Give a worked example of SWOT Analysis.
Worked example
A regional grocery chain might list a strength as "deep local supplier relationships," a weakness as "no online ordering," an opportunity as "rising demand for local food," and a threat as "national chain entering the region." A coherent SO strategy would amplify the local-sourcing story in marketing; a critical WO strategy would build basic ecommerce before the national chain arrives.
Why the example works
SWOT analysis is a structured review of a firm's internal Strengths and Weaknesses against external Opportunities and Threats. It is the most widely used strategic planning tool because it is simple to execute and forces a balanced internal-external view. A disciplined SWOT distinguishes carefully among four cells. Strengths are internal capabilities or assets the firm controls that genuinely advantage it relative to competitors. Weaknesses are internal disadvantages competitors do not share. Opportunities are external trends the firm could exploit. Threats are external developments that could harm the firm if unaddressed. The output is not the matrix itself but the SWOT-derived strategy: SO strategies use strengths to capture opportunities, ST strategies use strengths to defend against threats, WO strategies fix weaknesses to enable opportunities, WT strategies reduce vulnerability to combined weaknesses and threats.
Where it could go wrong
Most SWOT exercises devolve into laundry lists of generic items — "good people" as a strength, "tough competition" as a threat — that fail any test of specificity. SWOT items that are not relative to competitors and not actionable produce no insight.
Generalizing the lesson
A SWOT is judged on the strategies it generates, not the matrix's tidiness. If the analysis cannot produce three or four concrete strategic moves, the inputs are too generic.
Source basis: Open Textbook Library: READ MORE