Polygon Created with Sketch. Home | Research

Planning When You Can’t Predict: Strategic Foresight and the Future of Work

How do you plan when you can’t predict? 

A number of transformations are underway that pose risks to—and opportunities for— the future of work in Canada. This report, Planning When You Can’t Predict: Strategic Foresight and the Future of Work, introduces strategic foresight, a discipline that helps organizations and individuals think about and plan for the future in a context of radical uncertainty involving disruptive political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental changes. This paper is for newcomers to strategic foresight, whose organizations may benefit from the value that the discipline provides.

Strategic foresight is valuable for a range of stakeholders interested in the future of work and future skills. By providing an introduction and overview of strategic foresight and its implications for these areas, this report will enable readers to better engage with the strategic foresight literature and be better prepared to apply strategic foresight methods and findings to their work. For instance, policymakers will benefit from considering various uncertainties and may uncover an array of creative policy options. For businesses, including small and medium-sized enterprises, strategic foresight will support short-, medium-, and long-term strategic planning, ensuring the organization is equipped with the right talent to meet the needs of the future. Post-secondary institutions and partners in the skills development ecosystem also have an important role to play in teaching and creating opportunities to apply strategic foresight methods. Additionally, they can apply strategic foresight learnings to ensure students and future job seekers are equipped with the skills needed to be resilient in the future world of work.

young person talking in front of a group in an office

To help our audiences plan more effectively for the future of work and future skills, this paper:

  • Shows how striving to predict the future of work using only traditional forecasting methods can be counterproductive and identifies the benefits of strategic foresight.
  • Defines fundamental strategic foresight concepts and provides examples of strategic foresight techniques from academic literature.
  • Identifies politics, economics, society, technology, law, environment and climate change, and health as major categories of trends affecting the future of work in Canada.
  • Shares useful strategic foresight approaches to help plan for the future of work and future skills and offers tips for implementation.
  • Provides an in-depth discussion of scenario planning, one of the most important strategic foresight methods for addressing the “era of converging crises.”

With so many forces shaping the future of work and future skills, the ability to stay resilient and plan strategically is of paramount importance. Given its many benefits and its broad applicability to a wide range of stakeholders, strategic foresight provides the tools to help plan when the future can’t be predicted.

Key Findings

Strategic foresight is the deliberate, methodical, and imaginative exploration of what the future may hold, incorporating various methods to craft responses to major trends, weak signals of change, multiple scenarios, or other realities that could disrupt organizations and their stakeholders

Strategic foresight reveals implicit assumptions, challenges dominant perspectives, and engages with surprising and significant potential disruptions that otherwise might be ignored or dismissed

For decades, strategic foresight experts have applied foresight techniques to help decision makers and individuals explore a range of probable, preferable, and plausible futures to build more resilient, flexible, and adaptable organizations and people

Related Content

Two coworkers smiling and collaborating at a computer in an office.
Research

Supporting Inclusive Work-Integrated Learning as an Employer

Work-integrated learning and placements are critical bridges to employment. Employers who offer inclusive placements can access a wider talent pool, improve retention and performance, and foster innovation through diverse perspectives.
Two colleagues at a desk reviewing content on a computer, with one pointing at the screen while the other types.
Research

Preparing for the Workforce as a Neurodivergent Student

As a neurodivergent student, you bring unique strengths, perspectives, and skills to your studies and future career.
Cargo ships carrying stacked containers across calm water with a bridge and mountains in the background.
Research

Gearing Up for Global Exports: Identifying Skills and Promising Practices to Support Indigenous Exportersexternal link icon

Indigenous small and medium‑sized enterprises (SMEs) in Canada continue to be under‑represented in global trade due to long‑standing barriers that limit their access to global markets, financing, and export‑related support.
View all Research