
     
Peter Schwartz is
cofounder and chairman of Global Business Network, a Monitor Group
company, and a partner of the Monitor Group, a family of professional
services firms devoted to enhancing client competitiveness.
An internationally renowned
futurist and business strategist, Schwartz specializes in scenario planning,
working with corporations, governments, and institutions to create alternative
perspectives of the future and develop robust strategies for a changing and
uncertain world. His current research and scenario work encompasses energy
resources and the environment, technology, telecommunications, media and
entertainment, aerospace, and national security. Peter is also a venture partner
of San Francisco-based Alta Partners, a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations, and a member of the board of trustees of the Santa Fe Institute, the
Long Now Foundation, and the World Affairs Council.
From 1982 to 1986, Peter headed scenario planning for the Royal Dutch/Shell
Group of Companies in London. His team conducted comprehensive analyses of the
global business and political environment and worked with senior management to
create successful strategies. Before joining Royal Dutch/Shell, Peter directed
the Strategic Environment Center at SRI International. The Center researched the
business milieu, lifestyles, and consumer values, and conducted scenario
planning for corporate and government clients.
Peter is the author of Inevitable Surprises (2003), a provocative look at
the dynamic forces at play in the world today and their implications for
business and society. His first book, The Art of the Long View (1991 and
1996), is considered a seminal publication on scenario planning and has been
translated into multiple languages. He is also the co-author of The Long Boom
(1999), a vision for the world characterized by global openness, prosperity,
and discovery; When Good Companies Do Bad Things (1999), an examination
of, and argument for, corporate social responsibility; and China's Futures
(2001), which describes very different scenarios for China and their
international implications. He publishes and lectures widely and served as a
script consultant on the films "The Minority Report," "Deep Impact," "Sneakers,"
and "War Games." Peter received a B.S. in aeronautical engineering and
astronautics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
|