Not every scenario provides answers to every question that is asked concerning the future.
Possible topics that can be queried are society, values, customers, corporate structure, positioning, procurement or globalization.
A scenario cannot cover the entire future; you cannot predict and consider everything at once. It is advisable to focus on one or two aspects in order to work on them with a sufficient degree of detail to achieve the greatest possible informational value.
In the Words of Module 2: Within which area of life will the foresight exercise take place?
(Including the industry, sector, or issue area of focus, as well as relevant social, economic, technological, environmental, and political factors.)
Possible questions that a scenario can answer are:
Scenarios and associated methods are categorized differently in the literature, answering different basic questions and approaching the future differently .
A distinction is made between (Balula & Bina, 2013):
Consider which approach would answer your future question the best?
Which would be most compelling, interesting or relevant to read for stakeholders?
As said in the Defining scenario section, a scenario is never alone, there is always a set.
Depending on the contents and the overarching question as well as time and other resources, different numbers of scenarios are possible. Experts recommend creating 3 or 4 scenarios (Inayatullah, 2008).
Quantify | Implications |
1 | It will be the most likely scenario, though it is convenient for strategy formulation but one scenario will not yield any alternate future or future options |
2 | Two scenarios are usually based on two extreme situations (optimistic and pessimistic scenarios) which are difficult to handle in the context of evaluation |
3 | Recommended by many researchers but there is a risk of focusing on the middle (most likely) scenario |
4 | Possible, good cost-benefit ratio |
5 | Possible |
more than 5 | Possible, but cost of drafting and evaluating large number of scenarios will be very high and not justifiable |
“Each scenario plot or logic should be different, yet relevant to the focal question” (Ogilvy & Schwartz, 1998).
Possible distinctions between scenarios in a set are:
Any combination of these: Winners/Losers, Crisis and Response, Good News/Bad News, Evolutionary Change, Revolution, Tectonic Change, Cycles, Infinite Possibility, The Lone Ranger, Generations, Perpetual Transition (Ogilvy & Schwartz, 1998)
No matter how you try, your own assumptions about the future, worldview and understanding of interrelationships and “how the world works” play an unconscious role in creating scenarios, since they inevitably influence your view of the future.
According to Inayatullah (2008), there are the following basic views on how the future plays out:
Inayatullah (2008) has set out the following six basic questions.
It is useful to be aware of one’s own answers in order to possibly work on them and recognize when they might taint a future or otherwise influence scenarios in a overly subjective way.
What do you think the future will be like? What is your prediction? More and more progress and wealth? Wealth for the view? A dramatic technological revolution? Environmental catastrophe? Why?