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Where Is My Business Headed and Why?
Know your businesses internal Strengths and Weaknesses, as well as external Opportunities and Threats.
SWOT Analysis
A key problem facing any smaller business is how to focus their limited business resources of time
and money. SWOT analysis provides an efficient way to evaluate the range of factors that
influence your operation, and can give you valuable guidance in making decisions about what to do
next. It also provides a highly productive way to get your key personnel involved in the management
decision-making process.
SWOT analysis is the process of carefully inspecting the business and its environment
through the various dimensions of Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.
Strengths are the companies core competencies, and include proprietary technology, skills,
resources, market position, patents, and others. Weaknesses are conditions within the
company that can lead to poor performance, and can include obsolete equipment, no clear strategy,
heavy debt burden, poor product or market image, weak management, and others. Opportunities
are outside conditions or circumstances that the company could turn to its advantage, and could
include a specialty niche skill or technology that suddenly realizes a growth in broad market
interest. Threats are current or future conditions in the outside environment that may harm
the company, and might include population shifts, changes in purchasing preferences, new
technologies, changes in governmental or environmental regulations, or an increase in competition.
As with most such management analysis tools, SWOT in of itself will not give specific
answers. Instead, it is a way to organize information and assign probabilities to potential
events - both good and bad - as the basis for developing business strategy and operational plans.
Using SWOT analysis is a straightforward process. The key is to limit the number of
issues under each category. This forces you to evaluate the relative importance of each, and
select only the most critical. To get there, use a reduction process.
- List any issues you can think of that affect your business. These may be extremely pragmatic
and objective (we don't have enough capital to support growth), or highly subjective (key personnel
don't like each other and so don't work well together). They may be internal or external. They
may be real or perceived. Don't evaluate at this stage; just make your lists.
- Once listed, sort these issues or factors into the SWOT categories.
- Sort each category first by relative importance, and then by reality. This is where the hard
work begins. It is critical at this stage to make sure that the factors you are listing are real
and not wistful thinking on your part (We are the best - Are you really the best? How? Why?), or
a way of passing the buck (Things are out of control, and there is nothing I can do about it).
Being honest with yourself here is essential.
- Now, use the reduction process to limit each list to no more than five factors or issues. This
forces you to look for duplicates of variations of the same issue, and to determine which are
really the most critical to your business situation.
Once you have performed the SWOT analysis yourself, ask your key employees to go through
the same process. Make sure that they do this independently of your work and each other,
otherwise, they suffer from the phenomena of "group think," in which the group limits its
thinking to the topics, which hit the table first. After your staff has had an opportunity to
perform their own SWOT analysis, gather their ideas and construct a master list of all issues.
This may well bring some new matters to your attention that you haven't been aware of or have
chosen to ignore. This list now becomes the basis for your strategic planning. Remember that this
is not about ego, it is about reality, because the business can only operate in the realm of reality.
This list now becomes the basis for your further strategic planning. Inspect each of the
Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats, and determine what each of them
implies for your own operation. There is no substitute for your own efforts, and so no passing
this task along to someone else in the company. Here, the secret of success is in the details,
and your own hard work. Good luck!
Run your business - don't let it run you. This is COMMON SENSE.
SWOT analysis is further described in a 12-part workbook series adopted by the US Small
Business Administration titled
Common Sense, Strategic Management Learning System (SMLS).
In workbook #CS-11,
Strategic Analysis -
The Five Steps, you will receive step-by-step processes and a worksheet for applying SWOT
analysis to your specific business operation. See the Knowledge Institute
Bookstore.
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