed. In 2024, seven anomalous objects within 1,000 light-years of Earth caught researchers' attention for occlusion patterns that didn't fit known planetary behavior.

Matrioshka Brains — named after Russian nesting dolls, these are hypothetical star-powered supercomputers of almost incomprehensible scale. The hosts draw an obvious connection: if AI data centers already strain Earth's energy grid, what does that compute-energy loop look like at stellar scales?

Von Neumann Probes — self-replicating spacecraft capable of exploring the galaxy by mining local resources to reproduce themselves. Biology can't survive interstellar space. Self-replicating machines, perhaps, can.

The Fermi Paradox — the haunting question of why, in a universe this old and this large, we can't find anyone else. The hosts explore the possibility that civilizations rise and fall within cosmic time windows too narrow to ever overlap. That the universe may be full of life that simply never gets to meet itself.

What makes this episode work is not the concepts themselves — though they're genuinely fascinating — but the humility behind the exploration. No predictions. No resolution. Just two people genuinely wondering, out loud, whether the same drive that would take us to the stars might also be the thing that holds us back.



🎧 Listen to the full episode wherever you get your podcasts, or watch on YouTube.

Subscribe and Connect!

Subscribe to Modem Futura wherever you get your podcasts and connect with us on LinkedIn. Drop a comment, pose a question, or challenge an idea—because the future isn’t something we watch happen, it’s something we build together. The medium may still be the massage, but we all have a hand in shaping how it touches tomorrow.

🎧 Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/4bOu2kk

🎧 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2sbRQEuoabpKCUTrOQPCGT?si=159db4727a8841cb

📺 YouTube: https://youtu.be/z53hk7AlXZ4

🌐 Website: https://www.modemfutura.com/