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Analyzing Your Business's Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats
What is the SWOT process?

The SWOT process focuses on the internal strengths and weaknesses of you, your staff,

your products, and your business. At the same time, it looks at the external opportunities

and threats that may have an impact on your business, such as market and consumer

trends, changes in technology, legislation, and financial issues.

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What is the best way to complete the analysis?

The traditional approach to completing SWOT is to produce a blank grid of four

columns-- one each for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and weaknesses--and then

list relevant factors beneath the appropriate heading. Don't worry if some factors appear

in more than one box and remember that a factor that appears to be a threat could also

represent a potential opportunity. A rush of competitors into your area could easily

represent a major threat to your business. However, competitors could boost customer

numbers in your area, some of whom may well visit your business.

What is the point of completing a SWOT analysis?

Completing a SWOT analysis will enable you to pinpoint your core activities and identify

what you do well, and why. It will also point you towards where your greatest

opportunities lie, and highlight areas where changes need to be made to make the most of

your business.

Know Your Strengths

Take some time to consider what you believe are the strengths of your business. These

could be seen in terms of your staff, products, customer loyalty, processes, or location.

Evaluate what your business does well; it could be your marketing expertise, your

environmentally-friendly packaging, or your excellent customer service. It's important to

try to evaluate your strengths in terms of how they compare to those of your competitors.

For example, if you and your competitors provide the same prompt delivery time, then

this cannot be listed as a strength. However, if your delivery staff is extremely polite and

helpful, and your competitor's staff has very few customer-friendly attributes, then you

should consider listing your delivery staff's attitude as a strength. It is very important to

be totally honest and realistic. Try to include some personal strengths and characteristics

of your staff as individuals, and the management team as individuals. Whatever you do,

you must be totally honest and realistic: there's no point creating a useless work of

fiction!

Recognize Your Weaknesses

Try to take an objective look at every aspect of your business. Ask yourself whether your

products and services could be improved. Think about how reliable your customer

service is, or whether your supplier always delivers exactly what you want, when you

want it. Try to identify any area of expertise that is lacking in the business. as you can

then take steps to improve that aspect. For example, you might realize that you need

some more sales staff, or financial help and guidance. Don't forget to think about your

business's location and whether it really does suit your purpose. Is there enough parking,

or enough opportunities to attract passing trade?

Your main objective during this exercise is to be as honest as you can in listing

weaknesses. Don't just make a list of mistakes that have been made, such as an occasion

when a customer was not called back promptly. Try to see the broader picture instead and

learn from what happened. It may be that your systems or processes could be improved

so that customers are contacted at the right time, so work on boosting your systems and

making that change happen rather than looking about for someone to blame.

It's a good idea to get an outside viewpoint on what your weaknesses are as your own

perceptions may not always marry up to reality. You may strongly believe that your years

of experience in a sector reflect your business's thorough grounding and knowledge of all

of your customers' needs. Your customers, on the other hand, may perceive this wealth of

experience as an old-fashioned approach that shows an unwillingness to change and work

with new ideas. Be prepared to hear things you may not like, but which, ultimately, may

be extremely helpful.

Spot the Opportunities

Completing a SWOT analysis will enable you to pinpoint your core activities and identify

what you do well, and why. It will also point you towards where your greatest

opportunities lie, and highlight areas where changes need to be made to make the most of

your business.

The next step is to analyze your opportunities, and this can be tackled in several ways.

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External opportunities can include the misfortune of competitors who are not performing well, providing you with the opportunity to do better. There may be technological developments that you could benefit from, such as broadband arriving in your area, or a new process enhancing your products. There may be some legislative changes affecting your customers, offering you an opportunity to provide advice, support, or added services. Changes in market trends and consumer buying habits may provide the development of a niche market, of which you could take advantage before your

competitors, if you are quick enough to take action.

Another good idea is to consider your weaknesses more carefully, and work out ways of

addressing the problems, turning them around in order to create an opportunity. For

example, the pressing issue of a supplier who continually lets you down could be turned

into an opportunity by sourcing another supplier who is more reliable and who may even

offer you a better deal. If a member of staff leaves, you have an opportunity to re-

evaluate duties more efficiently or to recruit a new member of staff who brings additional

experience and skills with them.

Watch Out for Threats

Analyzing the threats to your business requires some guesswork, and this is where your

analysis can be overly plumbing repair cost calculator subjective. Some threats are tangible, such as a new competitor

moving into your area, but others may be only intuitive guesses that result in nothing.

Having said that, it's much better to be vigilant because if potential threat does become a

real one, you'll be able to react much quicker: you'll have considered your options

already and hopefully also put some contingency planning into place.

Think about the worst things that could realistically happen, such as losing your

customers to your major competitor, or the development of a new product far superior to

your own. Listing your threats in your SWOT analysis will provide ways for you to plan

to deal with the threats, if they ever actually start to affect your business.

Use Your Analysis

After completing your SWOT analysis, it's vital that you learn from the information you

have gathered. You should now plan to build on your strengths, using them to their full

potential, and also plan to reduce your weaknesses, either by minimizing the risk they

represent, or making changes to overcome them. Now that you understand where your

opportunities lie, make the most of them and aim to capitalize on every opportunity in

front of you. Try to turn threats into opportunities. Try to be proactive, and put plans into

place to counter any threats as they arise.

To help average plumbing repair costs you in planning ahead, you could combine some of the areas you have

highlighted in the boxes; for example, if you see an external opportunity of a new market

growing, you will be able to check whether your internal strengths will be able to make

the most of the opportunity. For example, do you have enough trained staff in place, and

can your phone system cope with extra customer orders? If you have a weakness that

undermines an opportunity, it provides a good insight as to how you might develop your

internal strengths and weaknesses to maximize your opportunities and minimize your

threats.

The basic SWOT process is to fill in the four boxes, but the real benefit is to take an

overview of everything in each box, in relation to all the other boxes. This comparative

analysis will then provide an evaluation that links external and internal forces to help

your business prosper.

Focusing just on a few issues

Don't just focus on the large, obvious issues, such as a major competitor encroaching on

your business. You need to consider all issues carefully, such as whether your Internet

system provides everything you need or whether your staffing levels are as they should

be.

Completing your SWOT analysis on your own

Do take advantage of other people's contribution when you're completing plumbing repair tape your SWOT

analysis; don't try and do it alone. Other people's perspectives can be very useful,

particularly as they may not be as close to the business as you are. This distance can often

help them see answers to thorny questions more easily, or to be more innovative: we all

get stuck in a rut at points.

Using your analysis for the next ten years

Don't do a SWOT analysis once and then never repeat the exercise. Your business

environment will be constantly changing, so use SWOT as an ongoing business analysis

practice.

Relying on SWOT to provide all the answers

Use SWOT as part of an overall strategy to analyze your business and its potential. It is a

useful guide, not a major decision-making tool so don't base major decisions on this

analysis and nothing else.





 
 
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