Workshops can be added after a keynote. Call or write to discuss workshops designed to your audience's interests.

As one of the very few professionally trained futurists on the planet, David Zach blends the funny with the profound in this surprisingly practical keynote to help you decide what really matters. You’ll rethink the balance between change and tradition – and the need to hold on to that which shouldn’t change. At the end, you’ll find yourself either thoughtfully quiet or engaged in some of the best conversations you’ve ever had at a meeting. Dave may not be the futurist you expected, but he is the one you’ll remember.


It should be clear that not all change is progress and not all tradition is outdated. Survival and progress depend on our ability to choose between change and tradition. Again, architects are some of the best prepared to make those choices clear for others. It’s time that they regained leadership positions for shaping the choices we must make.
This presentation is a fascinating (and rather irreverent) look at the trends and traditions affecting design and the roles that architects, designers and planners can have over the next ten years.


So what will students be facing when school ends and their work futures begin? (Or will School be an endless process?) Will the work they imagine be outsourced to China or India or be downsourced into machines that will be in their neighborhoods? What new inventions will let them do so much more than they can do today? Why is there such an explosion of innovation and will it continue?
Will the students (and their teachers and parents) be so distracted that they might not even notice? Will we lose the ability and the appreciation for eloquence, let alone for face to face communication? What's the future of multitasking? Are we retraining our brains to successfully pay attention to many things at once — or as author Maggie Jackson suggests, is the erosion of attention bringing on the new Dark Ages? How come kids can be doing ten things at once and still be, like, bored? David Zach asks a lot of interesting questions, and when cornered on stage, he's been known to give some funny answers. With a focus on both the practical, possible and preferable, he'll share with you a down-to-earth look at what's going on today and where it seems to be going. When he's finished with the talk, you still won't know tomorrow's lottery numbers, but you might just have a better idea of where to invest your time, attention and attitudes about the future. Let internationally renowned futurist David Zach be your guide to the not too distant future.



