Most of frameworks deal with one version of reality. SCR compresses the current situation. Issue trees map a single problem space. The 2x2 matrix evaluates options against fixed criteria. Hypothesis-driven thinking tests one claim. Pre-mortem images one failure. Second-order effects traces chains from one decision.
Scenario planning is different. It asks: What if the world changes? Not “What should we do given how things are” but “What should we do given that we don’t know how things will be?” It forces you to think across multiple possible futures simultaneously and make decisions that are robust enough to work in more than one of them.
The structure. You identify the two biggest uncertainties facing a decision: the forces that will shape the future but that you cannot predict or control. You map them as axes (like a 2x2). The four quadrants become four distinct future worlds. Then you ask: What would we do in each world? And critically: Is there a move that works across all four worlds?
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The overall sequence: Define the decision and time horizon. List driving forces, separating predetermined elements from critical uncertainties. Choose two uncertainty axes. Build four named, narrative worlds. Test the proposed strategy against all four. Find robust moves or identify primary bets with trigger points. Set signposts for monitoring. Communicate as a one-page brief.