In today’s volatile business environment, the biggest competitive advantage may not be scale, technology, or even capital—it may be the ability to anticipate change before it becomes obvious. Many companies make strategic decisions based on current market conditions, but the most successful firms invest with the future in mind, preparing for shifts that have not yet fully materialized. This capability is known as strategic foresight, and it is increasingly viewed as a critical leadership skill in industries facing rapid technological and regulatory change. A January 2026 study published by Harvard Business Review examined how companies build this capability and why some organizations consistently stay ahead of disruption while others fall behind. Based on a survey of 500 organizations, the study found that firms excelling at strategic foresight share common leadership behaviors that allow them to navigate uncertainty more effectively. In the Philippine context, the strategy of Converge ICT Solutions offers a compelling example of how these principles can translate into real-world competitive advantage.
Strategic Foresight Is Not About Predicting the Future
One of the central insights of the HBR study is that strategic foresight does not require predicting the future with precision. Instead, it involves identifying the major uncertainties that could reshape an industry and preparing the organization to perform well across several possible outcomes.
Many companies focus primarily on trends—such as technology adoption or demographic changes. But trends are often easier to identify than uncertainties. The more difficult question is how industries will respond to disruptions such as regulatory shifts, technological breakthroughs, or sudden changes in consumer behavior.
Companies that excel at strategic foresight incorporate these uncertainties directly into their strategic planning. Rather than building a strategy based on a single forecast, they design business models capable of adapting to multiple future scenarios.
Investing Before the Market Is Ready
The experience of Converge illustrates how strategic foresight often requires investing ahead of visible demand.
Years before the pandemic accelerated digital adoption across the Philippines, Converge focused heavily on expanding a nationwide fiber broadband network. At a time when many telecommunications operators concentrated on mobile data services, the company committed significant resources to building fixed fiber infrastructure.
This strategy reflected a long-term view of how the Philippine economy was likely to evolve. As more economic activity moved online—through digital payments, streaming platforms, cloud computing, and remote work—the demand for faster and more reliable internet connections would inevitably increase.
At the time, however, the scale of that demand remained uncertain.
Fiber deployment required substantial capital investment and longer payback periods compared with wireless services. For many operators, the safer strategy was to prioritize mobile networks that could generate faster returns.
Converge took the opposite approach. Instead of focusing on short-term profitability, the company concentrated on building a network capable of supporting future digital demand.
When Uncertainty Becomes Opportunity
The value of this strategy became clearer when the pandemic accelerated the digital transformation of the Philippine economy.
Millions of workers shifted to remote arrangements, students moved to online learning platforms, and households increased their consumption of digital entertainment and e-commerce. Internet connectivity, once considered a convenience, quickly became an essential infrastructure for economic activity.
Because Converge had already invested in fiber infrastructure before the surge in demand, it was well positioned to respond rapidly to the shift in usage patterns.
Households seeking faster and more stable connections increasingly migrated to fiber broadband. Businesses that required reliable connectivity for remote operations also expanded their broadband subscriptions.
In effect, a strategic decision made years earlier allowed the company to benefit from a major structural shift in how Filipinos work, study, and consume digital services.
Preparing for Multiple Futures
Another lesson from the HBR study is that strategic foresight requires preparing for several possible futures rather than relying on a single scenario.
The digital transformation of the Philippine economy did not depend solely on the pandemic. Even before 2020, several structural trends pointed toward rising demand for high-speed internet: the expansion of online entertainment, the growth of cloud computing, and the increasing role of digital platforms in commerce and finance.
By investing early in fiber infrastructure, Converge created a strategy that remained viable across these different scenarios. Whether digital demand accelerated gradually or surged suddenly, the company’s infrastructure would still be relevant.
This type of strategy is what the HBR researchers describe as robust strategy—one that continues to perform well even as conditions change.
Challenging Industry Assumptions
Strategic foresight also requires leaders to question prevailing assumptions within their industry.
For years, the dominant assumption in the telecommunications sector was that mobile networks would remain the primary driver of connectivity in emerging markets. Wireless technology offered flexibility, lower upfront costs, and faster rollout.
Converge challenged this assumption by focusing on fiber broadband, arguing that long-term digital consumption would eventually require higher bandwidth and more stable connections.
This willingness to challenge conventional thinking is another hallmark of companies that excel at strategic foresight. Instead of reacting to industry consensus, they examine the structural forces that could reshape demand in the future.
Turning Foresight into Competitive Advantage
Strategic foresight creates value only when it translates into tangible competitive advantages.
In Converge’s case, the early development of its fiber network established a foundation that competitors cannot easily replicate. Building nationwide infrastructure requires significant capital investment, regulatory coordination, and long-term planning.
As digital demand continues to expand, this infrastructure becomes an increasingly valuable asset.
More importantly, the company’s strategy demonstrates how foresight can help organizations move beyond reactive decision-making. Instead of waiting for market conditions to change, companies can shape their competitive position by investing ahead of the curve.
The Lesson for Philippine Business Leaders
The HBR study concludes that strategic foresight is becoming an essential leadership capability in a world defined by uncertainty and rapid technological change.
Companies that consistently outperform their peers do not necessarily have better predictions about the future. Rather, they design strategies that remain flexible and resilient across multiple possible outcomes.
The experience of Converge illustrates how this approach can work in practice. By investing early in fiber infrastructure and preparing for the long-term digital transformation of the Philippine economy, the company positioned itself to benefit when demand accelerated.
For Philippine business leaders navigating uncertain markets, the lesson is clear: the future rarely rewards those who wait for certainty. It rewards those who prepare for uncertainty long before it arrives.
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