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Strategy - SWOT analysis
SWOT is an abbreviation for
Strengths, Weaknesses,
Opportunities and Threats
SWOT analysis is an
important tool for auditing
the overall strategic
position of a business and
its environment.
Once key strategic issues
have been identified, they
feed into business
objectives, particularly
marketing objectives. SWOT
analysis can be used in
conjunction with other tools
for audit and analysis, such
as PEST analysis and
Porter's Five-Force
analysis. It is also a very
popular tool with business
and marketing students
because it is quick and easy
to learn.
The Key Distinction -
Internal and External Issues
Strengths and weaknesses are
Internal factors. For
example, a strength could be
your specialist marketing
expertise. A weakness could
be the lack of a new
product.
Opportunities and threats
are external factors. For
example, an opportunity
could be a developing
distribution channel such as
the Internet, or changing
consumer lifestyles that
potentially increase demand
for a company's products. A
threat could be a new
competitor in an important
existing market or a
technological change that
makes existing products
potentially obsolete.
it is worth pointing out
that SWOT analysis can be
very subjective - two people
rarely come-up with the same
version of a SWOT analysis
even when given the same
information about the same
business and its
environment. Accordingly,
SWOT analysis is best used
as a guide and not a
prescription. Adding and
weighting criteria to each
factor increases the
validity of the analysis.
Areas to Consider
Some of the key areas to
consider when identifying
and evaluating Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities
and Threats are listed in
the example SWOT analysis
below:
SWOT analysis is a simple
framework for generating
strategic alternatives from
a situation analysis. It is
applicable to either the
corporate level or the
business unit level and
frequently appears in
marketing plans. SWOT
(sometimes referred to as
TOWS) stands for Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities,
and Threats. The SWOT
framework was described in
the late 1960's by Edmund P.
Learned, C. Roland
Christiansen, Kenneth
Andrews, and William D. Guth
in Business Policy, Text and
Cases (Homewood, IL: Irwin,
1969). The General Electric
Growth Council used this
form of analysis in the
1980's. Because it
concentrates on the issues
that potentially have the
most impact, the SWOT
analysis is useful when a
very limited amount of time
is available to address a
complex strategic situation.
The following diagram shows
how a SWOT analysis fits
into a strategic situation
analysis.
Situation Analysis
Internal Analysis
External Analysis
Strengths Weaknesses
Opportunities Threats
SWOT Profile
The internal and external
situation analysis can
produce a large amount of
information, much of which
may not be highly relevant.
The SWOT analysis can serve
as an interpretative filter
to reduce the information to
a manageable quantity of key
issues. The SWOT analysis
classifies the internal
aspects of the company as
strengths or weaknesses and
the external situational
factors as opportunities or
threats. Strengths can serve
as a foundation for building
a competitive advantage, and
weaknesses may hinder it. By
understanding these four
aspects of its situation, a
firm can better leverage its
strengths, correct its
weaknesses, capitalize on
golden opportunities, and
deter potentially
devastating threats.
Internal Analysis
The internal analysis is a
comprehensive evaluation of
the internal environment's
potential strengths and
weaknesses. Factors should
be evaluated across the
organization in areas such
as:
* Company culture
* Company image
* Organizational
structure
* Key staff
* Access to natural
resources
* Position on the
experience curve
* Operational efficiency
* Operational capacity
* Brand awareness
* Market share
* Financial resources
* Exclusive contracts
* Patents and trade
secrets
The SWOT analysis summarizes
the internal factors of the
firm as a list of strengths
and weaknesses.
External Analysis
An opportunity is the chance
to introduce a new product
or service that can generate
superior returns.
Opportunities can arise when
changes occur in the
external environment. Many
of these changes can be
perceived as threats to the
market position of existing
products and may necessitate
a change in product
specifications or the
development of new products
in order for the firm to
remain competitive. Changes
in the external environment
may be related to:
* Customers
* Competitors
* Market trends
* Suppliers
* Partners
* Social changes
* New technology
* Economic environment
* Political and
regulatory environment
The last four items in the
above list are
macro-environmental
variables, and are addressed
in a PEST analysis.
The SWOT analysis summarizes
the external environmental
factors as a list of
opportunities and threats.
SWOT Profile
When the analysis has been
completed, a SWOT profile
can be generated and used as
the basis of goal setting,
strategy formulation, and
implementation. The
completed SWOT profile
sometimes is arranged as
follows:
Strengths
Weaknesses
When formulating strategy,
the interaction of the
quadrants in the SWOT
profile becomes important.
For example, the strengths
can be leveraged to pursue
opportunities and to avoid
threats, and managers can be
alerted to weaknesses that
might need to be overcome in
order to successfully pursue
opportunities.
Multiple Perspectives Needed
The method used to acquire
the inputs to the SWOT
matrix will affect the
quality of the analysis. If
the information is obtained
hastily during a quick
interview with the CEO, even
though this one person may
have a broad view of the
company and industry, the
information would represent
a single viewpoint. The
quality of the analysis will
be improved greatly if
interviews are held with a
spectrum of stakeholders
such as employees,
suppliers, customers,
strategic partners, etc.
SWOT Analysis Limitations
While useful for reducing a
large quantity of
situational factors into a
more manageable profile, the
SWOT framework has a
tendency to oversimplify the
situation by classifying the
firm's environmental factors
into categories in which
they may not always fit. The
classification of some
factors as strengths or
weaknesses, or as
opportunities or threats is
somewhat arbitrary. For
example, a particular
company culture can be
either a strength or a
weakness. A technological
change can be a either a
threat or an opportunity.
Perhaps what is more
important than the
superficial classification
of these factors is the
firm's awareness of them and
its development of a
strategic plan to use them
to its advantage.
SWOT Analysis
A scan of the internal and
external environment is an
important part of the
strategic planning process.
Environmental factors
internal to the firm usually
can be classified as
strengths (S) or weaknesses
(W), and those external to
the firm can be classified
as opportunities (O) or
threats (T). Such an
analysis of the strategic
environment is referred to
as a SWOT analysis.
The SWOT analysis provides
information that is helpful
in matching the firm's
resources and capabilities
to the competitive
environment in which it
operates. As such, it is
instrumental in strategy
formulation and selection.
The following diagram shows
how a SWOT analysis fits
into an environmental scan:
SWOT Analysis Framework
|
Environmental
Scan |
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/ |
\ |
|
Internal
Analysis |
External
Analysis |
|
/
\ |
/
\ |
|
Strengths Weaknesses |
Opportunities Threats |
|
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SWOT
Matrix |
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Strengths
A firm's strengths are its
resources and capabilities
that can be used as a basis
for developing a competitive
advantage. Examples of such
strengths include:
·
patents
·
strong brand
names
·
good
reputation among customers
·
cost
advantages from proprietary
know-how
·
exclusive
access to high grade natural
resources
·
favorable
access to distribution
networks
Weaknesses
The absence of certain
strengths may be viewed as a
weakness. For example, each
of the following may be
considered weaknesses:
·
lack of patent
protection
·
a weak brand
name
·
poor
reputation among customers
·
high cost
structure
·
lack of access
to the best natural
resources
·
lack of access
to key distribution channels
In some cases, a weakness
may be the flip side of
strength. Take the case in
which a firm has a large
amount of manufacturing
capacity. While this
capacity may be considered a
strength that competitors do
not share, it also may be a
considered a weakness if the
large investment in
manufacturing capacity
prevents the firm from
reacting quickly to changes
in the strategic
environment.
Opportunities
The external environmental
analysis may reveal certain
new opportunities for profit
and growth. Some examples of
such opportunities include:
·
an unfulfilled
customer need
·
arrival of new
technologies
·
loosening of
regulations
·
removal of
international trade barriers
Threats
Changes in the external
environmental also may
present threats to the firm.
Some examples of such
threats include:
·
shifts in
consumer tastes away from
the firm's products
·
emergence of
substitute products
·
new
regulations
·
increased
trade barriers
The SWOT Matrix
A firm should not
necessarily pursue the more
lucrative opportunities.
Rather, it may have a better
chance at developing a
competitive advantage by
identifying a fit between
the firm's strengths and
upcoming opportunities. In
some cases, the firm can
overcome a weakness in order
to prepare itself to pursue
a compelling opportunity.
To develop strategies that
take into account the SWOT
profile, a matrix of these
factors can be constructed.
The SWOT matrix (also known
as a TOWS Matrix) is shown
below:
SWOT / TOWS Matrix
|
|
Strengths |
Weaknesses |
|
Opportunities |
S-O strategies |
W-O strategies |
|
Threats |
S-T strategies |
W-T strategies |
·
S-O strategies
pursue opportunities that
are a good fit to the
company's strengths.
·
W-O strategies
overcome weaknesses to
pursue opportunities.
·
S-T strategies
identify ways that the firm
can use its strengths to
reduce its vulnerability to
external threats.
W-T strategies establish a
defensive plan to prevent
the firm's weaknesses from
making it highly susceptible
to external threats. |