Job Description
Join Horizon Dynamics Inc. as a visionary 2026 Futurist Strategist and help architect tomorrow's technological landscape today. We're seeking an innovative thinker to decode emerging trends, disrupt conventional paradigms, and steer our organization toward the next frontier of human progress. This pivotal role demands a blend of radical imagination and pragmatic execution to transform futuristic concepts into actionable blueprints.
As a key architect of our 2026 roadmap, you'll collaborate with quantum computing pioneers, neurotech researchers, and sustainable energy architects to build strategies that position us at the vanguard of technological evolution. If you thrive at the intersection of science fiction and reality, this is your calling.
Responsibilities
- Map emerging technological trajectories (AI, quantum, biotech) and forecast their 2026 commercial impact
- Design strategic frameworks for next-gen human-machine symbiosis interfaces
- Lead cross-disciplinary 'Future Labs' synthesizing nanotechnology and cognitive augmentation
- Develop ethical governance protocols for autonomous systems and neurotech integration
- Partner with C-suite to embed 2026 foresight into quarterly business roadmaps
- Author quarterly 'Horizon Briefs' predicting disruptive inflection points
- Curate global ecosystem of futurist researchers and innovation incubators
Qualifications
- Master's degree in Futures Studies, Systems Thinking, or equivalent interdisciplinary field
- 5+ years experience in strategic foresight or emerging technology consulting
- Proven track record translating speculative concepts into enterprise roadmaps
- Deep expertise in at least two 2026-relevant domains (e.g., AGI ethics, climate engineering)
- Exceptional systems modeling skills with proficiency in foresight methodologies
- Portfolio demonstrating published future scenarios or trend analysis
- Experience facilitating high-stakes scenario planning with executive stakeholders
- Fluency in forecasting tools (e.g., Delphi, Horizon Scanning, Cross-Impact Matrices)