Who speaks for tomorrow?
https://web.brid.gy/r/https://emerging-europe.com/who-speaks-for-tomorrow/
Reinventing US allies
https://web.brid.gy/r/https://emerging-europe.com/reinventing-us-allies/
"Never forget that adaptability outranks experience." - Futurist Jim Carroll
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Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
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The future doesn't care about your resume.
It only cares about your ability to adapt.
Don't let your experience become the baggage that holds you back.
If you think about our world of rapid change, you can easily appreciate that experience is a double-edged sword. It gives you the confidence to go forward, but it can also hold you back by encouraging you to be complacent, trying the 'same old things' instead of trying new things. In my 36-year voyage, I’ve come to realize that the more you "know" about how something works, the harder it is to see how it is about to change.
Think about it this way: the experience that you have in adapting to change has become more important than experience itself.
What does this mean? To master the art of the infinite pivot, you have to be willing to fire yourself as an expert every few years and reinvent yourself. You need to be willing to trade your "Expert" badge for a "Beginner" badge, admitting that the knowledge that made you successful yesterday might be the very thing that makes you obsolete tomorrow.
This is not only a personal skill but also the ultimate test for any leader in an era of disruptive change. Most organizations are run by experts who are conditioned to protect their "proven" success. When disruption occurs, these experts are often the first to dismiss it, discount it, and label it as unimportant because it threatens their identity, status, and power. They aren't just protecting the business; they are protecting their status.
To master the Infinite Pivot, you must be willing to unlearn and relearn. You have to be comfortable being the student in a room full of people who have less "experience" but more "adaptability" than you do.
The future rewards your ability to learn, not your ability to remember.
Don’t let your years of experience become years of baggage!
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Futurist Jim Carroll is always trying to learn new stuff, knowing that it is better to know what you don't know than to try to rely on what you do know.
**#Adaptability** **#Experience** **#Learning** **#Unlearn** **#Relearn** **#Pivot** **#Beginner** **#Change** **#Disruption** **#Growth** **#Reinvention** **#Flexibility** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Baggage** **#Expert** **#Student** **#Humility** **#Evolution** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Resume** **#Courage** **#Transformation** **#Onwards**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-10-never-forget-that-adaptability-outranks-experience/
"Don't let your past define your future" - Futurist Jim Carroll
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Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
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In the late 1990s, I was at the top of my game.
I had written 34 books and was the go-to expert for the "Information Highway." I literally did thousands of interviews with the media - and can still find many of them online. On paper, in print, and in broadcast, I had 'arrived.'
I did so many interviews that for a long time, I was pegged everywhere I went as 'that Internet guy.' And yet, when the dot.com collapse happened around 2001, many people thought the disruptive impact of the Internet had come to an end.
So too did my career - the result was that my bread and butter dried up.
People no longer wanted 'Internet strategy.' They wanted the next big thing, and that 'big thing' was a broader range of trends and disruptive innovation.
Since I was spending all my time on stages and boardrooms speaking about those issues, albeit with a technology and Internet focus, I decided I would be a "Futurist, Trends & Innovation Expert," a self-anointed title I carry with me to this day. That's when I came to realize that the "Infinite Pivot" isn't a one-time event.
Why did I shift? By 2002, I realized being "The Internet Guy" was a brand with a shelf life. The world was moving from how to use the web to what the world would look like next. I had to do something uncomfortable: abandon a successful brand to build a significant one.
At the time, it felt like a massive risk to leave the security of a known niche.
But by choosing my own title, I was claiming the future. I stopped being defined by the tools I explained (the Internet) and started being defined by the perspective I provided (the future).
I was NOT letting my past define my future. Just as I refused to let my accountancy career and designation define my technology role. (I'm still, at this moment, a CPA! I just don't talk about it much!)
And wow, was this pivot a success!
It took hard work but from about 2005 to this day, I've built an entirely new career with an entirely new brand. And in this is a critical lesson for any organization: you might be the market leader today, but if you allow that success to define your identity forever, you will become a legacy act.
True agility requires the courage to "self-title" into your next phase before the market forces you to.
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Futurist Jim Carroll is still known to some folks as 'that Internet guy.'
**#Past** **#Future** **#Redefine** **#Identity** **#Pivot** **#Brand** **#Reinvention** **#Change** **#Internet** **#Futurist** **#Courage** **#Legacy** **#Agility** **#Transformation** **#Career** **#Success** **#Growth** **#Evolution** **#SelfTitle** **#Freelance**
Original post: https://jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decoding-tomorrow-the-infinite-pivot-series-7-dont-let-your-past-define-your-future/
Success isn't reaching a destination; it’s mastering the art of the infinite pivot." - Futurist Jim Carroll
I walked out of the corporate world 36 years ago to bet on a home office, a fledgling new technology known as the Internet, and a belief that the future belongs to those who can change.
I’ve learned a lot along the way! Through those years, I’ve survived market crashes, massive technology revolutions, and the beautiful chaos of raising a family in the same rooms and homes where I wrote 44 books. All along the way, I’ve learned what it means to pivot — to change my career focus, reinvent my skills, adjust my personal outlook, rebalance my time commitments. Every single time, I was somehow pivoting, changing, and adapting.
I meant to share these lessons at Year 35 — I wrote a long post last year with some thoughts on what I’ve learned. I haven't shared it yet —I wanted to get the lessons right.
But the other day, I stumbled across it and realized I had powerful insight to share. Many people around the world are in the early years of the freelance economy; it might be useful. Given how quickly AI is evolving, there will probably be more.
With that in mind, I’ve distilled my journey into this new series: The Art of the Infinite Pivot.
I’ve come to realize that the delay was actually part of the journey. In a world obsessed with “instant” and “real-time,” I’ve learned that the best insights are the ones that have been lived, tested, and breathed for decades.
Over the next few months, I’m going to share them one by one — not as a “guru,” but as someone who has spent 36 years in the trenches of the home office and global freelance economy. Whether you are a solo-entrepreneur, a corporate leader considering t a pivot, or someone just trying to build a new future, I hope these lessons help you navigate your own voyage.
Lesson **#1** drops tomorrow. The series will be found here and at https://pivot.jimcarroll.com.
Who’s coming along?
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Futurist Jim Carroll bet on his future in November 1990. He hasn't looked back.
**#Pivot** **#Success** **#Freelance** **#Journey** **#Lessons** **#HomeOffice** **#Adaptation** **#Career** **#Change** **#Internet** **#Entrepreneurship** **#Wisdom** **#Series** **#Evolution** **#Growth** **#Learning** **#Independence** **#Reinvention** **#Future** **#Experience** **#Decades** **#Mastery** **#Navigation** **#Sharing** **#Onwards**
📝 Plot: In pre‑Revolutionary France in 1789, master chef Pierre Manceron loses his prestigious post after serving an unorthodox dish that offends aristocrats. Disheartened, he returns home with his son and meets a determined young woman who wants to learn the culinary arts. Together they open a humble restaurant celebrating simple regional cuisine and inspiring community, passion, and reinvention.
#DelicieuxMovie #Comedy #Drama #History #FoodFilm #FrenchCinema #Gastronomy #Passion #Reinvention
#DO #NOT #FALL #FOR #PARAMOUNT #SKYDANCE'S #REINVENTION #FOR #MTV!!!
Keep Boycotting Paramount Skydance until they went Bankrupt!
#BoycottCBS #BoycottParamount #BoycottParamountSkydance #IStandWithStephenColbert #FuckRealityTVShows #ShutDownParamountSkydance #AbolishParamountSkydance #CancelParamountPlus #RIPYouTube #NealMohanIsATerrorist #NoAgeVerification #120Minutes #HeadbangersBall #FuckFacialRecognition #FuckOnlineIDVerification #DeathToFacialRecognition #DeathToOnlineIDVerification