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We have many so-called laws to understand the future. The most famous is Moore’s Law, coined in 1965 in Electronics magazine.

Gordon Moore looked at the number of transistors on the circuits they manufactured at Fairchild Semiconductors and noted that they had doubled in number every year. A single transistor in 1959 had become 64 by 1965.

His prediction was that this exponential development would continue for at least ten years, maybe not doubling every year, but close to it.

Since 1971, the number has indeed doubled every two years, and the transistors on a circuit now number an incredible 19.2 billion.

If you understood Moore’s Law you would have been able to predict the future

Moore’s article, with the entertaining heading Cramming more components onto integrated circuits, became world-renowned, as it matched reality so well. If you had read Moore’s article in 1965 and truly understood what it meant, and acted and invested accordingly, you would have become the world’s richest person.

All the digital items we have around us are possible thanks to this development — consumer electronics, supercomputers, home PCs, mobile phones, the internet, smartphones, big data, augmented reality, drones and virtual reality.

By understanding Moore’s Law you cannot exactly predict which gadgets will arrive, but you can understand what it is possible to achieve.

A new sheriff, with a new law

Moore’s Law has also proven to be a good rule of thumb for other technologies. But now there’s a new sheriff in town, and he’s following another law: Wright’s Law.

Moore’s Law focuses on time whereas Wright’s Law focuses instead on the number of units produced. For each doubling of production, the associated cost drops by a certain percentage. In this rule of thumb, it is 20 percent.

The new rule of thumb: 20 percent reduction in cost when production doubles

If we have so far produced 1000 units of a product, then the cost per unit will decrease by 20% when production reaches 2000 units. Another 20% reduction happens at 4,000, then another at 8,000, and so on.

If the cost of producing 1000 units is $100, then the cost of unit number 2000 will be $80. For unit number 4000, the cost will be $64, and for unit number 8000 it will be $51.

Three doublings in production, therefore, cut the unit cost almost in half.

Researchers at MIT have compared several of these laws. They went through historical data for 62 different technologies and concluded that Wright’s Law comes closest to the truth, closely followed by Moore’s Law.

Wright’s Law comes from aircraft manufacturing

Wright’s Law originated in an observation from Theodore P. Wright, an aerospace engineer, who noted that for every accumulated doubling of aircraft production, costs fell by about 20 percent. This is also called the Learning Curve or Experience Curve.

The actual percentage reduction varies between the industry and product, but it does stay fairly constant over time. Therefore, it can be used as a rule of thumb to peer into the future.