Table of Contents

Scenario Methods

This page is an evolving, non-exhaustive collection of different methods and techniques that can be used in scenario building, particularly focusing on the ones that might be useful for Future Fabulators. There are many academic papers and consultants' websites describing a myriad of approaches to “how to build scenarios”. Though possibly oversimplifying the issue, we could say that for Future Fabulators the most important difference between methods is whether the scenarios are designed to be exploratory (multiple alternative scenarios for different possible futures), or normative (designing a desired scenario, then figuring out what needs to be done in order to get there). When working with normative scenarios the most interesting work is that of 'backcasting' or 'retrocasting' as we prefer to call it (see chapter below). With exploratory scenarios much time is spent on identifying constants and variables of a situation, that make up the scenarios (as characters, events, plot-lines…). These scenario components are derived from the key factors in the wider context of an issue (e.g. from the internal and external envrionment, past and present conditions), as well as the 'drivers of change' (micro and macro forces that influence change in a community, organisation or system).

An overview of scenario methods for strategy

Most scenario methods revolve around approximately similar phases:

Or, as Chris Stewart proposes: Input, Analysis, Interpretation and Application

Figure from Integral Scenario Development by Chris C Steward

There are many possible answers to the question “how to build scenarios”. We won't attempt to collect them all on this page. As a filter in our research we decided to look at approaches that can help us move from forecasting to embodiment, from story to experience. In Future Fabulators we are primarily focused on creating (immersive) situations where possible futures / parallel histories or presents can be physically experienced (and then reflecting on how this experience can affect our present behaviours). Therefore for FFab it isn't extremely important to have the most accurate representation of past, present and possible futures. We are more curious to uncover conscious and unconscious assumptions that the participants might have about their lives and environments and seeing how these assumptions shape and distort their images of the future. The scenario process uses these assumptions as raw materials in creating storyworlds. During the scenario process our awareness of assumptions grows through non-judgmental observation and several waves of analysis and synthesis. On this page we review existing scenario building methods to make available a wide palette of methods to apply and customise for different groups with whom we co-create scenarios.

The most rewarding moment in scenario building (in our experience) is when participants begin to recognise different scenarios as extreme versions or caricatures of their present, as if they have acquired a mysterious search-light, that can be used to illuminate different parts of an otherwise murky, entangled situation. By using appropriate scenario methods, we hope to amplify these moments of clarity that spark imagination and a pro-active engagement with the futures. We're also interested how to make the whole process more fluid, creative and mindful (of self, others and the environment).

Methodology, though, is about more than the tools used: it involves careful attention to the stance taken by the practitioner in the use of tools to enact knowledge and understanding.“ -Floyd, Burns and Ramos1)

Methods, comparisons

A simple description of a scenario building process can be found in How to Build Scenarios by Lawrence Wilkinson. An counter-prespective can be found in Ten Rules for Creating Awful Scenarios by Jamais Cascio, which provides a checklist of what NOT to do when creating scenarios.

The paper to review all the techniques for developing scenarios that have appeared in the literature, along with comments on their utility, strengths and weaknesses. (…) Based on our review of the literature, we have discovered eight general categories (types) of scenario techniques with two to three variations for each type, resulting in more than two dozen techniques overall. There are, of course, variations of the variations.”

  1. Judgment (genius forecasting, visualization, role playing, Coates and Jarratt)
  2. Baseline/expected (trend extrapolation, Manoa, systems scenarios, trend impact analysis)
  3. Elaboration of fixed scenarios (incasting, SRI)
  4. Event sequences (probability trees, sociovision, divergence mapping)
  5. Backcasting (horizon mission methodology, Impact of Future Technologies, future mapping)
  6. Dimensions of uncertainty (morphological analysis, field anomaly relaxation, GBN, MORPHOL, OS/SE)
  7. Cross-impact analysis (SMIC PROF-EXPERT, IFS)
  8. Modeling (trend impact analysis, sensitivity analysis, dynamic scenarios)

From The current state of scenario development by Peter Bishop, Andy Hines and Terry Collins, Foresight, Vol. 9(1)

Another attempt at scenario typology by Lena Börjeson and her colleagues classifies scenarios into three categories and six types:

  1. Predictive (Forecasts, What if)
  2. Explorative (External, Strategic)
  3. Normative (Preserving, Transforming).

They categorise scenario techniques (all of which contribute to different scenario methods) into three kinds:

  1. Generating techniques: generation of ideas and collection of data (surveys, Delphi, workshops)
  2. Integrating techniques: combining parts into wholes (time-series analysis, explanatory modelling, optimised modelling)
  3. Consistency techniques: checking the consistency of scenarios (cross impact analysis, morphological field analysis)

From: Towards a user's guide to scenarios by Lena Börjeson et al

Using four different scenario building methods: the 2×2 matrix approach; causal layered analysis; the Manoa approach; and the scenario archetypes approach. (…) This exploratory comparison confirmed that different scenario generation methods yield not only different narratives and insights, but qualitatively different participant experiences. (…) There is little in the literature which attempts to evaluate the different types of futures insight which emerge when different scenarios methods are used, the way in which choice of method might influence the types of conversations which are enabled by different scenarios processes, or the benefits and risks in using one approach over another. (…) To some extent, any scenario method can be completed as a desk-top research exercise. But creating scenario processes that effectively create change means creating participatory processes: scenarios create new behaviour only insofar as they create new patterns of thinking across a significant population within an organisation. So how engaging is each method, and what kind of thinking, conversation, and energy does each method produce in participants? Each of these scenario methods appears to have distinguishing strengths. The 2×2 matrix approach produces four scenarios consistently focused on alternative outcomes for an issue at a specific scale. CLA generates conversations that dig down into the worldviews, mental models and cultural structures that inform how we perceive both issues and possible future outcomes. Manoa creates a diverse array of details across all levels of a possible future. Scenario archetypes guarantee consideration of outcomes across a specified set of worldviews. Yet none by itself is really a 'perfect', all-purpose approach. These differences underline the need for people who commission futures work to understand clearly what they are trying to achieve through scenario building, and to remain open to the methods that are most likely to be effective in reaching the desired outcome. (…) The primary lesson we have learned from this exercise as active practitioners is the value of mash-ups: combining and layering different techniques to enrich outcomes.“

From: Curry, Andrew and Wendy Schultz (2009), Roads Less Travelled in the Journal of Futures Studies, Vol. 13(4)

Examples of (historical) scenario methods:

2x2 Double Uncertainty

The scenario building exercise (step 1-6) in the prehearsal pocket guide is based on the 2×2 method by Peter Schwartz in The Art of the Long View. On this page Schwartz summarises the scenario building steps.

Causal Layered Analysis

Causal layered analysis is offered as a new futures research method. Its utility is not in predicting the future but in creating transformative spaces for the creation of alternative futures. Causal layered analysis consists of four levels: the litany, social causes, discourse/worldview and myth/metaphor. The challenge is to conduct research that moves up and down these layers of analysis and thus is inclusive of different ways of knowing.

Sohail Inayatullah in CLA: poststructuralism as method and the CLA Reader

CLA simplified:

Image Credit: Thinking Futures

The Manoa Approach

The Manoa approach “assumes that actual futures are generated by the turbulent intersection of multiple trends, and the interplay of their cascading impacts. Thus each Manoa scenario requires a base of at least three orthogonal drivers of change, preferably emerging issues or 'weak signals.' The design is best suited to creating scenarios 25+ years out, maximally different from the present: it aims to produce surprising scenarios that shake current working assumptions/ (…) Five steps: [1] choose 3-5 significant emerging issues of change ('weak signals');
[2] brainstorm or mindmap the potential impact cascades of each, working one by one;
[3] consider the cross-impacts arising from the 3-5 drivers and their impacts working together;
[4] doublecheck the depth of detail using an ethnographic inventory;
[5] develop a summary metaphor or title

Four Generic Futures

Our use of “alternative futures” (or “scenarios”) is usually within the context of helping an organization or community plan for and move towards its preferred future. (…) I have chosen to explain our use of alternative futures as though I were telling an interested community or organization what the components of a futures visioning process are in our understanding and experience, and how to conduct the various parts of an overall futures visioning process.

James Dator in Alternative Futures at the Manoa School

Dator discusses the process of creating four generic futures (Continue, Collapse, Discipline and Transform) - as four types of stories in which all/most future scenarios can be classified:

1) Continue: What are the ways in which the system in which we find ourselves could continue as it is?
2) Collapse: What are the ways in which it could fall apart?
3) Discipline: What are the ways in which it could be directed?
4) Transform: What are the ways in which it could change altogether?
Phrased this way, each generic image of the future presents a challenge to test the boundaries of one’s expectations and understanding of the system.

From Stuart Candy in his disertation The Futures of Everyday Life

For more details see four generic futures

Cone of Plausibility

The Cone of Plausibility, according to Charles W. Taylor, “serves as an enclosure that circumscribes the thought process of the players. The strength of their thought process to build these scenarios and to hold them together as they proceed outward in time is a counterforce to the pressures of wild cards to disrupt the cone. Scenarios within the cone are considered plausible if they adhere to a logical progression of trends, events, and consequences from today to a predetermined time in the future”

Morphological Analysis / FAR

Morphological Analysis is a way to create one normative scenario, from which a number of critical uncertainties are selected and given a set of variables; by combining different variables several 'worlds' can be created, as stepping stones for a smaller set of branching scenario timelines. See also Field Anomaly Relaxation.

Other methods

Joseph Coates wrote “Today the question of what scenarios are is unclear except with regard to one point-they have become extremely popular. Many people see scenarios as forecasts of some future condition while others disavow that their scenarios are forecasts. Yet looking at scenarios that do not come labeled as forecasts or non-forecasts. It is difficult to tell them apart. The purpose of the scenario is at a meta level, since the scenario usually does not speak for itself in terms of its purpose.” More in Scenario Planning. Another early in depth overview of How Companies Use Scenarios was written by Mandel and Wilson.

Michel Godet writes in The Art of Scenarios and Strategic Planning: “we strive to give simple tools that may be appropriated. However, these simple tools are inspired by intellectual rigor that enables one to ask the right questions. Of course, these tools do not come with a guarantee. The natural talent,common sense, and intuition of the futurist also count!”

Anna Maria Orru and David Relan wrote The Scenario Symphony for the Resilients project, containing a whole range of scenario creation methods and techniques, including the dynamic panarchy and temporal model. It's interesting to compare it to the “Four Generic Futures” method above.

figure5

Integral Scenario Development by C.C. Stewart is based on the holistic integral theory of Ken Wilber and integral futures of Richard Slaughter.

More methods are described in the Futures Research Methodologies chapter 13 by Jerome C. Glenn and The Futures Group International.

Finally, an interesting avenue to explore are remote scenario planning workshops using various online collaboration tools. Jamais Cascio describes here how he conducted a virtual scenario workshop, Noah Raford describes another experiment in online scenario planning.

Scenario Techniques

Below we explore different techniques/elements of scenario building based on the 2×2 uncertainty method, a method that we have used in the first months of Future Fabulators' workshops. The structure of the document is based on our questions that emerged during process-debriefs. After compiling the questions, we investigated techniques that could help us improve the process.

Preparation beforehand

What can we/participants prepare for a scenario workshop beforehand?

Commonly the people organising the workshop will “Work on identifying major drivers, trends and events should be initiated ahead of the first workshop: this is an opportunity to draw on relevant horizon scanning work and other analysis. Ideally this work will be synthesised into a format which can be accessed easily by workshop participants, either as preparatory material or at the workshop itself. Material researched at this stage should include a mix of thematic material, together with analyses of broader trends.” The Horizon Scanning Centre (pdf)

other possibilities:

What are the ideal settings (e.g. room size per person) for a scenario workshop?

from our experience:

Key question

How to craft good questions?

How to better structure/encourage designing the core question?

Questions encourage an inquiring mind

Why does it seem more difficult to phrase questions rather than stating problems?

“In nearly all cases it should be possible to formulate the purpose of the scenarios work as a question. If this proves difficult, this is often an indication that the work will not be taken up when completed, even if it is of a good quality.” -The Horizon Scanning Centre (pdf)

Plotting past and present

What are different ways to map-out the past and present situation surrounding the key question?

When to use this step?

When can it be reduced/removed? When is it more important to focus on this step (observe, then interact as permaculture teaches us) than to work on possible future scenarios?

In very short workshops when participants know each other well, perhaps, but it might be better to always include at least a few minutes of it, to allow participant's to see differences in perception of the same situation.

What does a 'futurism without prediction' look like?

A few ideas on non_predictive_strategy

When does it help to talk about things that are fixed, or constraints that exist?

Key factors

What are different ways to visualise and cluster the relationships between key factors

What do we mean by key factors?

Change Drivers & Weak Signals

How do we look at drivers as dynamic forces? should we be looking at responses to trends rather than trends in general? (nouns → verbs)

Is there another way to look at large scale changes aside from trends (without having to do a PhD in each of the changes)?

How effective are these methods and how can we usefully evaluate them?

It seems to be a big (and unresolved) issue (see ”Foresight for Public Policy” thesis by Mihaela Ghisa)

Ranking critical uncertainties

(this is relevant primarily for the 2×2 uncertainty scenario method. other methods use more/less axes (but are equally vague about how to select them)

Scenarios

How to construct alternative future scenarios

  • Two axes method: Scenarios generated using the ‘two axes’ process are illustrative rather than predictive; they tend to be high-level (although additional layers of detail can subsequently be added). They are particularly suited to testing medium to long-term policy direction, by ensuring that it is robust in a range of environments. Scenarios developed using this method tend to look out 10-20 years.
  • Branch analysis method: The ‘branch analysis’ method is suited to developing scenarios around specific turning-points that are known in advance (e.g. elections, a referendum or peace process). This approach works best for a shorter time horizon: generally up to five years.
  • Cone of plausibility method: offers a more deterministic model of the way in which drivers lead to outcomes, by explicitly listing assumptions and how these might change. Of the three techniques, this approach is most suitable for shorter-term time horizons (e.g. a few months to 2-3 years), but can be used to explore longer-term time horizons. It also suits contexts with a limited number of important drivers.

From: The Horizon Scanning Centre (pdf)

And also:

How to better structure building scenario skeletons with guiding questions (which questions could be generalised)?

One suggestion (not sure about all of the focus on problems):

A. General discussion of your future

  • What will most people be doing in such a world?
  • What economic problems that worry people now will be gone, or relatively minor?
  • What environmental problems that worry people now will be gone, or relatively minor?
  • What other problems that worry people now will be gone, or relatively minor?
  • What new (economic, environmental, social, health, energy or other) problems will people have to worry about that are absent or unimportant now?

B. How probable (likely to actually occur) is the future described in your scenario? C. How preferable is the future described in your scenario? That is, how close is it to your own preferred future? D. To the extent the future described in your scenario is judged preferable by your group, what five things need to be done now to move towards those desirable aspects of that future? E. To the extent the future described in your scenario is judged undesirable by your group, what five things need to be done now to see that those undesirable aspects not occur?

From Alternative Futures at The Manoa School by Jim Dator

Other possibilities: An option from integral scenario development by Christ C Stewart is to Apply 6 root questions (relating to factors and actors) and the AQAL framework (four quadrants by Wilber) to deepen the scenario stories. Also, the layers from Causal Layered Analysis can be used as probes in fleshing out scenarios. Finally (something we haven't explored yet): the elements of the Ethnographic Futures Framework (Bowman & Schultz, 2005) might be useful.

From scenarios to story-worlds

Retrocasting

Aka Backcasting is about searching for present signals, asking the question “how to get from here to there”. “Backcasting starts with defining a desirable future and then works backwards to identify policies and programs that will connect the future to the present.”

When we practice retrocasting/retrotesting or scenario testing (as coined in the http://www.ideo.com/work/method-cards/IDEO Method Cards) we don't exclusively look at a desirable future, but at different possible futures resulting from scenario building, in an attempt to identify signals in the present that might point to the future moving in this or that direction. This is perhaps similar to the work of Dator, Schulz and others related to the “four generic futures” (see above in scenario examples), known as deductive forecasting or incasting.

“The best kinds of stories are about how you get from here to there, not just what there looks like.” –Jamais Cascio

What tools can we use to structure scenario testing?

Cause & Effect Diagram: “The cause and effect diagram is used to explore all the potential or real causes (or inputs) that result in a single effect (or output). Causes are arranged according to their level of importance or detail, resulting in a depiction of relationships and hierarchy of events.” In scenario testing this could be used not as 'cause and effect', but how to get there from here (note down a topic from the scenario, then work backwards to see what would have to happen to make it happen).

Another interesting possibility is to abstract principles from a scenario and retrocast from them. In this article they suggest not to use scenarios at all, but to work from agreed upon sustainability principles.

Theory of change model is essentially backcasting for specific goals: http://www.theoryofchange.org/what-is-theory-of-change/

what are important things to focus on?

Visualising

Which methods could we use to visualise scenarios?

Prototyping

More on possible_futures_parallel_presents design fiction, guerrilla futures and experiential futures

Prehearsals

continue research on prehearsal methods

Follow-up

It all depends on the purpose of the workshop…

Futures research methods

From: Identifying systems' new initial conditions as influence points for the future

Mapping scenarios techniques. (Source: Andrew Curry)