Future planning when you don’t know what’s around the corner

If you’ve ever felt like your strategic plan is out of date before the year even starts, you’re not alone.
It’s not that planning doesn’t matter anymore — it does. But the nature of planning has changed. For mid-market organizations in particular, future planning can’t be a one-time event. It has to be a dynamic process that flexes as circumstances shift.
So how do you create a plan that holds up in a world that doesn’t?
It starts with accepting that the goal isn’t to predict the future — it’s to be ready for a range of possibilities.
From rigidity to readiness
Traditional future planning tends to follow a linear path:
Assess → Plan → Execute → Review
But in a world of disruption, that cycle often breaks down. By the time a plan is finalized, the market may have already shifted. That’s especially true for mid-market businesses, where leadership teams are lean and decisions often carry higher risk.
Instead of rigid multi-year plans, successful leaders are adopting flexible, scalable approaches that evolve with the business — and the world around it.
One useful framework for this evolution comes from how organizations plan:
- Transactional
- Forecasted transformational
- Revolutionary transformational
These aren’t rigid categories. They’re mindsets — and understanding them can help organizations plan with purpose and flexibility.
Three levels of planning — and when to use each
1. Transactional planning: Do what you do — better
This approach focuses on improving efficiency, optimizing existing operations and sustaining performance. It’s a powerful starting point — especially for organizations in stabilization mode or dealing with margin pressure.
Traits of transactional planning:
- Focused on eliminating waste and increasing efficiency
- Driven by operational plans and resource management
- Ideal for organizations with hierarchical structures or limited planning maturity
- Focused on doing the same things, just better
It’s particularly useful in times of internal change — like leadership transitions, budget tightening or post-merger integrations. We’ve seen manufacturers use transactional planning to streamline plant operations and improve throughput. We’ve also seen nonprofits apply it to reduce grant reporting errors and align staffing to service delivery.
For example, a Head Start program might use transactional planning to reduce redundant paperwork, improve family engagement workflows and better align budget resources with federal compliance needs. These aren’t strategic leaps — they’re the foundation that enables future movement.
The goal here isn’t transformation — it’s stability. But that stability frees up capacity for bigger moves.
2. Forecasted transformational planning: Bridge from today to tomorrow
Here, strategy becomes future-focused. Forecasted transformational planning aims to close performance gaps, shift processes and build the structure needed for longer-term growth.
Traits of forecasted transformational planning:
- Relies on data, projections and scenario modeling
- Supports cultural shifts and leadership evolution
- Common in organizations expanding market share or adapting to new realities
- Planning focuses on building capacity and resilience, not just efficiency
This level is often where mid-market businesses feel the pressure — they’re big enough to need cross-functional alignment but not always resourced for it. Future planning in this phase becomes a team sport.
Take a regional healthcare system navigating labor shortages. It may use this approach to analyze workforce trends, identify care gaps, implement predictive staffing tools and reframe its care delivery model to prevent burnout.
Or a nonprofit coalition might use transformational planning to shift from event-based fundraising to a year-round donor engagement model, supported by automation and CRM integration. The planning effort looks ahead — not just at funding needs but also at donor behavior, engagement analytics and advocacy shifts.
The key here is capacity building — bridging from where you are to where you need to be.
3. Revolutionary transformational planning: Redefine what’s possible
This is the boldest form of planning. It asks: What could we become if we stopped limiting ourselves to what we’ve always been?
Revolutionary planning is about disruption — creating new value by redesigning business models, launching new service lines or entering entirely new markets.
Traits of revolutionary planning:
- Values imagination, originality and risk-taking
- Often incubated through innovation hubs or pilot programs
- Enables bold moves like M&A, divestiture or digital product launches
- Usually requires cultural shifts and high levels of alignment
While this mindset might sound reserved for Silicon Valley or Fortune 100 firms, it’s increasingly common — and achievable — for mid-market organizations.
We’ve worked with manufacturers who built internal accelerators to test AI-enhanced production models. We’ve helped community-based nonprofits reimagine their funding model through social enterprise. The scale may differ — but the mindset is the same.
This planning level isn’t about optimization — it’s about reinvention.
Most organizations do all 3 — and that’s the point
You don’t need to pick one approach and stick with it.
- You may be using transactional planning to stabilize core operations.
- While deploying forecasted transformational planning to scale new offerings.
- And piloting a revolutionary idea through a skunkworks team or innovation fund.
The key is knowing where each approach fits — and being deliberate about which mindset drives which area of the business.
Think of this like a strategic maturity model. Not all parts of your organization will evolve at the same pace — and that’s OK. The goal isn’t uniformity. It’s intentionality.
How scenario planning supports all 3
Another layer to consider: Scenario planning.
Regardless of which strategic mindset you’re using, scenario planning helps you stress-test assumptions, model best/worst/middle-case outcomes and clarify decision triggers.
- In transactional planning, it can highlight where cost pressures could create risk.
- In transformational planning, it helps frame investment choices and capacity forecasts.
- In revolutionary planning, it enables you to sandbox bold ideas without betting the farm.
Scenario planning doesn’t replace strategic planning. It makes it more actionable, resilient and aligned with reality.
Leading through uncertainty: It starts with mindset
The biggest shift happening in planning today isn’t about the tools — it’s about leadership mindset.
Mid-market leaders are recognizing that agility doesn’t mean chaos and structure doesn’t mean rigidity. The most resilient organizations are those that can adapt their planning approach to match the moment — without losing sight of where they’re headed.
Planning when you don’t know what’s around the corner requires confidence, humility and alignment. It means giving your team a shared language and decision framework that supports faster action — and fewer surprises.
Ready to evolve your planning approach?
Discover how our clients are using flexible planning mindsets to grow through uncertainty — and how Wipfli can help you adapt to what’s next and what-if.