Yes, planning is futuristic.
Planning takes the game plan - what can anyone do, how is it to be done, when is it to be done, by whom is it to be done, each one of these questions is identified with the future. After arranging, responses to these inquiries are identified. While an effort is made to find these answers, the chance of social, monetary, specialized, and changes in the official system are remembered. Since arranging is concerned about future exercises, it is called advanced. So, it is futuristic.