The Science of Foresight

Most companies think they have a strategy problem. In reality they have a foresight problem. The tools most companies use to plan the future were designed for a world that no longer exists. I call this the Foresight Gap.

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Probabilistic Thinking

In volatile environments, strategic decisions cannot rely on single-point forecasts. Leaders who understand the full probability distribution of outcomes gain a decisive advantage in managing risk and allocating capital.

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The Monolith Fallacy

In volatile environments, systemic outcomes are not mandated from the top down; they emerge from the bottom up. Leaders who fail to model individual agent behavior will find their strategies consistently undermined by downward causation effects they cannot see.

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Network Topology

The formal organizational chart is a polite fiction. In high-stakes environments, strategic success is determined by the shadow architecture—the invisible network of trust and expertise that dictates how information actually flows and where systemic stress accumulates.

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Integrated Decision Architecture

Most organizations analyze risk through fragmented lenses—finance models probability, HR studies behavior, and technology teams monitor networks. When those perspectives remain separated, leadership never sees how the forces interact.

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