The correct answer is B. Scenario Planning. In innovation management and strategic foresight, scenario planning is used to help organizations understand major external forces, uncertainties, and patterns of change that may shape the future. Rather than predicting a single outcome, scenario planning explores several plausible future realities and examines how different forces may interact over time.
This makes scenario planning especially valuable in innovation work because businesses must often make decisions under uncertainty. Through this approach, teams consider how technological, economic, social, regulatory, environmental, and market changes could combine in different ways. By doing so, they can better prepare innovation strategies, identify risks, and spot opportunity areas that may emerge under different future conditions.
Porter’s 5 Forces is mainly a tool for analyzing competitive structure within an industry, not for exploring broad future realities. Strategic Planning is broader and often depends on inputs from foresight tools rather than serving the same function. Trendcasting focuses on projecting trends forward, but it does not capture interacting future worlds as fully as scenario planning. Scenario planning is therefore the strongest fit for understanding forces and how they may shape future reality.