Liselotte Lyngsø, a futurist based in Denmark, spoke at the British Chamber of Commerce for Luxembourg’s Leadership Forum, held at the Banque de Luxembourg, 19 October 2022. Photo credit: Steve Eastwood/British Chamber of Commerce for Luxembourg

Liselotte Lyngsø, a futurist based in Denmark, spoke at the British Chamber of Commerce for Luxembourg’s Leadership Forum, held at the Banque de Luxembourg, 19 October 2022. Photo credit: Steve Eastwood/British Chamber of Commerce for Luxembourg

The Danish futurist Liselotte Lyngsø addressed the British Chamber of Commerce for Luxembourg on Wednesday evening. “It was as fascinating, energising and insightful as anyone might have predicted,” according to the chamber’s Keith Amoss, who shared this report with Delano.

In a dynamic and inspiring presentation, the audience was taken on a thoughtful journey to the future, full of artificial intelligence, natural language processing, chatbots, quantum computers, robots and the Metaverse. It became clear that these major technological advancements will increasingly affect how we will communicate, work collaboratively and even define our most significant relationships.

As a professional futurist, Liselotte Lyngsø is someone who predicts a host of possibilities, such as how we are likely to work, rest and play; what we will consume; and how we will manage our health in the near and distant future. That makes her a highly valued consultant for several global organisations where she gives much sought after advice on where their resources should be targeted.

Lyngsø opened by highlighting that in this particularly challenging moment with so many external forces at play--whether economic, social or environmental--companies were eager to know what was coming next.

Metaverse

In fact significant change is already here. Albeit at an early stage in some cases. She expressed her confidence that the development of the metaverse will mean spending a lot more of our time in virtual reality. She foretold that at some point we will be able to hug each other, taste and even smell in the virtual world through our avatars and holograms.

Lyngsø was also clear on the importance of democratising the technology so that people can make collective decisions on what they want to happen rather than being led into a dystopian world. In her view, we all have a responsibility to consider what kind of society we wanted to create for the future.

With regard to leaders, she felt that they needed to embrace the future with curiosity and with a neutral, apolitical, stance.  The ideal state, she believed was to see these new developments as both interesting and exciting.


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The evolution in many areas will be significant and we may be moving from an information society to a new age of precision, she stated. This would mean that technology would be treating us more as individuals and customising services to our individual needs. This would be based on high quality data collected and analysed to see where the most value would be created.

As an example, she cited a fictitious cleaning company which in the future would be able to determine from data analyses rather than human observation what needed cleaning, when, where and for how long.

Deepfakes

We have many options at our disposal and it was important to notice that with the transformations now taking place there were risks--such as with the use of deepfakes, where famous people’s faces and voices were being used to create lifelike video recordings. This could lead to more scams and fake news.

She pointed out that some lessons had already been learned from our collective covid experiences. These could take us forward in that it seems that some of us will be time owners --deciding where and when we work--while others will be time slaves--tied to particular jobs, hours of work and locations.

Liselotte Lyngsø is a futurist and founding partner of

This guest article was written by Dr Keith Amoss, and member of the People and Leadership Group