Artificial intelligence can optimize, predict, and generate. It can't imagine.
Imagination is the one competence that remains entirely ours - and it's the one most of us have stopped using on purpose.
The Imagination Age makes the case that imagination isn't a creative luxury. It's a practical, essential, distinctly human competence - one that operates in three modes, follows predictable patterns, and can be reclaimed with intention. It's the force behind every decision that didn't yet have a playbook, every moment of empathy that changed a conversation, and every leader who saw what wasn't there yet and built toward it anyway.
Theresa A. Stroisch spent more than twenty years working with leaders and organizations navigating high-stakes decisions, institutional change, and the moments where the playbook runs out. This book is what she learned: the people who shape the future aren't the ones with the best data or the fastest systems. They're the ones who never stopped imagining - and learned to do it with precision.
This is a book for anyone who's ready to ask what else is possible - and step into the age that demands it.