Most companies have no formal process for tracking change in their business environment. They rely on quarterly strategy sessions, individual gut instincts, and Google searches. By the time a trend reaches a search result, someone else has already built a strategy around it.
For example, Gillette controlled over 70% of the global razor market. But Gillette had no formal process to connect a social shift to its product strategy. Dollar Shave Club launched and built a $1 billion business partly by understanding an emerging beard culture among millennials.
The cost of this is not just missed opportunities. It is a permanent reactive posture. Companies that lack a disciplined foresight process make decisions based on visible, present conditions. That is structurally too late.
Exhibit 1: 10 strategic foresight methods to reduce uncertainty
This guide explains what continuous foresight is, why most organizations fail at it, who should own it, and how to build a process that gives your company a real competitive advantage.
