Horizon scanning- tips and tricks: A practical guide

This is a practical guide intended to develop scanning capabilities within the European Environment Agency (EEA) and European Environment Information and Observation Network (Eionet). It offers simple, step-by-step instructions on how to frame, run, and analyze results of a systemic horizon scan with limited resources. It focuses on developing a daily practice without the use of automation, advanced tools, or time-intensive processes.

Quick Facts
Report location: permalink
Language: English
Publisher: European Environment Agency
Publication date: June 29, 2023
Authors: Ana Jesus, Anne Jacod, Florian Wolf-Ott, Graciela Guadarrama Baena, Karin Fink, Klaus Kammer, Matthias Weber, Miklós Marton, Paavo Lammert, Sylvia Veenhoff, Tanja Schindler, Teoman Sanalan, Tereza Kochová, Totti Könnölä
Page count: 58

Methods

The research method used in the report is horizon scanning, which involves systematically scanning various sources to detect early signs of potentially important developments.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

Key Insights

This guide begins with key futures literacy concepts such as:

  • Key differences between horizon scanning and environmental scanning
  • One future vs. multiple futures
  • Predicting the future vs mapping the future
  • Cognitive biases affecting foresight practitioners

Then, it lays out a step-by-step guide for how and where to scan. the four main steps are:

  1. signal spotting- how to frame the scan and where to find signals
  2. signal scanning- outlines frameworks to use for best results
  3. sense-making- understanding the signals collected and understanding the insights
  4. communication- how to share the results

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Last modified: 2024/03/17 16:09 by davidpjonker