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


Ice Lollies: The Hidden System Behind The Wooden Stick
On a hot summer afternoon, an ice lolly seems almost insignificant. A child chooses an orange ice pop from a freezer. Someone walking through a city park buys a fruit lolly from a kiosk. A family stops at a petrol station and picks up frozen treats during a long journey. Within minutes, the lolly has disappeared, leaving behind only a wooden stick or a wrapper. What appears to be one of the simplest foods in the world is actually supported by one of the most temperature-sensi


Weight: Why Almost Everything Depends on Measuring What Things Carry
A lorry pulls onto a weighbridge outside a quarry. A boxer steps onto a scale before a title fight. A passenger watches an airline employee weigh a suitcase. A doctor records a patient’s body weight. A crane operator checks the load attached to a hook. A supermarket customer buys fruit by the kilogram. These actions appear unrelated, yet all depend on the same basic question: how much is being carried, moved, lifted, stored or supported? Weight is one of the most ordinary mea


How Does The Bahamas Actually Work?
For most people, The Bahamas is a destination rather than a country. They picture white beaches, turquoise water, luxury resorts, cruise ships and tropical sunshine. Millions of visitors arrive every year, spend a few days on one or two islands and leave believing they have experienced The Bahamas. In reality, they have experienced only a tiny fraction of one of the world's most fascinating national systems. The Bahamas is not simply a collection of beautiful islands. It is a

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


Ice Lollies: The Hidden System Behind The Wooden Stick
On a hot summer afternoon, an ice lolly seems almost insignificant. A child chooses an orange ice pop from a freezer. Someone walking through a city park buys a fruit lolly from a kiosk. A family stops at a petrol station and picks up frozen treats during a long journey. Within minutes, the lolly has disappeared, leaving behind only a wooden stick or a wrapper. What appears to be one of the simplest foods in the world is actually supported by one of the most temperature-sensi


Weight: Why Almost Everything Depends on Measuring What Things Carry
A lorry pulls onto a weighbridge outside a quarry. A boxer steps onto a scale before a title fight. A passenger watches an airline employee weigh a suitcase. A doctor records a patient’s body weight. A crane operator checks the load attached to a hook. A supermarket customer buys fruit by the kilogram. These actions appear unrelated, yet all depend on the same basic question: how much is being carried, moved, lifted, stored or supported? Weight is one of the most ordinary mea


How Does The Bahamas Actually Work?
For most people, The Bahamas is a destination rather than a country. They picture white beaches, turquoise water, luxury resorts, cruise ships and tropical sunshine. Millions of visitors arrive every year, spend a few days on one or two islands and leave believing they have experienced The Bahamas. In reality, they have experienced only a tiny fraction of one of the world's most fascinating national systems. The Bahamas is not simply a collection of beautiful islands. It is a


How Does a Point of Sale System Really Work?
Every purchase appears remarkably simple. A customer walks into a shop, restaurant or café, chooses a product, taps a bank card or mobile phone, collects a receipt and walks away. The transaction often takes less than thirty seconds. Yet beneath that brief interaction sits one of the most important business systems in the modern economy. The point of sale (POS) is often mistaken for a payment terminal. In reality, it is the operational nerve centre of a business. Every transa


Why Do Franchises Look the Same Wherever You Go?
Walk into a McDonald's in Tokyo, Nairobi, São Paulo, London or Sydney and much of the experience feels remarkably familiar. The menu may change, local ingredients may vary and regional favourites often appear, yet the layout, branding, service standards and customer experience remain instantly recognisable. The same pattern appears in Marriott hotels, Anytime Fitness gyms, Kumon learning centres, UPS Stores, RE/MAX estate agencies and hundreds of other franchise businesses op


Why Is Copy and Paste One of the Most Powerful Tools Ever Invented?
It takes less than a second. A student copies notes into an assignment. A lawyer duplicates a clause from an earlier contract. A software developer reuses a block of code. A finance analyst transfers figures between spreadsheets. A parent copies an address into a navigation app. Most people perform the action dozens, sometimes hundreds, of times every day without giving it any thought. Yet copy and paste is one of the most important systems ever built into modern computing. I


What If Hunger Starts After the Harvest?
Every harvest should be a moment of celebration. Months of planting, weeding and waiting have finally paid off. Fields are full, markets begin filling with fresh produce and farmers prepare to sell the crops they have spent an entire season growing. Yet for millions of farmers around the world, this is precisely when the biggest problems begin. Tomatoes start rotting before reaching market. Mangoes spoil in the heat. Milk cannot be chilled quickly enough. Prices collapse beca


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
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