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


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

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


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


Pickup Trucks: The Vehicles That Built Economies
Few vehicles reveal more about a country than its pickup trucks. In some places they are workhorses. In others they are status symbols. In some regions they transport farmers, builders and livestock. In others they carry families, camping equipment and recreational gear. Across much of the world, pickup trucks sit at the intersection of labour, infrastructure, geography, culture and economics. The story of the pickup truck is ultimately a story about work. The earliest pickup


Gates: The Hidden System Controlling Movement
Every day, billions of people pass through gates. They open garden gates before leaving home, drive through gates protecting factories and warehouses, scan tickets through railway gates, board aircraft through airport gates and pass security gates protecting everything from schools to data centres. Most of the time, nobody gives them a second thought. Yet gates sit at the centre of one of the most important functions in society: controlling movement. At their simplest, gates


Sheep Shearing: The Skill Behind Wool, Lamb and Rural Economies
Most people encounter sheep through products rather than animals. A wool jumper. A lamb roast. A wool carpet. A duvet. A pair of socks. Few people ever see the work that makes those products possible. Yet behind every sheep stands an industry built on labour, skill, migration, animal welfare, technology, weather, trade and some of the most physically demanding agricultural work in the world. One of the most important and least visible parts of that system is sheep shearing. T


AI, Identity and Entrepreneurship: A Conversation with Alex Green of Players Couture
This article forms part of Founder Conversations, a new Stories of Business series exploring the people, ideas and systems behind businesses, organisations and communities. Rather than simply documenting founder journeys, the aim is to use those conversations as a lens to better understand the wider forces shaping business and society. One of the most interesting aspects of our conversation with Alex Green, founder of Players Couture, was that it quickly moved beyond clothing


Transformers: The Hidden Machines Behind Every Light Switch
Drive through rural Texas and you'll see grey transformers hanging from wooden utility poles beside ranches, farms and highways. Walk through central London and many transformers disappear underground into compact substations hidden beneath office blocks and busy streets. Travel to China's ultra-high-voltage transmission corridors and you'll find giant transformer stations helping move electricity thousands of kilometres from western hydroelectric dams to eastern megacities.


Growing Summer in Winter: The Hidden System Behind Greenhouses
Fly over the south of Spain on a clear day and you will see something extraordinary. Near the city of Almería, vast sheets of white plastic stretch across the landscape for mile after mile. From the air, it looks almost like a frozen sea. On the ground, it is one of the most productive agricultural systems in the world. Millions of tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, aubergines and melons are grown here every year before being shipped to supermarkets across Europe. Meanwhile, hundr


The World Through Glass: How Windows Shape Everyday Life
Windows are so ordinary that most people barely notice them. They are part of the background of daily life. We open them when a room feels stuffy, close them when the weather turns cold, look through them when we are bored, clean them when they become too visible and replace them when they stop doing their job. Yet windows are one of the most important technologies in human settlement. They shape how buildings feel, how cities look, how much energy households use, how safe pe


The Number on the Sign: How Speed Limits Shape Society
Every day, billions of people move through a world governed by numbers. A train timetable tells us when to leave. A school bell tells us when to arrive. A tax deadline tells us when to pay. Among the most familiar of these numbers are speed limits. Most drivers see them as simple rules designed to prevent accidents. A sign says 30, 50, 70 or 120, and the expectation is straightforward: do not go faster than that. Yet speed limits are far more than road safety tools. They are
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