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What Is Your SWOT?
What Is Your SWOT?
What Is Your SWOT? by
An effective tool that assesses and identifies opportunities and
risks is a SWOT analysis. A SWOT analysis is a strategic planning
tool used to evaluate the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and
threats involved in a business venture or project. Once a clear
objective has been identified, a SWOT analysis can be highly
effective in the pursuit of the objective.
SWOT is an acronym for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and
Threats. It's an assessment technique that paints an accurate
picture of how your business stacks up based on these four factors.
SWOT is a simple, popular way to gather and use information in
preparing or amending your business plan. It's also useful in
solving problems, making decisions and educating staff when change
is necessary.
In brief, SWOT means identifying:
* Strengths--internal factors- such as expertise, innovation, and
resources.
* Weaknesses--internal factors- such as a high level of debt, slow
moving inventory, and labor shortages.
* Opportunities--external advantages- such as a rapidly growing
market where demand outstrips supply.
* Threats--potential external risks- such as natural disasters,
competitive price undercutting, and changes in the general business
environment.
Calculate SWOT, and you can quickly identify your venture's pros
and cons. Aligning internal strengths and weaknesses with external
opportunities and threats is essential to sound strategic planning.
With SWOT, you know where you stand today and where you are going
tomorrow. With SWOT, you can identify and prioritize the issues
that will accelerate success.
In the planning stages of jumpstarting your business, SWOT is
essential to your business plan--especially if you're looking for
capital. Why? Investors appreciate any type of analysis that
minimizes their risk. The SWOT analysis identifies internal and
external factors that can impact your business success. To
calculate SWOT, you need to understand the factors--internal and
external--that will affect your progress.
Internal factors are those factors that are within your control and
that take place within your business environment:
* Operational issues--the efficiency of your operation.
* Staff and employees--the loss of a key salesperson or
supervisor.
* Capacity-- resources available that match supply with demand.
* Cash flow--the timely flow of revenues to pay financial
obligations.
* Costs--costs of doing business such as payroll, equipment, and
rent.
* Productivity--ability to produce desired number of products or
level of service within a given time frame.
External factors are general conditions and environmental factors
that are outside of your control:
* The general business environment--interest rates and
demographics.
* Economic change--a sudden deterioration in the
geographic/regional market or growth in the macroeconomic
climate.
* Industry/market/customer trends.
* Changes in the competitive landscape.
* Technology trends--trends that can be used to your advantage.
* Regulatory environment--changes that can create opportunity.
* Weather issues--whether you are a tennis pro, a painter, or a
landscaper, long periods of bad weather can limit
revenue-generating opportunities.
* Product availability-- manufacturing materials that you count on
are suddenly impossible to obtain.
The purpose of the SWOT analysis is to examine and identify all of
these factors, (the likelihood that some or all of the factors will
come into play), quantify how they can affect your business, and
then develop a contingency plan. Examine each of the internal and
external factors and develop reasonable responses.
Copyright © 2007 Terry H. Hill You may reprint this article
free of charge in your newsletter, magazine, or on your website,
provided that the article is unedited, and that the copyright,
author's bio, and contact information below appears with each
article. Articles appearing on the web must provide a hyperlink to
the author's web site.
"An author, speaker, and consultant, Terry H. Hill is the founder/
managing partner of Legacy Associates, Inc., a business consulting
and advisory services firm. By signing up for Business Insights
from Legacy eZine at http://tinyurl.com/2t4fxs you can keep abreast of the
latest tips, tactics, and best business practices. You will, also,
receive the free eBook, Jump Start Your Knowledge of Business.
Contact Terry at htp://www.legacyai.com
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