If strategy is all about choice, and I strongly contend that is so, the challenge for responsible management is to imagine first what those choices may be.
This ambiguous mindset requiring choices to be made with less than full information never happens by itself, as it makes people uncomfortable. It must be pushed, being uncomfortable must be made a significant part of the status quo, making change along with its risks and downsides a normal part of the culture.
Ask yourself what could be true in five years?
Chances are you will not get much right, but the process of thinking about and resetting the status quo to a state ready and able to welcome change will be immensely valuable.
In 1985, few predicted that microprocessors would be everywhere, from rockets to fridges, from phones to toys.
In 1995 few predicted the Internet would become ubiquitous, and in 2005 few predicted their kids would get all the news they could consume, and wanted to consume, from social platforms.
Ask yourself what could be true that would alter the shape and dynamics of your industry.
Step forward and embrace the possibility of those changes occurring in the way you manage your business. By so doing irrespective of how accurate you have been, the business will be much better able to respond to and leverage the change.