Many entrepreneurs find SWOT – strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats – analysis almost intuitive.

Before sitting down to do your SWOT analysis, it’s a good idea to go off-site, away from ringing phones and other distractions. Some experts recommend hiring a facilitator to help you consider all the angles. Others say you can get the same effect by soliciting the perspective of customers, suppliers or other crucial contacts outside the company.
Limiting the group to anywhere from two to 12 people will help you avoid getting bogged down in procedural issues. And speed is basic to SWOT’s appeal. A good analysis can be completed in anywhere from several hours to two or three days, although you may wish to spread meetings over a week or two to give yourself time to gather information.
A SWOT analysis essentially consists of brainstorming about the key variables that affect your company.
Just thinking about SWOT isn’t enough. As with any successful strategy session, it’s essential to write the factors down. There are many workable formats. While a four-column approach is the simplest, some experts recommends five-column technique.
This entails labeling rows with factors critical to success in your industry (strong weaknesses, weaknesses, neutral factors, strengths and strong strengths) and places positive and negative numbers in the columns to show how your company stacks up. This system is used to rate key strategic issues including production costs, management skills and so on, and to determine which weaknesses need attention and which strengths can be exploited.
1. Strong Weaknesses
• etc
• etc
2. Weaknesses
• etc
• etc
3. Neutral Factors
• etc
• etc
4. Strengths
• etc
• etc
5. Strong Strengths
• etc
• etc
Other experts recommend a square with quadrants for each of the four elements.
1. Strengths
• etc
2. Weaknesses
• etc
3. Opportunities
• etc
4. Threats
• etc
No matter the format, you have two main goals in a SWOT analysis. First, you want to identify areas where your strengths match your opportunities. For example, you’re a low-cost producer – a strength – and one of your opportunities lies in the existence of an untapped cost-sensitive market.
And second, you’ll want to spot places where weaknesses make you vulnerable to threats. For instance, if there’s a trend toward more regulation in your industry and your business has an image as an outlaw, that could be a problem.
A SWOT analysis isn’t supposed to be a list of action items, but it should suggest such a list. After doing your analysis, use it to identify specific moves you can make to leverage strengths, maximise opportunities, remedy weaknesses and defuse threats. The low-cost producer mentioned above, for instance, might choose to target-market cost-conscious customers, while the company with the renegade reputation might polish its image with a public service program.
When preparing a SWOT, restrict yourself as much as possible to simple, factual statements such as “We’re the largest competitor in this niche” or “Our CEO reaches retirement age in June.” Being concise and specific will help you make the most of your analysis.
Simple, effective and time-tested, SWOT analysis should probably have a place in every entrepreneur’s strategic toolbox. While it’s not something you’ll do every day, having the analysis can give you a basis for guiding all sorts of actions on a continuing basis.
With every decision you make, filter what you’re good at and what you’re not so good at. In this way you will subconsciously apply SWOT to your decision-making process.