Is too much changing too fast and it's hard to keep up? Do you wish all this uncertainty would just go away? If these questions ring true for you, you’re in the right place with futurist, speaker, and author April Rinne. She'll help you fall in love with change.
Business, work, education, financial markets, demographics, and the climate are all in flux. April makes sense of these changes as a globally-oriented futurist, speaker, and author. With 25+ years of experience in more than 100 countries and across the public, private and social sectors, she’s developed a keen eye for where the world is heading. She is energized to help build a brighter tomorrow, today.
Fall in Love with Change
Change isn’t something to manage or control, it’s something to embrace. When you fall in love with change, you open yourself to new ways of seeing, learning, and leading. It’s how you build your Flux capacity: the ability to find calm amid chaos, hope amid uncertainty, and possibility in what’s next.
About April Rinne
Futurist, Speaker, Author, Adventurer, & Advocate for Humanity
A graduate of Harvard Law School and member of the Silicon Guild, April has been weaving a story about how to thrive amid flux for as long as she can remember, drawing on her history as a futurist, advisor, global development executive, microfinance lawyer, investor, mental health advocate, certified yoga teacher, globetrotter (100+ countries), and insatiable handstander.
April also harnesses her very personal experiences with flux, including the death of both of her parents in a car accident when she was 20.
Through her travels and tragedy, vision and values, global perspective and grounded sense of purpose, April helps others better understand how we see, think about, struggle with, and ultimately forge positive relationships with change.
Futurist
Ranked one of the “50 Leading Female Futurists” in the world by Forbes, April Rinne is a change navigator.
She helps individuals and organizations rethink and reshape their relationship with change, uncertainty, and a world in flux. She is a trusted advisor to well-known startups, companies, financial institutions, nonprofits, and think tanks worldwide, from Airbnb to Nike to the World Bank, as well as governments ranging from Singapore to South Africa, Canada to Colombia, Italy to India.
Speaker
In her keynotes and presentations, April guides the way.
She has been weaving a story about how to thrive amid flux for as long as she can remember, drawing on her history as a futurist, advisor, global development executive, microfinance lawyer, investor, mental health advocate, certified yoga teacher, globetrotter, and joyful handstander.
She brings a global perspective and understanding to how we see, think about, talk about, struggle with, better understand, and ultimately forge positive relationships with change.
Author
April Rinne has been weaving a story about how to navigate change, personally and professionally, for as long as she can remember.
Flux: Superpowers for Thriving in Constant Change is the container to express this story and cast a broader vision for humanity as a whole.
Handstander
April has been doing handstands ever since her childhood days as a gymnast. As an adult, she finds that they are a great icebreaker while traveling.
Spending time upside-down is directly related to happiness, increased longevity and better memory, so her plan is to keep doing them as long as she can!
April & Jerry: Future-Ready Leadership
with Flux Mindset Expert April Rinne & Future Strategist Jerry Michalski.
FLUX by April Rinne
8 Superpowers for Thriving In Constant Change
We’re in a world of change that’s accelerating…
You’re hearing this all the time already, and I have a hunch you may feel overloaded — even sick of — a 24/7 barrage of chaotic, complex and even catastrophic news. Rather than join a deafening choir, I’d like to offer you a positive way out of this overload — and into a new way of seeing, being, and living.
“If you fear change, read this book. Flux will help you discover the power and beauty in the invisible, the imperfect, and the unknown.”