19 March 2026
Leif Godsk, Consultant
Change is no longer the exception – it is the norm. Technological breakthroughs, geopolitical instability, new regulations, climate related events and rapidly shifting customer needs affect projects faster and more profoundly than ever before.
Scenario planning is not about predicting the future, but about preparing for multiple possible futures and making better decisions under conditions of uncertainty. The method dates back to, among others, Shell’s strategic work in the 1970s and is now widely used as a response to increasing complexity and uncertainty.
Traditional project management has historically focused on reducing uncertainty through detailed upfront planning. However, in a complex and unpredictable reality, this approach often becomes the project’s greatest weakness. This is where scenario planning, active risk management and agile leadership emerge as critical capabilities – not as alternatives to planning, but as a more realistic and resilient way of leading projects. As a result, scenario planning and risk management are no longer merely project tools – they have become core leadership competencies.
Conventional long term planning is based on the assumption that the world develops more or less linearly. The problem is that this assumption rarely holds true. The limitations are clearly visible across many projects:
The result is projects that, at best, deliver what was planned – but not necessarily what is needed.
Scenario planning introduces a different mindset into project leadership. Instead of working with a single expected trajectory, organisations consider several plausible scenarios and test the project’s robustness against them. This strengthens both risk management and decision making capability.
In practice, this means shifting from only asking:
“How do we ensure the plan holds?”
to also asking:
“What do we do if the world develops differently from what we expect?”
Scenario planning is increasingly adopted by agile and adaptive organisations precisely because it supports flexibility, prioritisation and timely decision making.
A key link between scenario planning and agile execution is the use of Proof of Concept (PoC). A successful PoC increases confidence that the selected scenario should be pursued. For the other relevant, deselected scenarios, a high level contingency plan is maintained should the PoC not be met.
A PoC can take many forms – for example, a prototype, simulation results, a pilot initiative, a completed assessment or analysis, or the outcome of a structured investigation.
This is therefore not about abandoning risk management, but about addressing uncertainty in a more intelligent and evidence based manner.
Risk management is not only about identifying risks, but about preparing concrete preventive or corrective response options. Contingency plans, clearly defined trigger points and explicit decision boundaries enable organisations to react quickly when scenarios materialise.
Project Recovery is a recognised discipline that provides early warning and preparedness, while also focusing on eliminating the root causes that place projects at risk.
Scenario planning and risk management should be treated as active leadership instruments rather than static documents. Danish and international studies consistently show that risk management creates value when it is continuously embedded in project decisions and prioritisation.
The application of scenario planning, PoC and risk management places new demands on leadership. Agile leadership requires practising “IDEA’L leadership – that is, being Involved in project execution, demonstrating Decisiveness, showing ownership and being Engaged in the project and last but not least being Available and accessible to project stakeholders.
Effective leadership must be able to:
Leadership’s role is to create the conditions for learning and adaptation – not to preserve the plan at all costs.
Several well known organisations apply, to varying degrees, the principles described in this article. These organisations have not avoided risk – but they have been better prepared to manage it.
Scenario planning, risk management and agility are not “methods for special projects”. They have become fundamental conditions for modern project leadership.
Organisations that master these disciplines do not merely deliver better projects – they build greater strategic responsiveness.
The question, therefore, is not whether we can afford to work in a more agile and scenario based way – the real question is whether we can afford not to.
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