In rapidly changing markets, the ability to anticipate disruption before it fully materializes can create a significant competitive advantage. Finance leaders are uniquely positioned to identify early indicators of change through data, forecasting and operational insights.
The challenge is turning those signals into effective go-to-market adjustments that help organizations remain agile, protect revenue and capitalize on shifting customer demand. Here, the Forbes Finance Council members each share their best practices to help other leaders navigate this unpredictability and apply smarter strategies in today’s economy.
1. Balance AI Tools With Human Judgment To Read Early Signs Of Market Changes
Market shifts happen when something external changes how customers interact with your product, such as a regulatory change, a competitor move or a broader economic shift. Finance leaders spot these early through margin pressure, pricing sensitivity and cohort trends. AI can help process these signals faster, but the final call still comes down to human judgment. – Yogi Goel, Maxima
2. Adjust Messaging To Proactively Match Your Clients’ Needs
The edge is often in behavioral signal recognition, and when client decision-making starts to shift (e.g., hesitation, risk aversion, short commitments), that’s an early indicator of a market turn. Finance leaders can translate those subtle changes into proactive positioning by adjusting messaging so that the go-to-market strategy meets clients where they are going, not where they’ve been. – Nathaniel Tilton, Tilton Wealth Management
3. Avoid Second-Guessing Your Own Revenue Data
This is an unpopular opinion, but external market signals are overrated. By the time analysts call it, it is already too late. Your own revenue data is more accurate. Forecast slippage, conversion drops and discounts creep up. These tell you where the market is going before any report will. CFOs who move first read their own numbers, not the news. – Anand Murugan, Blackbee AI (Cratoflow Inc.)
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4. Embed Adaptable Scenario Thinking Into Strategic Commercial Planning
Finance leaders can anticipate market shifts by combining external signals with internal performance analytics. Tracking changes in customer behavior, cost curves and channel dynamics helps identify early pressure points. Embedding scenario thinking into commercial planning enables faster adjustments to pricing, portfolio mix and channel priorities. – Masha Chandrasekaran, Unilever
5. Maintain Forecast Flexibility
Finance leaders stay ahead by combining real-time data with scenario planning and close collaboration across teams. They keep forecasts flexible, monitor market signals and adjust pricing, budgets and focus areas quickly rather than sticking to rigid plans. – ATM Rahat Mohammad, SPONSOR (SCOP)
6. Connect The Dots By Investing In Cross-Functional Knowledge
Finance leaders can’t afford to be reactive. Track leading indicators like client behavior and rate movements instead of quarterly reports. Build flexible strategies that adapt when conditions shift. Invest in cross-functional knowledge so you connect dots others miss. The goal isn’t predicting the future; it’s being ready to move no matter which direction the market goes. – Andre Pennington, Pennington Law
7. Build Real-Time Visibility Into Cash Flow, Customer Behavior And Risk
Finance leaders can anticipate market shifts by building real-time visibility into cash flow, customer behavior and risk. With that insight, they can adjust go-to-market plans faster by reallocating capital, refining credit and payment strategies and focusing resources where demand is strongest. Finance should help the business adapt before market pressure forces it to. – Joel Campbell, TreviPay
8. Choose Timeliness Over Perfect Predictions
Anticipating market shifts starts with real-time data, not lagging indicators. Build feedback loops across customers, competitors and internal performance metrics, then scenario-plan aggressively. But most importantly—stay adaptable. The leaders who win aren’t the ones who predict perfectly, but the ones who adjust the fastest. – Caroline Farah Lembck, LemVega Capital
9. Ask Frontline Employees To Weigh In On Behavior Patterns
It’s not just what affects your company; it’s what affects your customers. Finance leaders anticipate shifts by staying close to the customer through their employees, connecting with them daily. Sales, customer success and support see the trend signals early. Combine that with watching regulatory, trade, geopolitical and commodity trends moving your customers’ businesses. That’s where GTM pivots start. – Shannon Power, Shabrae Strategic Advisors
10. Close The Communication Gap Between Finance And Sales
Anticipating shifts requires moving beyond rearview mirror accounting. Leaders must use real-time data to spot leading indicators, such as changes in payment velocity or deal size. Success hinges on a tight feedback loop between finance and sales. When a vertical tightens, finance leaders shouldn’t just cut budgets. Instead, they should proactively reallocate capital to resilient segments before a trend becomes a crisis. – Eyal Lifshitz, Bluevine
11. Keep Your Numbers Clean And Your Close Tight
Stop waiting for the quarterly close to tell you what happened. AI can surface patterns in your data faster than any analyst. But it only works if your numbers are clean and your close is tight. When that foundation is solid, AI helps you model scenarios in real time. Finance should shape GTM strategy, not report on it after the fact. – Mike Whitmire, FloQast
12. Reallocate Capital Quickly And Stay Aligned With Liquidity Trends
Anticipate market shifts by pairing real-time data with AI-driven signal detection—spot demand before it shows up in revenue. Run dynamic GTM scenarios, reallocate capital fast and stay aligned with liquidity trends. The edge isn’t prediction—it’s precision, speed and execution. – Jacob D. Frankel, Beyond Alpha Ventures L.L.C.
13. Pay Attention To Disruptive Technologies
The earliest sign of change needed isn’t revenue decline; it’s often new disruptive technologies. Constant innovation across every part of the business and early adoption of transformational tech shifts like AI are key. These shifts often impact the product and the associated go-to-market strategy and skills needed in sales and marketing. The key is to allocate capital to market momentum, not noise. – Marthin De Beer, BrightPlan
14. See What Early-Stage Startups Are Working On
Look at what the best early-stage startups are working on. Most likely, some of their ideas, products and GTM strategies will end up mainstream in the near future. – Andrew Izyumov, 8FIGURES AI Investment Advisor
15. Check Leading Indicators And Eliminate Underperforming Channels
Watch leading indicators, not rearview metrics: pipeline quality, win rates, sales-cycle length, CAC payback, churn and pricing resistance. Then reallocate early—narrow the ICP, shift spend to resilient segments, rework pricing and packaging and cut channels that no longer justify the burn. – Anatoly Iofe, IceBridge Financial Group, LLC
The information provided here is not investment, tax, or financial advice. You should consult with a licensed professional for advice concerning your specific situation.

