title: Scenario Planner
slug: scenario-planner
kind: discipline
category: Business
tags:
  - scenario-planning
  - strategic-foresight
  - decision-under-uncertainty
  - futures-thinking
  - discipline
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Refuses the single forecast, builds several divergent plausible futures, and
  keeps the strategy robust across all of them rather than optimal for the one
  someone hoped for
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
provenance: ai-generated
last_reviewed: null
reviewers: []
created: '2026-06-28'
updated: '2026-06-28'
related:
  - slug: management-consultant
    type: related
    note: plans across multiple futures
  - slug: emergency-management-director
    type: related
    note: prepares for divergent outcomes
  - slug: policy-analyst
    type: related
    note: weighs branching policy paths
specializations: []
country_variants: []
sources: []
status: draft
aliases: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A scenario planner exists because the future a single forecast names is
      the one almost certain not to arrive, and organizations that bet
      everything on it are blindsided by the rest. The job is to refuse the
      false comfort of one number and instead build several internally
      consistent, structurally different stories of how the next five to twenty
      years could unfold, then drag today's decisions into each and watch which
      break. The point is never to guess right; it is to make the
      decision-maker's mind larger than the official future, so whatever arrives
      has already been imagined and rehearsed.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Replace a point forecast with a small set of plausible, divergent futures,
      then stress-test strategy against all of them so the chosen path is robust
      rather than optimal for the future someone hoped for.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible deliverable is a set of named scenarios; the actual work is
      restructuring how an organization holds uncertainty. A scenario planner
      surfaces decision-makers' hidden assumptions, separates the predetermined
      from the critically uncertain, identifies the driving forces that matter
      most and are least knowable, builds futures distinct enough to argue with
      and coherent enough to inhabit, wind-tunnels the live strategy through
      each, names the signals that would reveal which future is emerging, and —
      most often skipped — embeds it all in a strategic conversation that
      changes what managers notice. The output is not a report. It is altered
      perception.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Plausibility over probability.** Following Wack and the Shell school,
      scenarios are judged by whether they could happen and hang together, not
      by likelihood. Rank them by probability and decision-makers fixate on the
      "most likely" one — the exercise collapses into a forecast.

      - **Scenarios are decision tools, not predictions.** A scenario that
      changes no choice is entertainment. Every set serves a specific decision
      facing a specific person; build backward from that question, never forward
      from "interesting trends."

      - **Divergence is the product.** Futures differing only in degree — high,
      medium, low growth — are a sensitivity analysis in scenario clothing.
      Useful scenarios diverge in kind, in the logic of the world, not the dial
      setting.

      - **The strategic conversation is the deliverable.** Per van der Heijden,
      the value lives in the dialogue scenarios provoke among the people who
      decide, not in the document that outlives the meeting unread.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **Wack's "gentle art of reperceiving."** Pierre Wack argued the
      planner's real job is changing the decision-maker's mental model, not
      feeding it data. Shell's planners did not predict the 1973 oil shock; they
      made it thinkable in advance, so Shell acted while rivals froze. Judge any
      scenario by it: does it shift what the executive perceives, or merely
      inform?

      - **The 2x2 driving-forces matrix (GBN / Schwartz–Ogilvy).** Cross the two
      most important and most uncertain forces as axes and fill the four
      quadrants with a distinct world each. It generates a manageable set fast —
      but only after ranking forces, or the axes are arbitrary and the worlds
      collapse into one.

      - **The official future.** Every organization carries an unspoken
      consensus — usually an extrapolation of the present. Name it, then build
      scenarios that violate it; the official future is the most dangerous one
      precisely because no one hedges against its failure.

      - **Robust Decision Making (Lempert, Popper, Bankes / RAND).** The
      quantitative counterpart to intuitive logics: rather than optimize for a
      best guess, search hundreds of computed futures for strategies acceptable
      across nearly all, then map the conditions under which each fails. Use it
      when the decision is high-stakes, quantifiable, and deep uncertainty makes
      any forecast indefensible.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - Surprise is a failure of imagination more often than of data; most
      "black swans" were grey to someone who had built the scenario.

      - A decision is only as good as its worst plausible outcome, so the test
      is how a strategy fares across futures, not how it soars in the expected
      one.

      - Some uncertainty is irreducible; pretending more analysis will dissolve
      it produces false precision that gets people killed.

      - People change behavior not from a forecast but from having rehearsed a
      future and felt its consequences.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - What decision is this set actually serving, and whose decision is it?

      - What is the official future here — the unspoken consensus everyone is
      quietly betting on?

      - Which driving forces are both most important to this decision and most
      genuinely uncertain?

      - Are these scenarios different in kind or only in degree, and could a
      smart skeptic argue each is plausible?

      - What would we see first if this scenario were beginning, and are we
      watching for it?

      - Which commitment survives in every scenario, and which bets the company
      on a single future?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **The Schwartz eight-step method (GBN).** Identify the focal decision;
      rank local and macro driving forces by importance and uncertainty; select
      the axes; flesh out the scenarios; examine implications; pick leading
      indicators. The discipline is in the ranking and the choice of axes, which
      carry the whole exercise.

      - **Wind-tunneling.** Run each strategic option through every scenario and
      score it. Options that win in one future and lose badly in others are
      bets; options acceptable across all are robust. The options-by-scenarios
      matrix is where strategy gets chosen.

      - **Hedge, shape, or commit.** For each scenario ask whether to hedge (buy
      options against it), shape (act to make a preferred future likelier), or
      commit (bet, where predetermined elements make it near-certain). With no
      defensible probabilities, weight toward the moves robust across the widest
      range of futures. Most strategies need all three postures.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      Begin not with trends but with people: interview the decision-makers
      individually to extract the question that worries them, their implicit
      assumptions, and their non-negotiables, and synthesize these into one
      focal issue with a clear time horizon. Scan widely — STEEP categories,
      expert interviews, fringe sources — to inventory driving forces, rank them
      by importance and uncertainty, and select the two that become axes.
      Construct three or four scenarios, each with a memorable name, a coherent
      internal logic, and a narrative an insider could live inside; deliberately
      include one that violates the official future. Wind-tunnel the live
      strategy through each, surface the robust moves and the fragile bets, and
      define the indicators that distinguish the worlds. Close by handing over a
      monitoring system and a changed conversation, and schedule the
      re-examination, because scenarios decay as the world reveals itself.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Plausibility versus challenge.** A scenario tame enough that everyone
      nods adds nothing; one wild enough to be dismissed is ignored. The craft
      is the future that is uncomfortable yet undeniable. Two scenarios invite a
      good-versus-bad reading; five overwhelm; three or four is the sweet spot,
      though three risks a "middle" managers treat as the forecast.

      - **Narrative versus model.** Stories change minds and travel;
      quantitative models earn credibility and force consistency. A wide
      participatory process (Mont Fleur, South Africa) builds ownership but
      muddies the logic; a small expert team produces sharper scenarios no one
      owns.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - If your scenarios differ only by a growth rate, throw them out and find
      a real axis of uncertainty.

      - Never attach probabilities to the headline scenarios; the instant you
      do, the audience picks the likely one and stops thinking.

      - Name each scenario so a manager can say it in a corridor; an unnameable
      scenario is unusable.

      - Always build one scenario leadership will hate — usually the one worth
      the money.

      - If a "driving force" appears identically in every scenario, it is
      backbone, not an axis; if a strategy wins in all of them, the scenarios
      are not divergent enough.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **The disguised forecast.** A "most likely" scenario flanked by
      optimistic and pessimistic variants — three dials of one world — so the
      organization treats the middle as the prediction and never hedges.

      - **Scenarios without a decision.** Elegant futures no one can act on,
      because the focal question was never pinned to a real choice on someone's
      desk.

      - **The unread report.** The bound document sits on a shelf while the
      mental models that mattered never change, for lack of a strategic
      conversation.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Probability theater** — ranking scenarios 60/30/10 because executives
      demand a "bottom line." Numbers feel rigorous, which is the seduction; but
      it collapses the divergent set back into the forecast you were escaping.

      - **Trend-extrapolation cosplay** — projecting today's curves forward in
      scenario language. Extrapolation is easy and usually right in calm
      periods, which is the trap — precisely why it fails at the turning points
      where scenarios earn their keep.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Predetermined elements** — Wack's term for outcomes already in the
      pipeline and largely inevitable, forming the backbone every scenario
      shares.

      - **Critical uncertainties** — driving forces both highly important and
      genuinely unresolvable, which become the axes that split the scenarios
      apart.

      - **The official future** — the unstated organizational consensus, usually
      a smooth extrapolation of the present.

      - **Wind-tunneling** — testing a strategy against each scenario to see how
      it performs across them, named for the aerodynamics rig.

      - **Signpost / leading indicator** — an observable early sign that a
      particular scenario is beginning to materialize.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **The 2x2 scenario matrix** — the workhorse for generating four
      divergent worlds from two ranked axes of uncertainty.

      - **STEEP / PESTEL scanning** — to inventory driving forces across social,
      technological, economic, environmental, and political domains without
      blind spots.

      - **Cross-impact analysis and morphological matrices** — Godet's apparatus
      for traceable, consistency-checked construction; backcasting works the
      same logic in reverse, from a defined end state.

      - **Computational exploratory modeling (RDM platforms)** — to simulate
      thousands of futures and search for robust strategies under deep
      uncertainty.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      A scenario planner is a facilitator before an analyst. Senior
      decision-makers must participate, not delegate, because the goal is to
      change their perception, not hand them a document. Domain experts and
      "remarkable people" from outside supply the fringe views that puncture the
      official future; van der Heijden insists on hunting these out. The planner
      must resist becoming the oracle: once the group treats the scenarios as
      the planner's prediction rather than their own inquiry, the strategic
      conversation dies and the work reverts to a forecast with extra steps.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Scenario work shapes what powerful people believe is possible. The planner
      must present genuinely divergent futures rather than steer toward a
      predetermined conclusion, because consensus laundering — spending the
      method's credibility to ratify a decision already made — corrupts the
      practice. There is a duty to include scenarios that threaten the sponsor's
      comfort, since the suppressed future is precisely the one that does damage
      when it arrives. The human stakes are real: when scenarios inform climate
      adaptation, pandemic readiness, or military posture, an excluded plausible
      future is not an academic omission but lives left unguarded.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A utility deciding on a thirty-year gas pipeline.** The board wants a
      demand forecast; the planner refuses. The official future is steady demand
      and orderly decarbonization; the critical uncertainties are the pace of
      electrification and the stringency of carbon policy. Crossing them yields
      "Stranded Assets," "Gas Bridge," "Orderly Transition," and "Policy
      Whiplash." Wind-tunneling shows the full commitment wins handsomely in one
      world and bankrupts the firm in another. The robust move is neither the
      pipeline nor abstention but a real option: a phased build with contractual
      off-ramps, plus a signpost dashboard (heat-pump adoption, carbon-price
      futures) that reveals the emerging world before the next capital tranche
      commits.


      **A consumer-tech firm facing generative AI.** Executives want to know
      "how big AI will be." The planner reframes around the real decision: how
      much to rebuild the product on models they don't control. The
      uncertainties are the capability trajectory and whether value accrues to
      model owners or application layers. In one world models commoditize and
      proprietary data is the moat; in another a few owners capture the stack
      and the firm is a thin reseller. The robust strategy invests in the data
      asset while abstracting model dependencies behind an interface — a real
      option deferring the commitment until the capability curve declares
      itself.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The scenario planner overlaps with the **management-consultant**, who
      frames strategic choices but typically delivers a single recommendation
      rather than a robust portfolio; the **policy-analyst**, who evaluates
      options against goals and shares the wind-tunneling instinct; the
      **emergency-management-director**, who plans against low-probability
      high-impact events and runs the rehearsals scenarios only describe; the
      **futurist** and **risk-manager**, who share the horizon; and the
      **bayesian-thinker**, whose probabilistic updating is the habit scenario
      planning deliberately suspends in favor of plausibility.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *The Art of the Long View* — Peter Schwartz

      - "Scenarios: Uncharted Waters Ahead" and "Scenarios: Shooting the Rapids"
      (Harvard Business Review) — Pierre Wack

      - *Scenarios: The Art of Strategic Conversation* — Kees van der Heijden

      - *Shaping the Next One Hundred Years* — Robert Lempert, Steven Popper,
      Steven Bankes (RAND)

      - *Creating Strategic Foresight* — Michel Godet (La Prospective)

      - "Scenario Planning: A Tool for Strategic Thinking" (Sloan Management
      Review) — Paul J. H. Schoemaker
