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Human-centred storytelling that helps explain how complex systems shape everyday life
Spotlight Stories


Trust, Talent and Opportunity: A Conversation with Valerie Bowden at CRDLE
Every successful international hire appears deceptively simple. A company needs a new team member, interviews a candidate, signs a contract and work begins. Yet behind that apparently straightforward transaction sits a far more complex system of trust, recruitment, training, communication, technology, incentives and human ambition. It is these hidden layers that determine whether global hiring succeeds or fails. That was the focus of our conversation with Valerie Bowden, Foun


The Knee: The System That Carries a Lifetime
A footballer collapses clutching their knee. A runner cuts a morning jog short after feeling a sharp pain. An older adult struggles to climb the stairs. A builder kneels on concrete all day before returning home with swollen joints. Across the world, millions of people think about their knees only when something goes wrong. The visible point of entry is pain. The real story is one of the most remarkable systems in the human body. The knee is not simply a hinge connecting the


Archaeology: The Science of Reading Human Systems
Every year, archaeologists uncover extraordinary discoveries. A buried Roman road in England. A Viking ship in Norway. A Pharaoh's tomb in Egypt. Ancient human footprints in New Mexico. A lost Maya city revealed beneath the forests of Guatemala using laser technology. Headlines often focus on treasure, mystery and discovery. That is only the visible point of entry. Archaeology is not really about finding old objects. It is about reconstructing entire systems from the smallest

How Do Systems Shape Everyday Life?
From housing and healthcare to food, travel, and technology, Stories of Business examines the systems and incentives behind the things we take for granted.

The Hidden Systems Behind Everyday Life
Latest Stories


Trust, Talent and Opportunity: A Conversation with Valerie Bowden at CRDLE
Every successful international hire appears deceptively simple. A company needs a new team member, interviews a candidate, signs a contract and work begins. Yet behind that apparently straightforward transaction sits a far more complex system of trust, recruitment, training, communication, technology, incentives and human ambition. It is these hidden layers that determine whether global hiring succeeds or fails. That was the focus of our conversation with Valerie Bowden, Foun


The Knee: The System That Carries a Lifetime
A footballer collapses clutching their knee. A runner cuts a morning jog short after feeling a sharp pain. An older adult struggles to climb the stairs. A builder kneels on concrete all day before returning home with swollen joints. Across the world, millions of people think about their knees only when something goes wrong. The visible point of entry is pain. The real story is one of the most remarkable systems in the human body. The knee is not simply a hinge connecting the


Archaeology: The Science of Reading Human Systems
Every year, archaeologists uncover extraordinary discoveries. A buried Roman road in England. A Viking ship in Norway. A Pharaoh's tomb in Egypt. Ancient human footprints in New Mexico. A lost Maya city revealed beneath the forests of Guatemala using laser technology. Headlines often focus on treasure, mystery and discovery. That is only the visible point of entry. Archaeology is not really about finding old objects. It is about reconstructing entire systems from the smallest


Leather: The Material Between Animals, Luxury and Labour
Leather is one of the oldest materials humans still use every day. It appears in shoes, handbags, belts, wallets, car seats, sofas, watch straps, footballs, saddles, jackets, gloves and luxury goods displayed behind glass in expensive shops. It can signal durability, craftsmanship, wealth, heritage or rebellion. A leather briefcase and a biker jacket are made from the same broad material, yet they tell very different stories. The visible point of entry is the finished product


Esports: The System Behind Competitive Gaming
A teenager sits in a bedroom wearing a headset, hands moving rapidly across a keyboard. On screen, a match is unfolding at impossible speed. To some people, it still looks like play. To others, it is sport, entertainment, business, technology, media and culture colliding in real time. Esports is one of the clearest examples of how a familiar activity can become an entire economic system once enough people care, watch, organise and compete around it. The visible point of entry


Prosthetics: Rebuilding Human Capability One System at a Time
A runner explodes out of the starting blocks on carbon fibre blades. A child picks up a pencil using a robotic hand. A farmer returns to work after losing a leg in an accident. A soldier learns to walk again after a battlefield injury. A grandmother climbs the stairs with a prosthetic knee that adjusts to every step. Most people see the prosthetic limb. The real story lies in the system that makes it possible. Prosthetics are among humanity's oldest technologies. Archaeologis


Muscles: The System Behind Strength, Movement and Survival
Walk into almost any gym and you will see people lifting weights, running on treadmills or stretching on exercise mats. Some are training for sport. Others want to lose weight, build muscle or simply stay healthy. Social media often portrays muscles as symbols of appearance, confidence and attractiveness. Yet muscles are far more than a cosmetic feature. They are one of the most important biological, economic and social systems in human life. Every movement begins with muscle


Magic: The Business of Making the Impossible Feel Real
A magician walks onto a stage holding an ordinary deck of cards. A volunteer shuffles the pack, chooses a card and places it back inside. Moments later the same card appears inside a sealed envelope, under a watch or in someone's pocket. The audience applauds because they believe they have witnessed something impossible. They have not. They have witnessed the result of an extraordinary system built around psychology, practice, performance, engineering and storytelling. Magic


Concrete: From Roman Domes to Mega Cities
Walk through almost any city on Earth and you are surrounded by concrete. It forms the foundations beneath homes, the bridges carrying traffic, the tunnels beneath mountains, the dams holding back rivers, the hospitals treating patients, the airports connecting countries and the pavements people barely notice beneath their feet. It is so common that it almost disappears from view. Yet modern civilisation would look completely different without it. Concrete is not simply a con


Heatwaves: When Sunshine Becomes a System Test
A hot day can feel like a gift. People head to beaches, parks, beer gardens and outdoor swimming pools. Ice cream vans become busy. Supermarkets sell more barbecue food, bottled water and sunscreen. Hotels near the coast benefit from last-minute demand. For countries with long winters, grey skies and short summers, sunshine can feel like a reward. A heatwave is different. A heatwave is not just warm weather. It is a stress test for society. It reveals how homes, schools, hosp


Founder Conversations: Why Stories of Business Is Launching a New Series
Every business has a story, but not every business story explains how the business actually works. That is why we are launching Founder Conversations, a new series from Stories of Business that explores the systems behind entrepreneurship through relaxed conversations with founders, business owners and leaders from around the world. Our goal is not to create promotional interviews or polished success stories. We want to understand what happens beneath the surface of a busines


Borders: The Lines That Organise the World
Borders are among the most powerful lines humans have ever created. Some are marked by fences, walls, rivers, mountains, checkpoints and passport controls. Others exist only as signs beside a road or invisible legal boundaries on a map. A person may cross from France into Belgium without stopping, while another may wait for hours at the border between the United States and Mexico, Kenya and Uganda, India and Bangladesh, or South Africa and Zimbabwe. The line itself may be thi
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