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?

  1. Document the list in the issue log and move on to planning.
  2. Pair items to create SO, WO, ST, and WT strategies and define action owners and due dates.
  3. Assign an owner to each strength so it is not forgotten.
  4. 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.

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