I am not in the habit of quoting V. I. Lenin, but he did get some big things right.

‘There are decades where nothing happens, and there are weeks where decades happen’

We are in one of those ‘weeks,’ the inflection point of a lifetime for most of us.

Almost every trend we look at, and forecast by, is somewhat linear. There will be bumps and jumps, but overall, looked at over time, they are linear.

Most business models are built on the automatic assumption of those linear trends holding true.  Our institutions utterly depend on that being the truth. As a result, when the inflection point comes, it is traumatic; the response slow and often inappropriate, assuming all will return to a ‘new normal’, that it is just another bump in the road. Perhaps a nasty one, but a bump nevertheless.

I suspect that is not the case currently, this is not a bump in the road; this is a U-turn down a bush track into the unknown.

Forces build for a while in the background, looking linear, and then some sort of catalyst creates a confluence that totally changes the forces that drive the industry. The resulting chaos creates opportunity as much as it creates uncertainty, disharmony and dislocation of the pre-existing status quo.

Today, we are watching as several trends come together, which will create a new normal, looking little like the old one.

The digitisation of everything, has taken a dose of steroids since January, changing the way we shop, communicate, and work. To me it looks a bit like I imagine the confluence of the internal combustion engine and electricity looked in 1920. They had been around for a while, but suddenly converged to become transformative powerhouses that led to a 50 year burst of productivity increases.

Similarly with education. We have been wandering down a road of increasing commercialisation of education, marketing a tertiary qualification to Australians as the road to a good life and to international students as the ticket to wealth and a visa, while gutting the development of trade skills.  Suddenly we have closed borders, the major source of international university students actively discouraging coming to Australia, and a massive shortage of depth of trade skills we cannot fill with 457 visas.

The education sector is in deep financial and philosophical trouble.

What about energy?  For years we have clung to coal as not only our primary energy source, but as a huge magnet for international investment and export commodity sales, to the active exclusion of alternatives. Now we have wind and solar producing energy more cheaply than coal, and technology rapidly solving the storage problem. At the same time, the distribution of power is changing rapidly from a centralised system to a localised one. That confluence must be producing a bad case of reflux in Canberra. Political donations, existing political institutions, and relationships will not be enough to stem the tide, and the outcome is likely to be bloody, inevitable, and very soon.

Coming at us are revolutions in biology, driven by gene therapy and CRISPR. The human genome was first mapped in 2003, at the cost of billions. Now you can send a sample along and get your own map for a couple of hundred dollars. CRISPR, discovered in 2012, has accelerated our gene editing capability faster than Henry Ford’s production line accelerated the manufacture of cars, and look what happened then. Massive investment in roads, the 2 day weekend, and people travelled daily further than they had in a lifetime just a generation before.

That is before we consider the coming tsunami of AI, Quantum computing, additive manufacturing, and the new materials being developed with properties that seem to be out of the mind of Jules Verne.

As the old Chinese proverb goes: ‘May you live in interesting times’. We are, and to some measure that will be due to the changes driven by the Chinese journey out of poverty into world dominance in just over 30 years. This is trend reaching a tipping point without a lot of notice, or thought about the consequences.

Are you ready?