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The Solari Report 2016-11-17

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The Solari Report 2016-11-17


November 24 – The Food Series – Francois Vecchio – Charcutier, Salumiere, Wurstmeister

December 01 – Introduction to Rudolf Steiner with T.H. Meyer

December 08 – Year End Tax Planning with Patty Kemmerer

“There was an old sailor who offered me the line, “the sea lies in wait for the unwary, but she stalks the reckless.” It’s reckless not to be prepared – not to know what the commitment is to deliver on what you say.” ~Eric Best

By Catherine Austin Fitts

Scenario thinking is one of the most valuable techniques for managing a life, a business, or a portfolio of assets.

Scenario thinking is a form of strategic planning that creates stories about the future, called scenarios, to simulate and to test with adaptations.  One aspect of scenario thinking is to define and to master key variables that influence events.  Each year in the Solari Report Annual Wrap Up, I use four scenarios to describe the outlook for the global economy. I apply probabilities to them to help me allocate investments of both time and money and to look for opportunities in the unexpected.

Eric Best, founder of Best Partners SC LLC, is the finest “scenario thinker” I know. After his successful career in journalism, he became a leader by helping people to understand and reinvent their futures. Eric has spent two decades helping leaders in a range of industries to practice scenario thinking. An avid sailor, Eric has also written a book about his 5,000-mile sailing solo to Hawaii, Into My Father’s Wake.

I have seen truly great scenario thinking reinvent and reinvigorate a family or a firm’s understanding of its world and how to build its future.  Such effort is rare, but instead of our listening to experts predicting our futures, I recommend we invest time in preparing to emerge into our multiple futures, even to invent our futures.

This Thursday, November 17, Eric will join me on the Solari Report to introduce you to scenario thinking so that you can use it to grasp opportunities and to manage risk in our uncertain world. The US elections will press us to take more responsibility for our futures–rather than our deferring to centralized systems, so I am pleased that Eric agreed to join me at this time.

In Let’s Go to the Movies, please watch Eric’s introductory video The 4 Best Principles.

In Money & Markets this week I will discuss the latest in financial and geopolitical news. I will be speaking to you from Amish country in Pennsylvania, having flown in from Dublin!

Please make sure to e-mail or post your questions for Ask Catherine.

Talk to you next Thursday!

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5 Comments

  1. This segment is especially useful and helpful as it outlines some plug and play conceptual tools. Not only in the board room, but the utility in helping family members and friends to plan their lives in a more objective, less emotionally charged manner, particularly when it come to future financial planning, wealth preservation and wealth transfer in a time when many are fearful and uncertain of the future. Thank you again for organizing this session with Eric Best.

    1. Scenario tools can be so powerful. I struggle to communicate the power of this! Thanks, Allison.

  2. Thanks for your recommendations to read both “The Field” by Lynne Mctaggart and Joseph Farrell’s most recent book on 9/11. I thought they were both great, and I’m enjoying reading “In the Dark” by Jason Bawden-Smith right now, too.

  3. I am greatly enjoying the written notes you’ve now been including along with your Money & Markets segments, so thanks!

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