Methods and Approaches of Futures Studies
For all of human history people have tried to develop methods for predicting the future, from reading palms to gazing at the stars. But in recent years, primarily since World War II, scientists, sociologists, operations researchers, and others, many of whom began to call themselves futurists, have developed quantitative and qualitative methods for rationally anticipating the future. What separates futurists from the soothsayers who came before is rationality, an awareness that the future cannot be known with absolute certainty, and the recognition that many different futures are possible, depending on decisions people make in the present.
Generally, methods for studying the future do not pretend to be able to predict the future, although assessing the probabilities of alternative futures is an important aspect of futures studies methods. Rather, futures studies methods are generally designed to help people better understand future possibilities in order to make better decisions today. Futurists often say they use their methods to reduce uncertainty, although it may be more accurate to say they are trying to manage uncertainty. Many decisions must be made today in the face of great uncertainty about what may happen in the future or even what the effects of today's decision might be in the future. Futures methods help people to deal with this uncertainty by clarifying what is known, what can be known, what the likely range of possibilities is, what the most desirable possibilities are, and how today's decisions may play out in each of a variety of possible futures.
Futures research methods are both descriptive and
prescriptive.
Descriptive methods, sometimes also called extrapolative, attempt to
describe
objectively what the future will be or could be. Prescriptive methods,
also called normative, focus on what the future should be. Prescriptive
methods try to help people clarify their values and preferences so they
can develop visions of desirable futures. Once they understand what
they
would like the future to be, they're better able to take the
appropriate
steps to create that preferred future.
Although much has been learned about futures studies
methods since most were developed in the 50s and 60s, they remain
somewhat
amorphous. One can probably identify as many futures studies methods as
there are futurists, as each futurist develops his or her own style for
looking ahead. But gradually, some consensus on methodologies is
developing.
One principle upon which most futurists would agree is the need to use multiple methods to address most futures problems. One will gain much greater insight by developing a futures research program that combines environmental scanning, trend assessment, delphi, and scenarios, for example, than one could achieve using any single method alone. Thus, although several of the more popular methods are described individually in the pages that follow, they are ideally used in various combinations.
Another principle upon which some consensus is developing is that futures research should be participatory: it should involve stakeholders and decision-makers directly in the process of developing forecasts or creating scenarios, because that is the only way to enable people to fully appreciate and perceive the range of possible futures.
Although many futurist strive for objectivity, ultimately, most futures methods rely heavily on subjective human judgment. But there are various tools one can use to augment individual human judgment. A method's value often lies in amalgamating the judgment of many people, enhancing creativity, generating questions and ideas to produce different judgments, and demonstrating consistencies and inconsistencies among and within competing views of the future.
As discussed in Chapter 2, Principles of Futures
Studies,
futurists often divide the purposes of futures studies as imagining the
possible, assessing the probable, and deciding on the preferable. Most
futures studies methods focus on one or two of these goals, but not all
three; thus one almost always will need multiple methods if on is to
work
through the full range of futures studies. For instance, analyzing a
present
trend will give some information about the possible and the probable,
as
we analyze what will happen if the trend continues or what may cause
the
trend to change, but it tells us relatively little about what we like
to
have happen. Visioning techniques may tell us something about the
possible,
as we brainstorm a range of alternatives, and the preferable, as we use
visioning to imagine preferred futures, but it may tell us relatively
little
about the probabilities of our preferred futures without the help of
other
techniques.
Futures studies can also be thought of as encompassing
five stages, although many individual projects will focus on one or two
stages and leave the rest to other projects. The first stage is to
identify
and monitor change. The second stage is to critique and analyze change.
The third stage is to imagine alternatives. The fourth stage is to
envision
the preferred alternative. And the fifth and final stage is to plan and
implement steps to achieve the preferred vision.1
Trend Analysis: A
Method
Everyone Uses
Trend analysis involves the use of any of a variety of
techniques based on historical data. Trend analysis involves several
processes.
One process is spotting an emerging trend, that is, identifying a
change
in the world around us. For example, you may notice that more and more
people seem to be waiting until they are in their thirties to have
children.
You may have spotted a trend-i.e., that people are delaying child
birth.
Now you need to do some analysis to see what the nature of the trend is
and what its implications might be. You could first look at historical
data. What was the average age of women having their first child in
1950?
In 1955? and so on. Do you see a pattern? Is the average age of women
at
the birth of their first child increasing?
You might see the age at birth of the first child is increasing by six months over each five-year interval. That is, perhaps the average age was 21 in 1950, 21.5 in 1955, 22 in 1960, and so on until 1995 when the average age is 26. Then you might extrapolate the trend into the future, to predict that the average age would be 26.5 in 2000 and 27 in the year 2005 and so on. But trend analysis requires that you do more than simply extrapolate the trend forward. You have to ask, what is causing this trend, and will those causes continue indefinitely? Are there upper limits to the trend? What other forces may affect the trend? At this point trend analysis relies more on subjective judgment rather than objective extrapolation of historical data.
Trend extrapolation is the most straight-forward and
objective
component of trend analysis. Extrapolation essentially consists of
taking
historical data, fitting a curve to the data, and extending the curve
into
the future. Trend extrapolation assumes that things will keep changing
in the future the way they have been changing in the past. One simply
extends
the line or the curve forward to predict where things will be at a
certain
future time.
If the population of a city is known to be increasing
at the rate of 2% a year, we assume that it will continue to do so in
the
future, and we can use simple arithmetic to calculate what the
population
will be in five years. In other words, we can generate a forecast by
observing
a change through time in the character of something and projecting
(extrapolating)
that change into the future. In making a forecast, we naturally
disregard
short-term changes or fluctuations, such as the swelling of a city's
population
each morning as people come to work. What is important is the
longer-term
change, that is, the trend.
Trend extrapolation is one of the most commonly used
ways to generate a forecast. City planners, economists, demographers,
and
many other specialists constantly extrapolate trends -- consciously or
unconsciously -- when they think about the future. So, too, do ordinary
people. Assuming that the future will be like the past or that past
changes
will continue in the same direction and rate is a perfectly sensible
way
to begin trying to understand the future. It can not, however, be the
end
of our endeavors, or we would end up with absurd results. For example,
we might estimate that a child aged four has grown at the rate of five
inches a year, and then calculate that this rate of growth means he
will
be more than 13 feet tall at the age of 34! We would not accept this
forecast,
because we know that human beings never grow that tall. Long before he
reaches the age of 34, we forecast, his rate of growth will slow and
eventually
halt at a height that will probably be somewhere between five feet and
six and a half feet.
Cyclical Pattern Analysis
Closely related to trend analysis is cyclical pattern
analysis, see theTrends
Timeline Graph. Trends
Timeline in Flash. Many phenomena appear to operate on
cycles, and cyclical
pattern analysis uses cyclic or recurring patterns (also referred to as
waves, warps, bursts, surges, epochs, and episodes) as templates for
anticipating
future developments in various areas, such as public policy, the
economy,
etc. The "business cycle" is probably the best known example of this,
in
which a recession is followed by recovery, which leads to
over-expansion
of capacity, which in turn leads back to recession, and the cycle
begins
again. A similar, though much longer-range cycle, was proposed by
Russian
economist N.D. Kondratieff, who hypothesized that Western societies
cycle
through a pattern of long waves, characterized by
recession-depression-revival-prosperity.
The length of the overall cycle averages 56 years, with peaks in the
occurring
in 1800, 1856, 1916, and 1969.4 The Kondratieff Wave attracted great
attention
in the mid-1980s, when the cycle predicted depression, but has
attracted
less attention recently.
Other cycles futurists have explored include product
life
cycles, historical cycles, and generational cycles. See my paper
on Sept 11 as a turning
point in history.
Environmental Scanning
Environmental
scanning refers to the process of scanning the media (especially online
media and media used heavily by youth) to identify emerging issues to
enable
organizations or individuals to anticipate and respond to changes in
the
external environment.5 Scanning is meant to provide strategic
intelligence
to the strategic planning process by identifying changing trends and
potential
developments, monitoring them, forecasting their future pattern and
assessing
their impacts.6
"The objective of scanning is to look over the widest
range of possible factors and to identify connections with the
organization's
function or business, and especially to identify the significant
positive
or negative effects those could have on the organization and its
activities.
In general, the objectives in monitoring and scanning are to:
* detect scientific, technical, economic, social,
political
and ecological events and other elements important to the company;
* define the potential threats or opportunities or
major
potential changes for the organization that are implied by those events;
* provide continuous awareness and evaluation of trends
to guide planning and action choices;
* inform management and staff of the need for
anticipatory
action; minimize reaction; stimulate proaction;
* alert management and staff to trends which are
converging,
diverging, speeding up, slowing down, or interacting.7
Scanning may be active or passive. "Passive scanning
is what most people do when they read journals or newspapers," writes
James
Morrison, an expert in and proponent of scanning.8 Active scanning is a
more deliberate and conscious effort to review information from a broad
array sources and subject areas.
The best known practitioner of
Environmental
Scanning is probably Faith
Popcorn.
Scenarios: Making Up Stories
About
the Future
Scenario planning is the use of internally consistent
narrative descriptions of possible states of affairs or development in
the future. Usually, alternative scenarios are developed in order to
allow
people to conceptualize alternative futures and to clarify possible
consequences
of present developments and decisions.
A
scenario is simply a series of events that we imagine happening in
the future. Our everyday thinking is filled with little ventures into
the
mysterious world of tomorrow, or next week, or next year. And these
ventures
are scenarios, though rarely as well developed as the elaborate
scenarios
prepared by professional researchers working for government agencies,
the
military, and commercial enterprises.
A scenario begins when we ask, "What would happen if
such-and-such occurred?" For example, "What would happen if we went to
the theater on Saturday night?" Once this question is posed, we can
begin
to imagine the various consequences of the event. First, certain
preparations
would be necessary for this event to occur; for example, there would be
the need for transportation to the theater. In addition, if the event
does
occur, there will be additional consequences, such as being absent from
home at a time when we anticipate that a relative might come. In our
minds,
we may develop a large number of scenarios in an effort to decide
whether
or not to go to the theater on Saturday night. We develop these
scenarios
intuitively and rarely bother to write them down. We may, however,
discuss
them with each other and with friends.
What does a scenario do for us?
Fundamentally, scenarios are tools for ordering our
perceptions
about alternative futures in which today's decisions may play out.
First,
it makes us aware of potential problems that might occur if we were to
take the proposed action. We can then (1) abandon the proposed action
or
(2) prepare to take precautions that will minimize the problems that
might
result.
Backcasting
A method closely related to scenarios is backcasting.
Backcasting is concerned with how desirable futures can be created,
rather than what futures are likely to occur. In backcasting, one
envisions
a desired future endpoint, and then works backward to determine what
policy
measures would be required to achieve such a future. Backcasting
involves
six steps: determine objective, specify goals and constraints, describe
the present system, specify exogenous variables, undertake scenario
analysis,
and undertake impact analysis.12 The end result of a backcasting study
is alternative images of the future, thoroughly analyzed as their
feasibility
and consequences.13
Visioning
Visioning
has become one of the most popular and important futures studies
methods,
and a wide range of futurists have developed particularized techniques
to help people develop their vision of a desirable future for
themselves,
their organization, or their community. (Visioning on larger scales,
such
as national or global scales, remains relatively undeveloped.)
Generally,
a visioning process will attempt to identify sources of pleasure and
dismay
in the past and present, will challenge people's current assumptions,
will
give people a sense of current drivers of change so they can imagine a
range of alternative futures, and facilitates a process of achieving
some
consensus of a preferred vision for the future. "Visioning is a process
of making images of the future sufficiently real and compelling to act
as 'magnets,' or goals to achieve, or 'spurs' to present action.
Visioning
can be done by an individual, but it much more frequently takes place
in
futures workshops,"14 writes Australian futurist Richard Slaughter.
For example, Clem Bezold, who has been developing
vision
methods since the early 1980s, identifies five stages in building a
vision:
1) identification of problems, 2) identification past successes 3)
identification
of future desires; 4) identification of measurable goals; and 5)
identification
of resources to achieve those goals.15
"If we can articulate what we want clearly enough, we
will be better able to invent and create the future we most desire (our
'preferred' future)," says Bezold. "A preferred future encompasses our
ideals (usually in the form of a vision statement or description) and
our
sense of the best outcome that might be achievable. A vision is a
compelling,
inspiring statement of the preferred future that the authors and those
who subscribe to the vision want to create."16
The visioning concept owes a heavy debt to the future
workshop developed by Robert Jungk. Jungk describes the future workshop
as follows:
Typically, a future workshop can be divided into a
preparatory
phase and three workshop phases. The preparatory phase involves
deciding
on the topic and making the practical arrangements . . . The workshop
itself
begins with the critique phase, during which all the grievances and
negative
experiences related to the chosen topic are brought into the open.
There
then follows the fantasy phase, in which the participants come up with
ideas in response to the problems, and with their desires, fantasies
and
alternative views. A selection is made of the most interesting notions
and small working groups develop them into solutions and outline
projects.
The workshop concludes with the implementation phase, coming back down
into the present with its power structures and constraints. It is at
this
stage that participants critically assess the chances of getting their
projects implemented; identifying the obstacles and imaginatively
seeking
ways round them so as to draw up a plan of action.17
Jim Dator, another long-time expert of the visioning
method, has modified Jungk's method in several ways, most significantly
in emphasizing the role of the futurist in helping people think more
broadly
about alternative futures. "I think it is a serious mistake to ask
people
to engage in any kind of preferred futures envisioning exercise until
they
have first been challenged to examine their own ideas about the
future,"
says Dator. "One part of the futurist's role is to present, in a
dramatic,
engaging way, some of the elements, forces or components in the past
and
present that might significantly influence the future."18
Technological Forecasting
A technology forecaster generally makes forecasts
concerning
how soon various types of technologies will be possible and what
characteristics
they may have, rather than what they will have, because the actual
technology
that will be used in the future depends on economic, social, and
political
considerations, which are normally beyond the province of the
technology
forecaster. For example, a technology forecaster might forecast that it
will be possible by the year 2050 to produce electricity from nuclear
fusion,
but whether thermonuclear fusion will actually be used for that purpose
may depend on a variety of non-technological considerations.
Technology
forecasting is differentiated from the other methods described in this
chapter by the subject area of the forecasts rather than the
methodology
used. Technology forecasting could, theoretically, employ almost any of
the other methods described here. However, technology forecasting has
developed
as a distinct endeavor within futures studies, with its own concepts,
literature,
and practitioners, so it is useful to address it as an independent
method.
An important concept used by technological forecasters
is "stages of innovation." Every technological advance passes through
certain
stages, with each stage representing a greater degree of practicality
or
use. According to technological forecaster Joseph P. Martino, these
stages
are: "scientific findings," when some basic scientific understanding
has
been developed; "laboratory feasibility," when a specific solution to a
specific problem has been identifies and a laboratory model has been
created;
"operating prototype," when a device intended for a particular
operational
environment has been built; "commercial introduction or operational
use,"
at which point the innovation at which point the innovation
technologically
successful but is also economically feasible; "widespread adoption," at
which point the innovation has shown itself to be in some way superior
to whatever method was used previously to perform its function and the
innovation replaces a some portion of those previous methods;
"diffusion
to other areas," at which point the innovation becomes adopted for
purposes
other than those originally intended; "social and economic impact," at
which point the innovation has changed the behavior of society or has
somehow
involved a substantial portion of the economy.32
Futures Research:
Because futures research relies heavily on human
judgment,
it is often difficult to know which futures research projects are
well-executed
and which should be largely ignored. It is also important to realize
the
limitations of even the best-executed futures research.
Experienced futurists have developed certain caveats
one must keep in mind whenever one engages in or uses futures research,
guideposts for telling good work from bad, and rules of thumb for
understanding
why some futures research fails.
First, some caveats:
1. Forecasts will be incomplete. As Herman Kahn once
said, "The most surprising future is one which contains no surprises."
2. No forecast that depends on what humans will do can
be 100 percent accurate.
2. Futures depend on chance.
3. Accurate forecasts of some complex and nonlinear
systems
may be impossible.
4. Extrapolation is bound to be wrong eventually.
5. Forecasting and planning must be dynamic and able
to respond to new information and insights.