Founder Peter Leyden

Our founder Peter Leyden has spent his entire career in pursuit of the constantly evolving answers to the four key questions: what's really going on today, what’s probably coming, what’s possible to achieve, and what we should do now.

He started his career as a journalist trying to figure out what’s really going on in America and as a foreign correspondent in Asia, traveling to 50 countries to figure out the world. 

Leyden moved to San Francisco at the beginning of the digital revolution to work with the founders of WIRED and figure out what’s probably coming. He has since built up an extraordinary network of technologists and entrepreneurs, innovators and creatives, intellectuals and academics throughout Silicon Valley and the region.

He then learned the futures business with some of the key pioneers in strategic foresight including the legendary Stewart Brand and the founders of The Long Now Foundation. This helped him understand trends in a wider breadth of fields and look farther ahead on what’s possible to achieve over time. 

Through all this Leyden has become a thought leader on the future, new technologies and megatrends. He does keynote talks on a monthly basis to conferences throughout America and Europe where he publicly lays out his insights into the big four questions. He’s written two influential books on the future, and many magazine pieces, including his latest: The Great Progression: 2025 to 2050.

Leyden founded Reinvent Futures out of the pandemic as the best way to build off this foundation and help others become more prescient and effective as we head into what will be a transformative decade ahead. 

Reinvent Futures does that by focusing on three core areas: convening remarkable innovators to help figure out the future, advising senior leaders of organizations about what can be done, and creating media of what we learn. 

Managing Director Joe Boggio

Managing Director Joe Boggio runs the business side of Reinvent Futures and is primarily responsible for developing our partnerships, business development, as well as finance and operations.

Throughout his career Boggio has focused on the strategic application of emerging trends and technologies. He has filled leadership roles at Microsoft, Capgemini, and Stanford University. His core expertise is in building platforms, trust-based communities, and leadership competencies needed to advance innovation. 

Boggio was the co-host with Leyden of the highly successful What’s Now San Francisco series, which built out a dedicated following and maxed out attendance each month for the 5 years prior to the pandemic. 

Boggio founded and ran the place where the series was held: the Applied Innovation Exchange, an innovation lab established in SOMA in San Francisco by Capgemini, the global tech consulting firm headquartered in Paris with 350,000 employees around the world. 

Capgemini came to San Francisco in 2015 with little presence in the region but with an ambition to raise the brand profile and become integrated into the heart of the tech world. Boggio teamed up with Leyden (then founder of the media startup Reinvent Inc.) to create the What’s Now San Francisco series that did just that over the years.  

Capgemini underwrote the series that benefited a whole ecosystem of companies and talent throughout the region, and they gained acceptance as a player and their customers from all over the world benefited from those new relationships too. 

Prior to Capgemini, Boggio co-founded Microsoft’s Innovation Outreach Program, which was an exclusive, invitation-only network made up of 35 companies who represented more than $2 trillion in annual revenue.  

This was a forum for peers from very large multinational companies trying to navigate technical, business and social disruptions by working together to co-create new markets, business models and products.  

Peter Leyden Bio

Peter Leyden has spent his career in a wide range of roles figuring out the future, explaining what’s probably coming next, and helping envision how we can build a better world.

Since coming to San Francisco at the beginning of the digital revolution to work with the founders of WIRED magazine, he has become a thought leader on the future and new technologies.

Leyden has given keynote talks for the last 25 years on roughly a monthly basis throughout America as a futurist and tech expert working through Keppler Speakers. He regularly speaks in Europe and abroad too.

Leyden currently is the founder of Reinvent Futures where he and his team convene remarkable innovators in a range of fields impacting the future, create media that can spread what they learn through these gatherings, and advise senior leaders in strategic foresight.

Leyden hosts The AI Age Begins, an event and media series based in San Francisco that convenes top technologists and explores the many positive ways that AI could impact America and the world. He also hosts a roundtable event series The New Ways Forward that convenes senior leaders and thinks through the strategic implications of the arrival of AI.

Leyden writes up what he is learning about artificial intelligence through these series in essays open to all in Substack called The Great Progression.

He is the coauthor of two influential books on the future that were published in multiple languages, including The Long Boom, and periodically writes magazine pieces like his recent The Great Progression: 2025 to 2050.

Leyden ended up as managing editor of WIRED magazine in the heyday of the 1990s and he subsequently founded two of his own media startups that helped pioneer the early use of the new medium of YouTube and the early days of interactive video like Zoom.

He learned the futures business working at the pioneering strategic foresight and scenario planning firm Global Business Network, with the legendary Stewart Brand.

Leyden spent a four-year cycle helping transition politics to the internet and served on Barack Obama’s Technology and Media Advisory Committee in his groundbreaking 2008 campaign.

Leyden started his career as a journalist, including working as a foreign correspondent in Asia for Newsweek magazine, and has traveled to more than 50 countries.

He graduated summa sum laude at Georgetown University in Washington D. C. and has two master’s degrees from Columbia University in New York.

More at PeterLeyden.com.

Joe Boggio Bio

Joe Boggio joined Reinvent Futures to take the lead on the business side of The Great Progression Series while Peter Leyden took the lead on the content side. Boggio is core to the design, delivery, and business development aspects of the series, as well as other projects that might come off the series.  

Boggio and Leyden co-hosted and co-developed the highly successful What’s Now San Francisco event series that ran for five years before the pandemic. Boggio was the sponsor of that series while he worked at Capgemini, where he led their local Applied Innovation Exchange.

Throughout his career Boggio has focused on the strategic application of emerging trends and technologies. He has filled leadership roles at Microsoft, Capgemini, and Stanford University. His core expertise is in building platforms, trust-based communities, and leadership competencies needed to advance innovation. 

At Microsoft, Boggio was a founding leader of the Innovation Outreach Program (IOP).  The IOP brought C-Level leaders from more than 35 top firms, representing more than $2 Trillion in revenue, into an intimate network focused on joint research and co-innovation as a non-competing group.

Boggio then moved to Capgemini, which is the largest consultancy in Europe, with 350,000 employees around the world.  He was a founding leader of the company’s Applied Innovation Exchange (AIE) and led the flagship Exchange in San Francisco.  The AIE worked to facilitate “Exchange” with the ecosystem of Silicon Valley and help clients to “Apply” the various innovations.   

As the AIE was being developed, Capgemini wanted to develop a strong and authentic brand within the Valley, and to become a member of the community who added value to the ecosystem.  It was in that spirit that Boggio and outsider Leyden conceived of the What’s Now San Francisco series. 

That Series brought a diverse community of technologists, entrepreneurs, innovators, and creatives each month to the AIE to engage in vibrant discussions about the most promising developments in a wide range of fields. As a result, Capgemini realized a boost in talent, brand, and ecosystem expansion, as well as sales.

Boggio most recently has been working with Stanford University and their Disruptive Technology Program to again develop a high-trust community of corporations, family offices, and academia. 

Joe also works as an early-stage investor and leadership coach.  He lives in San Francisco, with his wife and son.

Peter Leyden Long Bio

Peter Leyden has spent his career in a wide range of roles figuring out the future, explaining what’s probably coming next, and helping envision how we can build a better world. He came to San Francisco at the beginning of the digital revolution to work with the founders of WIRED magazine, he learned the futures business working with the founders of the pioneering strategic foresight firm Global Business Network, and then founded two of his own media startups focused on the future.

Leyden now is considered a thought leader on the future, the impact of new technologies, and the repercussions of megatrends primarily known through his speaking and writing. He has worked for 25 years as a futurist and tech expert through Keppler Speakers, giving keynotes on roughly a monthly basis throughout America and periodically Europe. He’s written two influential books on the future and most recently popular online pieces like The Great Progression, 2025 to 2050.  He is regularly interviewed by the media and podcasts. 

Leyden also is a senior advisor on strategic foresight operating through his firm Reinvent Futures. He frequently takes what he learns about the future and helps C-suite executives, senior leaders of organizations and boards think through the strategic implications of what’s coming in the decade ahead. He has worked with a range of companies, from Airbnb in its early days to Autodesk in the pandemic to less well-known organizations in tailored talks, workshops, and longer projects. 

One of the main ways Leyden learns about the future is by hosting physical and virtual events and convening an extraordinary network of innovators, technologists, entrepreneurs, intellectuals, and creatives in a wide range of fields impacting the future who he has met in Silicon Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area since the 1990s. Leyden hosted the popular What’s Now San Francisco event series each month for five years before the pandemic. During the pandemic, he hosted the virtual Civilization Salons with The Long Now Foundation, the premier place in the world for thinking about very long-term change.

Leyden now hosts and convenes a new series of physical events with media called The Great Progression, which launched in 2023 with a deep dive on the key questions surrounding Generative AI. He convenes top innovators in a wide range of fields and gets their ideas on what’s really going on in the field, what’s probably coming in the next 10 years, what’s possible to achieve in the next 25 years, and what we should do now. The series is run by his Reinvent Futures and eventually will cover the progress happening in a wide range of fields from artificial intelligence to synthetic biology to energy and transportation – all with an eye towards how we can solve the great challenges of our time like climate change.

Peter Leyden has held an unusually wide range of roles in different fields over the years that add up to make him exceptionally valuable at giving comprehensive insights into the decades ahead. They include stints in politics and work as a foreign correspondent abroad. What follows dive deeper into more details:

At WIRED in the 1990s, Leyden eventually became Managing Editor running the magazine when it was considered one of the leading authorities in the world explaining the digital revolution. WIRED at that time also was a driving force pioneering the early online media of the Web 1.0. 

Leyden subsequently founded and ran two of his own media startups that also pioneered some of the key next stages of online media. His Next Agenda first took advantage of the dramatically lower costs of online video via YouTube to scale up the reach of physical conferences in Web 2.0. His Reinvent then helped pioneer the early world of interactive online video by creating virtual events that have now become familiar to everyone via Zoom. 

Leyden learned all about strategic foresight and scenario planning working with the founders who helped pioneer those tools and methodologies at Global Business Network. GBN was considered one of the leading firms in the world helping top corporations and advanced government agencies better prepare for the future. Leyden worked closely with the legendary Stewart Brand who curated a network of remarkable innovators in a wide range of fields who were convened for challenging projects that few others could solve.

Leyden is the coauthor of two influential books on the future that were published in multiple languages. The Long Boom was written in the late 1990s but told the story of the world until 2020, which explained how the nascent digital economy and accelerating globalization would change the world, and mostly did. His second book What’s Next drew off deep interviews 50 world-class thought leaders and laid out what to expect in the decade after the Dotcom collapse and 9/11.

Leyden spent a four-year cycle helping transition politics to the internet by taking top technologists from Silicon Valley to Washington D.C. each month through a political startup he cofounded called The New Politics Institute. During that time, he gave keynote talks to Rep. Nancy Pelosi and the entire House Democratic Caucus on their annual retreat, as well as to Sen. Chuck Schumer and the entire Senate Democratic Caucus on their annual retreat as well. Leyden ended up serving on Barack Obama’s Technology and Media Advisory Committee as part of his groundbreaking 2008 presidential campaign. 

Leyden started his career as a journalist learning about different regions of America by working on newspapers in the Deep South, New England and the Midwest. He also worked as a foreign correspondent in Asia, mostly for Newsweek magazine, but also contributing to select newspapers, including The New York Times. He was based in South Korea, but covered stories in Japan and China, including during the time of the Tiananmen Square massacre. He has traveled to more than 50 countries in all major regions of the world.

Leyden excelled at the highest levels of the academic world on the east coast. He graduated summa sum laude at Georgetown University in Washington D. C. after designing his own interdisciplinary major in intellectual history that covered the major thinkers of Western Civilization since The Enlightenment. He has two master’s degrees from Columbia University in New York., one in journalism and another in Comparative Politics.

Leyden grew up in the heartland in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul as the oldest of four kids in a middle-class family. Leyden has lived for almost 30 years with his wife and daughter in Berkeley in the San Francisco Bay Area. You can find more about him at PeterLeyden.com.