A planning method that starts with defining a desirable future and works backwards to identify what steps need to happen today — the inverse of forecasting, and a far more powerful approach to annual planning.
Backcasting is a planning method that starts with defining a desirable future and works backwards to identify what needs to happen today to reach it — the inverse of forecasting, which projects from the present forward. Backcasting asks: "Given where we want to be, what steps must we take now?" Unlike forecasting, it is explicitly normative: it starts from a desired outcome rather than an extrapolation of current trends. This makes it particularly useful when current trends lead somewhere unwanted — or when your ambitions outstrip what incremental projections from your current position would suggest is achievable.
// historyJohn Robinson at the University of Waterloo developed backcasting in 1982 as a tool for energy policy analysis — asking not "what energy future will we end up with?" but "what energy future do we want, and how do we get there?" It became widely used in sustainability planning, urban development, and organisational strategy. The method spread to corporate strategy and personal planning as an antidote to goal-setting that is unconsciously constrained by current limitations. It also underpins design thinking's "begin with the end in mind" philosophy, and is structurally related to OKR and EOS visioning processes used in business planning.
// exampleDesired future in 5 years: your business generates £10k/month from digital products, runs without you for 3 months a year, and you have a team of two part-time contractors. Backcast: what needs to be true in year 4? (Systems are documented, a VA is managing customer support, revenue is at £7k/month.) Year 3? (At least 3 product lines are running, email list is over 10k, you've automated the fulfilment process.) Year 2? (You've hired one contractor, have a proven content system, have published at least 50 products.) This year? (Launch your first evergreen funnel, start building systems as if someone else will run them.) The path from now to the vision becomes a roadmap of concrete milestones rather than a vague aspiration.
Backcasting is how I do annual planning. I start with a clear vision of what I want my business and life to look like in three to five years, then work backwards to this year, this quarter, this month. It's completely different from goal-setting that starts from "what can I reasonably achieve?" — which tends to produce underwhelming goals shaped by present limitations. Start from where you want to be. Then reverse-engineer the path. You'll surprise yourself with what's actually possible.