Strategic Planning Kit For Dummies
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Ultimately, no matter how good your research and strategic planning are, all your knowledge is about the past, and all your decisions are about the future. Scenario planning faces up to this dilemma, confronting you with the need to acknowledge that you don’t, and can’t, know the future. Ready to step into your future? Use the following as a guide to run scenarios with your team.

But first, how many scenarios should you develop? Normally, in the traditional approach, you should create between two and four possible futures for each variable. Don’t feel compelled to develop a complete strategy for each scenario. If you want to see an example as you review this process, go to The ScenarioThinking website, click Scenario Thinking in Practice, and then click RSM MBA 2010 Scenarios.

Although this process is slightly simplified, the figure, which is the Future of the City Centre 2025 scenario, provides a good look at the outcome.

[Credit: Developed by Sander de Iong, Secretary General Rotterdam IAB, EDBR]
Credit: Developed by Sander de Iong, Secretary General Rotterdam IAB, EDBR

Here are the straightforward steps to building scenarios:

  1. Establish a clear-cut decision(s) focus.

    Instead of starting with a view of all the possible trends impacting your organization, identify the major issue or decision you’re facing, such as siting of a new plant, entering into a global alliance, entering a new market, or revamping product distribution channels.

    By tying scenarios to needed decisions, you effectively link them to specific planning needs from the beginning and prevent the exercise from straying off into overly broad generalizations about the future of society or the global economy.

  2. Identify key drivers of change.

    Identify the primary driving forces that affect your company and industry. Drivers fall into two categories: predetermined elements or critical uncertainties. Predetermined elements are relatively stable or predictable, like demographic shifts.

    Critical uncertainties are unstable or unpredictable, such as consumer tastes, government regulations, natural disasters, or new technologies or products. A critical uncertainty is an uncertainty that’s key to the decision you focused on from Step 1. Sometimes phrasing these uncertainties as questions can help you clarify them.

  3. Select the two most important drivers.

    Don’t complicate scenarios by selecting too many drivers. Restrict yourself to formulating three or four scenarios with sharply contrasting futures: (1) the baseline, business-as-usual, world-as-it-is scenario; (2) the scenario that one driver alone dominates; (3) the scenario that the second driver alone dominates; and (4) one with both drivers present. See the figure for an example.

    These drivers are the different directions in which a critical uncertainty may play out. Each scenario provides a different answer to the decision. Each answer presents myriad implications that fundamentally change the business environment.

  4. Develop the scenario outline.

    Give each scenario a creative name. Establish a timeline and brainstorm the future state by writing a short internally consistent story of the future.

  5. Determine implications of each scenario.

    Within each scenario, determine the implications for the issue or decision specified at the outset. If one of the scenarios seems unlikely, eliminate it at this time. Discuss with your organization what your decision or business response should be. By doing so, you can rehearse responses to those possible futures and spot them as they begin.

    Discussing your decision also raises people’s awareness of what’s going on in the world and their understanding of how they interpret what they see to be proactive to signals.

  6. Summarize overall strategies.

    Luckily, you don’t choose amongst the scenarios or have to rank or rate the probability of them occurring. Rather, you use them all to help form consensus about the world and to recognize which ones are in play at any given time. Move from exercise to execution by identifying and taking action on strategies that work across multiple scenarios.

About This Article

This article is from the book:

About the book author:

Erica Olsen is cofounder and COO of M3 Planning, Inc., a firm dedicated to developing and executing strategy. M3 provides consulting and facilitation services, as well as hosts products and tools such as MyStrategicPlan for leaders with big ideas who want to empower and focus their teams to achieve them.

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