Shiftdisturbers highlights the people, research and ideas that change the way we think about the world. It is the official podcast of the Martin Prosperity Institue, an academic think tank that aims to deepen our understanding of economic prosperity. Housed at the University of Toronto’s Rotman Scho…
The Martin Prosperity Institute will be closing its doors at the end of June. Over a decade ago we set out to make a difference in the world in our explorations of city building and geographic advantage and in our investigation into the underpinnings and fault lines of democratic capitalism. For details on the latter, we highly recommend taking a listen to our previous episode that lays out some solutions for the ills facing democratic capitalism. But for our final episode, wanted to take stock of all the work and research that’s come out of the Institute over the past 11 years. Here, MPI staff members past and present offer highlights from their time working here and offer what they believe will hopefully be the Institute’s lasting legacy. Music used in this episode - "Steppin'" by Wake
Over the course of the last decade, MPI researchers have looked at the problems faced by democratic capitalism from a number of different angles. In our last episode, MPI Institute Director Roger Martin talked about some of the solutions he’s explored for the problems facing our democratic, capitalist system. He specifically had call-to-actions for four different actors: citizens, policy makers, business and educators. On this episode he drills down further, offering the what, why and how for each actor. There are echoes of past work from across MPI’s existence; while these are Roger’s solutions, they were arrived at through the blood, sweat and tears of people like Richard Florida and MPI’s talented fellows and researchers. But this is far from simply a greatest hits of our work; it’s a holistic assessment of our political system and the people who work within it. Notably, their roles are not siloed – when one actor pulls a lever, it affects the actions of the other three. Music used in this episode: Wake - "Steppin" Jahzaar - "The Last Ones" and "Siesta"
As part of MPI's ongoing work around shared prosperity, Roger Martin outlines his case against efficiency, specifically the way it's come to dominate how we think about the economy and politics and how that impacts are day to day lives. Once considered an unalloyed good, he argues we've gone to far, pushing our systems of finance and government to a point where they no longer work towards the betterment of the average middle-class family. This episode is based on the article "Rethinking Efficiency" by Roger Martin for the Harvard Business Review - https://hbr.org/2019/01/rethinking-efficiency Featured music: "Steppin'" by Wake "The Last Ones" & "Siesta" by Jahzzar
We examine the idea of citizenship and the power that comes with it. Here in North America, and across the Western world, we don’t put stringent definitions or limitations on what constitutes citizenship. Some simply define citizenship as voting while others would argue that even that is too limiting. Everyone we spoke with for this podcast, agreed on though was that it’s through citizenship that we create power, especially political power. Yet, as a whole we’ve become power illiterate. Featuring interview with Citizen Universtiy founder Eric Liu, the Ryerson Leadership Lab's Karim Bardeesy, and MPI Executive Director Jamison Steeve. Music featured: Wake - "Steppin" Jahzzar - "The Last Ones" Jahzzar - "Siesta"
we kick-off 2018 by looking at the term Music City, its meaning, intent and how such recognitions shape cultural policy in cities. Featuring interviews with Toronto Music Sector Development Officer Mike Tanner and Sound Diplomacy founder Shain Shapiro. Featured music: Wake - "Steppin'" Poddington Bear - "Woop Groove" & "The Window"
16 blog posts, 14 research reports, 13 op-eds, four books and 1 short film – it’s been quite a year for us here at MPI. On this episode we take stock and looking back at some of that research while casting our gaze forward to 2018. The Shiftdisturbers Holiday Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/user/iangormely/playlist/3jkDo1co6ZsOi7kowoVRAz Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake "Playtime" by Jahzzar "Jingle Bells" by Poddington Bear
We take a look at integrative thinking, a problem-solving theory that MPI Institute director Roger Martin conceived about a dozen years ago. He’s written two books on the subject, 2007’s The Opposable Mind, and the just-released Creating Great Choices, co-authored by Jennifer Riel. Put simply, integrative thinking is a technique through which two opposing ideas are “resolved” by taking the best elements of each to create a new, better idea. The theory was born out of Roger’s quest to get inside the heads of highly successful business leaders like Jack Welch and AG Lafley. But integrative thinking isn’t some business-speak laden theory reserved for managers. Rather, its premise can be applied to almost any situation, from the halls of government to elementary school classrooms.
A look into the themes explored in the new documentary short film ProsperUS. Produced by the Nantucket Project, an annual gathering of leading thinkers and decision makers with an aim making quote meaningful change, ProsperUS puts the spotlight on the decline of the American Dream and the dangers that imbalance poses to the capitalist democratic system. It also offers some solutions for this most wicked of problems and features MPI Institute Director Roger Martin and MPI Fellow Zeynep Ton. ProsperUS Trailer: http://martinprosperity.org/about/prosperus-mpis-thinking-on-the-future-of-work/ Music from this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake
This episode celebrates MPI's 10th anniversary and features a sit-down conversation with Institute director Roger Martin and Director of Cities Richard Florida. In the mid-2000s, Joseph Rotman came to then dean Roger Martin, offering Roger the financial support needed to build his own think tank. Excited by the opportunity, Roger immediately called up Richard Florida, someone he’d wanted to work with for some time. Forces beyond his control had stymied Roger’s attempts to bring Richard to Toronto in the early 2000s. But, with this new opportunity, Richard was once again top-of-mind. Music featured in this episode: "The Window" and "Woop Groove" by Podinton Bear; "Steppin" by Wake.
Featuring interviews with IDEO CEO Tim Brown, Claudia Kotchka and Roger Martin, we take a closer look at design thinking. While you might not know what that term means, you’ve no doubt encountered many of the products the methodology has helped shape. It's a way for companies to figure out what consumers want and how best to give that to them. Apple is probably the most famous example of a company that’s incorporated design thinking into its products. But design thinking can be much more than just a way to design cooler iPhones; it’s a problem-solving method that focuses on solutions rather than problems. As such, it can be applied to pretty much any problem, from product development to public policy, which is where our interest comes in. Featured music: "Steppin" by Wake "The Window" & "Woop Groove" by Poddington Bear All music used in this episode is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution License and available via freemusicarchive.org
In honour of Canada Day, on today’s episode, we’re taking a break from our usual dives into MPI research and have a little nationalistic fun. We canvased the staff here at MPI and our sister think tank, the Institute for Competitiveness and Prosperity asking people to share their most Canadian moment with the pod. And while no one was willing to admit that they’d arm wrestled a beaver, the stories that we heard reflected the good, the bad, and the just plain weird of Canada. Featuring the track "Steppin'" by Wake
On today’s episode, we’re talking childcare. This seemingly innocuous piece of public-private policy can have a huge impact on kids, parents and even the economy. Childcare is finally being viewed through an economic, rather than a social lens as governments realize that childcare is about creating jobs, getting people back to work and preparing future generations for the workforce. In the most recent budget, the federal Liberals committed $7 billion to child care over the next decade. Though the issue still doesn’t get a lot of airtime in the media, childcare is a hot topic of conversation amongst anyone who’s even thinking of having a kid. "Why is childcare so expensive in Ontario" by Philippa French https://www.competeprosper.ca/blog/why-is-child-care-so-expensive-in-ontario "Student Loans for Babies?" by Vass Bednar http://policyoptions.irpp.org/2015/03/17/student-loans-for-babies/ More on Dr. Lauren Jones http://www.laurenedenjones.com/#sthash.ix4i5hVx.dpbs Featured Music: "Steppin'" by Wake "The Window" by Podington Bear "Woop Groove" by Podington Bear
A look at the different processes that thinkers Roger Martin, Richard Florida, and Jennifer Riel as well as journalists David Frum and Adam Radwanski use to come up with, articulate, and disseminate their thoughts and ideas. These are unique ways of approaching thinking and research specific to the individual, but we hope that if givesome insight into our work and a better understanding of how you think and communicate with others. Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake "The Last Ones" by Jahzzar "Whispering Through" by Asura
Ever since he burst back onto the political scene back in 2015, politicians, pundits and the general populace has been trying to figure out what makes Donald Trump tick. While many claim to understand the motivations of the president, few believed he’d actually win. Not so with Roger Martin. The former Dean of Rotman and our own Institute Director viewed Trump’s primary run through a business lens. By the beginning of 2016, Roger felt so strongly that Trump would clinch the nomination that he not only penned an op-ed about it, he bet a friend $10,000 that it would happen. Given his certaintude, what exactly was it that Roger saw in Trump? Notes: Roger Martin's HBR article on how Trump won https://hbr.org/2017/01/how-the-attacks-on-trump-reinforce-his-strategy David Frum's cover story from the Atlantic, "How to Build an Autocracy" https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/03/how-to-build-an-autocracy/513872/ Syrian refugees in Canada series from the New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/25/world/canada/syrian-refugees.html?_r=0 "What's Yours is Mine" by Tom Slee http://www.orbooks.com/catalog/whats-yours-is-mine-by-tom-slee/ Music used in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake "The Last Ones" by Jahzzar "Whispering Through" by Asura
We’re taking stock and looking back at some of the research we’ve done over the past year. On the whole, we think that we’re on the right track.But, the base assumptions through which we filter much of our work has been altered by both the Brexit vote and the recent US election. How will this affect our work in the upcoming new year? Music by Wake ("Steppin") and Jahzzar ("The Last Ones")
What do you do when your country goes on without you? On today’s episode, we take a look at the concept of social mobility, or moving up the socio-economic ladder. Politicians, particularly in the most recent election cycle, like to talk about the American dream – the idea that if you keep your head down and work hard, you can be lifted out of poverty, or into the upper echelons of the so-called middle class. That sort of rhetoric is common here in Canada too. And, as we saw through the course of the US election, culminating in Donald Trump’s electoral win, when voters start seeing that path blocked they start looking for a better map. Its prominent role in Trump’s ascent got us wondering about social mobility more broadly. What is it? Why is it so important to modern society? And is there anything that can be done to actually influence it? Music in this episode: "Steppin" by Wake
In this mini-episode, MPI's very own Director of Cities Richard Florida talks about the cities’ team’s new report, the Geography of the Global Super-Rich which tracks the geography of the world’s billionaires. Richard tells us what he and his team discovered including where the world’s wealthiest people live, why they live there and how they can affect the neighbourhoods and cities that they call home. Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake
We had the chance to speak with New York Times best-selling author Chuck Klosterman when he stopped by Rotman as part of our Shiftdisturbers speaker series. Klosterman is known for his keen sports and pop culture observations as well as his stint as the Ethicist for New York Times Magazine. He’s a super smart guy who brings his a unique worldview to almost any topic. But we were specifically talking about his new book, But What If We’re Wrong: Thinking About the Present as if it Were the Past, in which he tries to grapple with humanity's assumptions about what we think we know, and what that unquestioning certainty could mean for us in the future. Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake; "The Last Ones" by Jahzzar.
Speaking with MIT Sloan School of Management prof Zeynep Ton, author of the Good Jobs Strategy, and the United Way's Michelynn LaFleche, we take a look at the changing nature of work. Specifically, we put on the spotlight on workplace instability and how bad jobs and precarious work are sending ripple effects across the economy. The Good Jobs Strategy http://zeynepton.com/book/ United Way - The Precarity Penalty http://www.unitedwaytyr.com/document.doc?id=307 Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake; "The Last Ones" and "Siesta" by Jahzzar.
For this mini-episode we polled the MPI office about our own worst work experiences. We talk a lot about the shift from an industrial economy to a creativity and knowledge driven economy. Yet, what gets obscured is that that this shift hasn’t benefitted everyone; while those who have moved into creative fields enjoy both higher compensation and job satisfaction, an alarming number of people aren’t so lucky. They find themselves stuck in precarious service industry work – dead-end low pay, routine jobs that do nothing to stimulate the mind. Worst of all, these bad, service jobs now account for just under half of all jobs. In almost every case, the aspects of the MPI staff’s worst jobs mirrored the low-stakes, low rewards drudgery associated with many service work positions. For anyone in the Toronto area interested in learning more about this topic, Zeynep Ton, author of the Good Jobs Strategy is speaking at the Rotman School of Management on Monday, September 12th at 5:30pm. Register to attend here: http://martinprosperity.org/shiftdisturbers/schedule/
A recent article on TechCrunch suggested that Toronto is set to become the next Silicon Valley. For Episode 3 of ShiftDisturbers we asked Toronto based entrepreneur Michael Katchen, founder of FinTech company WealthSimple, local angel investor Dan DeBow, and Richard Florida, who wrote series of Startup City reports examining the geography of venture capital investment, about the chances of such a thing happening. Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake; "Siesta" by Jahzzar TechCrunch - "Toronto is Poised to become the Next Great Producer of Tech Startups - https://techcrunch.com/2016/06/12/toronto-is-poised-to-become-the-next-great-producer-of-tech-startups/
On the second episode of Shiftdisturbers we’re talking about how to rethink the think tank. There is a growing consensus that the traditional work of think tanks – identifying and studying a topic before making policy recommendations to government - is no longer effective in its current form. If that if the model is to continue, we’re going to need to drastically alter the research and communication strategies that have drive think tanks in the twenty-first century. In this episode You’ll hear from Hana Passen, associate director for the New America Foundation’s National Network, Susan Glasser, editor at Politico and MPI’s very own Institute Director, Roger Martin. Music in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake; "Siesta" by Jahzzar
Richard Florida talks about venture capital investment in the United States and across the globe as part of the Martin Prosperity Institute's ongoing Startup City series of reports.
In the inaugural episode of shiftdisturbers: the MPI podcast, our host Ian Gormely talks to MPI Fellow, Adam Grant, MPI Director of the Cities team, Richard Florida, and radio host on Vibe 105.5, Alex Centorame. We discuss what makes an Original, and how non-conformity can help stoke creativity, and what this means for the workplace. Intro and Outro - "Steppin'" by Wake
We chat with MPI director of cities, Richard Florida, about his team’s most recent report, The Rise of the Urban Creative Class in Southeast Asia, which looks at the massive wave of urbanization currently sweeping Southeast Asia and the ripple effects that transformation could have on the region’s middle and creative classes. Analyzing urbanization in Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, as well as their major cities, Richard was struck by relatively uneven levels of development happening in the region. But there’s also concern about its future. The economic development that led to the rise of the advanced nations in North America, Europe and parts of Asia was propelled by urbanization. However globalization has torn apart local linkages between the hinterlands and urban centres and now some nations in the region are threatened by the specter of urbanization without growth. As Richard explains, South East Asia is an intriguing case study of urbanization in our time. What We're Reading recommendations: Anthony Bourdain's Moveable Feast - http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/02/13/anthony-bourdains-moveable-feast The Strange Journeys of Anthony Bourdain http://www.wnyc.org/story/strange-journeys-anthony-bourdain/ Zadie Smith - Swing Time https://www.amazon.ca/Swing-Time-Zadie-Smith/dp/0670069043 Claudia Rankine - Citizen: An American Lyric https://www.amazon.ca/Citizen-American-Lyric-Claudia-Rankine/dp/1555976905 Music used in this episode: "Steppin'" by Wake "Something Elated" by Broke for Free "Whispering Through" by Asura