futurist-analyst
Analyzes events through futures lens using scenario planning, trend analysis, weak signals,drivers of change, and forecasting methods (exploratory, normative, backcasting).Provides insights on possible futures, emerging trends, disruptive forces, strategic foresight, and alternative scenarios.Use when: Strategic planning, emerging trends, technology assessment, long-term planning, uncertainty navigation.Evaluates: Trends, weak signals, drivers of change, plausible futures, strategic options, uncertainty ranges.
Install
mkdir -p .claude/skills/futurist-analyst && curl -L -o skill.zip "https://mcp.directory/api/skills/download/471" && unzip -o skill.zip -d .claude/skills/futurist-analyst && rm skill.zipInstalls to .claude/skills/futurist-analyst
About this skill
Futurist Analyst Skill
Purpose
Analyze events through the disciplinary lens of futures studies and strategic foresight, applying established forecasting frameworks (scenario planning, trend analysis, horizon scanning), anticipatory methods, and systems thinking to understand emerging trends, identify drivers of change, envision alternative futures, and develop strategic responses to uncertainty.
When to Use This Skill
- Strategic Planning: Long-term planning under uncertainty
- Trend Analysis: Identifying emerging patterns and their implications
- Technology Assessment: Evaluating potential impacts of new technologies
- Risk Anticipation: Identifying emerging threats and opportunities
- Scenario Planning: Exploring multiple possible futures
- Innovation Strategy: Understanding future markets and needs
- Policy Development: Forward-looking policy design
- Disruption Analysis: Identifying potential paradigm shifts
Core Philosophy: Futures Thinking
Futures analysis rests on fundamental principles:
The Future is Not Predetermined: Multiple futures are possible. Choices and actions shape which future emerges.
The Future Cannot Be Predicted: But we can identify plausible futures, understand uncertainty, and prepare for multiple scenarios.
Signals Are Everywhere: Weak signals today become strong trends tomorrow. Attending to edges reveals emerging futures.
Systems Thinking Required: Everything connects. Understanding futures requires seeing relationships, feedback loops, and cascading effects.
Mental Models Matter: Our assumptions about the future shape what we see. Challenging assumptions reveals alternative futures.
Exploration Over Prediction: The goal is not to predict THE future, but to explore possible futures and prepare for multiple scenarios.
Action Shapes Futures: Futures thinking is not passive forecasting but active shaping. Understanding possible futures empowers strategic action.
Theoretical Foundations (Expandable)
Framework 1: Three Horizons Framework
Origin: Sharpe, Hodgson, Leicester (International Futures Forum, 2004)
Core Principle: Three overlapping waves of change at different time scales
Three Horizons:
Horizon 1: The Dominant System (Present)
- Current established systems, institutions, practices
- Mature, optimized, but showing signs of decline
- Fit for current context but not emerging challenges
- Time frame: Present to near-term
- Examples: Current business models, incumbent technologies
Horizon 2: Disruptive Innovations (Transition)
- Emerging innovations disrupting H1
- Transitional space between old and new
- Competing paradigms, uncertainty, experimentation
- Some will succeed (become H3), some will fail
- Time frame: Near to medium-term
- Examples: Emerging technologies, new business models, pilot programs
Horizon 3: Future Systems (Emerging)
- Seeds of future systems
- Currently marginal but may become dominant
- Weak signals today, strong trends tomorrow
- Fit for future context we're moving toward
- Time frame: Medium to long-term
- Examples: Radical innovations, paradigm shifts, transformative visions
Key Insights:
- All three horizons coexist at any time
- H1 declines while H2 experiments and H3 emerges
- Transitions are messy, non-linear
- Understanding all three horizons reveals strategic choices
When to Apply: Strategic planning, innovation strategy, understanding systemic change
Sources:
- Sharpe et al., Three Horizons: A Pathways Practice for Transformation (2016)
- Three Horizons - Wikipedia
Framework 2: Scenario Planning
Origin: Herman Kahn (RAND, 1950s), refined by Royal Dutch Shell (1970s)
Core Principle: Develop multiple plausible future scenarios to prepare for uncertainty
Shell Method (Classic Approach):
Step 1: Identify Focal Issue
- What decision, strategy, or question are we addressing?
- What time horizon matters?
Step 2: Identify Driving Forces
- What trends, forces, uncertainties shape the future?
- Categorize: predetermined elements vs. critical uncertainties
Step 3: Select Critical Uncertainties
- What 2-3 uncertainties have highest impact and highest uncertainty?
- These become scenario axes
Step 4: Develop Scenario Logics
- Create 2-4 distinct scenarios based on different combinations of uncertainties
- Each scenario must be internally consistent and plausible
Step 5: Flesh Out Scenarios
- Develop rich narratives for each scenario
- What does this world look like? Feel like?
- What are implications for focal issue?
Step 6: Identify Implications and Options
- What strategies work across scenarios (robust)?
- What early indicators signal which scenario emerging?
- What actions prepare us for each?
Scenario Types:
- Business-as-usual: Continuation of current trends
- Best-case: Optimistic but plausible
- Worst-case: Pessimistic but plausible
- Wildcard: Low probability, high impact
Key Insights:
- Scenarios are not predictions but explorations
- Purpose is to challenge assumptions and expand thinking
- Good scenarios are plausible, divergent, challenging, relevant
- Robust strategies work across multiple scenarios
When to Apply: Strategic planning under high uncertainty, preparing for multiple futures
Sources:
- Peter Schwartz, The Art of the Long View (1991)
- Scenario Planning - Wikipedia
Framework 3: Drivers of Change (STEEP/PESTLE)
Purpose: Systematic framework for identifying forces shaping the future
Five/Six Categories:
Social:
- Demographics (aging, urbanization, migration)
- Values and culture shifts
- Social movements
- Lifestyle changes
- Health and wellness trends
- Education and skills
Technological:
- Emerging technologies (AI, biotech, nanotech, quantum)
- Infrastructure developments
- Digital transformation
- Automation and robotics
- Connectivity and computing power
Economic:
- Growth patterns and cycles
- Globalization vs. fragmentation
- Inequality and wealth distribution
- Labor market shifts
- Resource scarcity or abundance
- Financial system evolution
Environmental:
- Climate change and impacts
- Resource depletion
- Biodiversity loss
- Pollution and ecosystem health
- Renewable energy transition
- Circular economy
Political/Legal:
- Governance models
- Geopolitical shifts
- Regulatory changes
- Power distributions
- Conflict and cooperation
- Institutional strength or weakness
(Optional) Ethical:
- Emerging ethical questions
- Values conflicts
- Moral frameworks
Analysis Approach:
- Scan each category for current trends and emerging shifts
- Assess direction, speed, and magnitude
- Identify interactions between categories
- Determine implications for focal question
Key Insights:
- Changes in one domain affect others (systems thinking)
- Multiple drivers interact to create complex futures
- Some drivers reinforce each other, others conflict
- Comprehensive scanning reduces blind spots
When to Apply: Horizon scanning, trend analysis, understanding context for scenarios
Framework 4: Weak Signals and Wild Cards
Weak Signals:
- Definition: Early indicators of potential change, currently marginal or ambiguous
- Characteristics: Low visibility, fragmented, uncertain significance
- Examples: Niche innovations, edge behaviors, anomalies, surprises
- Value: Detecting weak signals early enables proactive response
Identification Process:
- Scan edges, margins, outsiders (not just mainstream)
- Notice anomalies and surprises
- Track niche innovations
- Listen to fringe voices
- Monitor leading indicators in related domains
Wild Cards:
- Definition: Low probability, high impact events
- Characteristics: Disruptive, paradigm-shifting, often sudden
- Examples: Pandemics, financial crises, breakthrough discoveries, political shocks
- Value: Preparing for wildcards builds resilience
Approach:
- Identify potential wildcards
- Assess probability and impact
- Develop contingency plans
- Build organizational agility
Key Insights:
- Weak signals become strong trends
- Ignoring weak signals leads to strategic surprise
- Wild cards are inevitable even if unpredictable
- Resilience matters more than prediction
When to Apply: Early warning systems, risk anticipation, innovation tracking
Framework 5: Forecasting Methods
Exploratory Forecasting (What could happen?):
- Start from present, project forward
- Identify trends and drivers
- Extrapolate to future possibilities
- Multiple scenarios, not single prediction
Normative Forecasting (What should happen?):
- Start from desired future, work backward
- Define goals and vision
- Identify pathways to achieve
- Also called "backcasting"
Delphi Method:
- Systematic expert consultation
- Multiple rounds to build consensus
- Anonymous to reduce bias
- Iterative refinement of forecasts
Trend Extrapolation:
- Identify historical trends
- Project continuation or inflection
- Assess S-curves (emergence, growth, maturity, decline)
- Caution: Trends can reverse or accelerate
Cross-Impact Analysis:
- How do multiple trends/events interact?
- Reinforcing or dampening effects?
- Cascading consequences
- Network effects
Key Insights:
- Different methods serve different purposes
- Combine methods for robust analysis
- Forecasts are always uncertain—embrace probability ranges
- Update forecasts as new information emerges
When to Apply: Strategic planning, risk assessment, policy development
Core Analytical Frameworks (Expandable)
Framework 1: FUTURES Cone (Voros)
Purpose: Visualize range of possible futures
Structure (expanding cone from present):
Potential Futures: All physically
Content truncated.
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