SWOT analysis
SWOT analysis is a technique that compares internal strengths and weaknesses with external opportunities and threats to understand a project's position. It guides strategy choices, action planning, and risk-response thinking.
Key Points
- Focuses on internal factors (strengths, weaknesses) versus external factors (opportunities, threats).
- Works best when tied to a clear objective and time horizon.
- Simple 2x2 matrix encourages broad participation and shared understanding.
- Insights should translate into strategies and concrete actions, not just a list.
- Helps identify positive risks (opportunities) and negative risks (threats) for risk planning.
- Useful at initiation and during major reviews when context or strategy may shift.
Purpose of Analysis
- Clarify the current situation and readiness to achieve objectives.
- Highlight where to leverage strengths and where to mitigate weaknesses.
- Reveal external trends and events to exploit or defend against.
- Support prioritization of strategies and project actions.
- Facilitate stakeholder alignment using a common, visual summary.
Method Steps
- Define the objective, scope, and time horizon for the SWOT.
- Collect data: performance metrics, stakeholder input, market and environmental scans.
- Brainstorm and categorize items into Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.
- Cluster similar items and refine wording to be specific and evidence-based.
- Prioritize items using impact and likelihood or relevance to objectives.
- Develop strategies by pairing quadrants (SO, WO, ST, WT) and outline actions.
- Assign owners, timelines, and measures of success for selected actions.
- Validate with key stakeholders and integrate actions into plans and logs.
- Review and update as context changes or at key milestones.
Inputs Needed
- Project objectives, success criteria, and constraints.
- Internal performance data, capabilities, resources, and lessons learned.
- Stakeholder interviews, surveys, and expert judgment.
- External environment scan (for example, market, regulatory, technology, socio-economic).
- Competitor and customer insights, benchmarking, and trends.
- Current risk register, assumption log, and organizational policies.
Outputs Produced
- A 2x2 SWOT matrix capturing key items with brief rationale.
- Prioritized list of critical factors linked to objectives.
- Strategy options (SO, WO, ST, WT) and an action plan with owners and dates.
- Updates to risk register, assumption log, backlog, and communications.
- Decision records documenting selected approaches and trade-offs.
Interpretation Tips
- Test each item: is it internal or external, and is it clearly stated and evidence-based.
- Tie every item to the objective; remove or park items that do not impact outcomes.
- Estimate relative impact and likelihood to focus on what matters most.
- Use quadrant pairings to craft strategies, not just to display information.
- Quantify where possible and define indicators to track progress over time.
- Seek diverse viewpoints to reduce bias and validate findings with data.
Example
A team planning a new service uses SWOT to guide launch decisions.
- Strengths: Dedicated skilled team; supportive sponsor; reusable platform components.
- Weaknesses: Limited marketing budget; untested support process; tight timeline.
- Opportunities: Growing customer demand; partner distribution channels; favorable regulation.
- Threats: Aggressive competitor pricing; supply delays; emerging substitute solutions.
- Actions derived: Use partner channels to offset low marketing spend (WO); accelerate pilot to build proof and counter competitors (ST); secure secondary suppliers to reduce delay risk (WT).
Pitfalls
- Mixing internal and external factors, leading to wrong strategies.
- Vague, generic items that cannot be acted on or measured.
- No prioritization, resulting in too many low-value actions.
- Stopping at the matrix without converting insights into strategies and tasks.
- One-time exercise that goes stale and ignores changing context.
- Groupthink or bias that overlooks uncomfortable facts or dissenting views.
PMP Example Question
After your team lists strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats for a project, what should you do next to make the SWOT analysis most useful?
- Document the list in the issue log and move on to planning.
- Pair items to create SO, WO, ST, and WT strategies and define action owners and due dates.
- Assign an owner to each strength so it is not forgotten.
- Break the SWOT items directly into WBS work packages.
Correct Answer: B — Pair items to create SO, WO, ST, and WT strategies and define action owners and due dates.
Explanation: SWOT is valuable when insights are turned into strategies and actions with accountability. Simply recording items without actionable follow-up limits its impact.
HKSM