SWOT Analysis Theory
SWOT Analysis Theory
SWOT Analysis Theory
SWOT Analysis is a strategic planning method used to evaluate the Strengths, Weaknesses,
Opportunities, and Threats involved in a project or in a business venture. It involves specifying
the objective of the business venture or project and identifying the internal and external factors that are
favorable and unfavorable to achieving that objective.
If a SWOT analysis does not start with defining a desired end state or objective, it runs the risk of being
useless. A SWOT analysis may be incorporated into the strategic planning model. An example
of a strategic planning technique that incorporates an objective-driven SWOT analysis is SCAN
analysis. Strategic Planning, including SWOT and SCAN analysis, has been the subject of much
research.
First, the decision makers have to determine whether the objective is attainable, given the SWOTs. If the
objective is NOT attainable a different objective must be selected and the process repeated.
If, on the other hand, the objective seems attainable, the SWOTs are used as inputs to the creative
generation of possible strategies, by asking and answering each of the following four questions, many
times:
Ideally a cross-functional team or a task force that represents a broad range of perspectives should carry
out the SWOT analysis. For example, a SWOT team may include an accountant, a salesperson, an
executive manager, an engineer, and an ombudsman.
Another way of utilizing SWOT is matching and converting. Matching is used to find competitive
advantages by matching the strengths to opportunities. Converting is to apply conversion strategies to
convert threats or weaknesses into strengths or opportunities. An example of conversion strategy is to
find new markets. If the threats or weaknesses cannot be converted a company should try to minimize or
avoid them.
These criticisms are addressed to an old version of SWOT analysis that precedes the SWOT analysis
described above under the heading "Strategic and Creative Use of SWOT Analysis." This old version
did not require that SWOTs be derived from an agreed upon objective. Examples of SWOT analyses
that do not state an objective are provided below under "Human Resources" and "Marketing."
Internal and external factors
The aim of any SWOT analysis is to identify the key internal and external factors that are important to
achieving the objective. These come from within the company's unique value chain. SWOT analysis
groups key pieces of information into two main categories:
Internal factors – The strengths and weaknesses internal to the organization. - Use a PRIMO-F analysis
to help identify factors
External factors – The opportunities and threats presented by the external environment to the
organization - Use a PEST or PESTLE analysis to help identify factors
The internal factors may be viewed as strengths or weaknesses depending upon their impact on the
organization's objectives. What may represent strengths with respect to one objective may be
weaknesses for another objective. The factors may include all of the 4P's; as well as personnel,
finance, manufacturing capabilities, and so on. The external factors may include macroeconomic
matters, technological change, legislation, and socio-cultural changes, as well as changes in the
marketplace or competitive position. The results are often presented in the form of a matrix.
SWOT analysis is just one method of categorization and has its own weaknesses. For example, it may
tend to persuade companies to compile lists rather than think about what is actually important in
achieving objectives. It also presents the resulting lists uncritically and without clear prioritization so
that, for example, weak opportunities may appear to balance strong threats.
It is prudent not to eliminate too quickly any candidate SWOT entry. The importance of individual
SWOTs will be revealed by the value of the strategies it generates. A SWOT item that produces valuable
strategies is important. A SWOT item that generates no strategies is not important.
The usefulness of SWOT analysis is not limited to profit-seeking organizations. SWOT analysis may be
used in any decision-making situation when a desired end-state (objective) has been defined. Examples
include: non-profit organizations, governmental units, and individuals. SWOT analysis may
also be used in pre-crisis planning and preventive crisis management.
SWOT-landscape analysis
The SWOT-landscape grabs different managerial situations by visualizing and foreseeing the dynamic
performance of comparable objects according to findings by Brendan Kitts, Leif Edvinsson and Tord
Beding (2000).
Changes in relative performance are continuously identified. Projects (or other units of measurements)
that could be potential risk or opportunity objects are highlighted.
SWOT-landscape also indicates which underlying strength/weakness factors that have had or likely will
have highest influence in the context of value in use (for ex. capital value fluctuations).
Corporate planning
As part of the development of strategies and plans to enable the organization to achieve its objectives,
then that organization will use a systematic/rigorous process known as corporate planning.
SWOT alongside PEST/PESTLE can be used as a basis for the analysis of business and
environmental factors.
Environmental scanning
Internal appraisals of the organization's SWOT, this needs to include an assessment of the present
situation as well as a portfolio of products/services and an analysis of the product/service life cycle
Analysis of existing strategies, this should determine relevance from the results of an internal/external
appraisal. This may include gap analysis which will look at environmental factors
Strategic Issues defined – key factors in the development of a corporate plan which needs to be
addressed by the organization
Develop new/revised strategies – revised analysis of strategic issues may mean the objectives need to
change
Establish critical success factors – the achievement of objectives and strategy implementation
Monitoring results – mapping against plans, taking corrective action which may mean amending
objectives/strategies
Marketing
In many competitor analyses, marketers build detailed profiles of each competitor in the market,
focusing especially on their relative competitive strengths and weaknesses using SWOT analysis.
Marketing managers will examine each competitor's cost structure, sources of profits, resources and
competencies, competitive positioning and product differentiation, degree of vertical integration,
historical responses to industry developments, and other factors.
Marketing management often finds it necessary to invest in research to collect the data required to
perform accurate marketing analysis. Accordingly, management often conducts market research
(alternately marketing research) to obtain this information. Marketers employ a variety of techniques to
conduct market research, but some of the more common include:
Marketing managers may also design and oversee various environmental scanning and competitive
intelligence processes to help identify trends and inform the company's marketing analysis.
Using SWOT to analyze the market position of a small management consultancy with specialism in
HRM
strength- market related , finance related , operational related , research and development related, hr
related market related- product quality, packaging , advertisement, service, distribution channel finance
related- optimum debt/equity ratio, number of share holders, inventory size , optimum use of the
financial resources, low cost of borrowings proper investment of the financial products
Operational related- low cost, higher productivity, excellent quality, modernized technology.