6.2. Strategic analysis Flashcards
Define strategic analysis
the process of conducting research into the business environment within which an organisation operates, and into the organisation itself, to help form future strategies
Strategic analysis tries to answer 3 key questions:
- Where is the business now?
- How might the business be affected by what is happening or likely to happen?
- How could the business repsond to these likely changes?
Define SWOT analysis
a form of strategic analysis that identifies and analyses the main internal strengths and weaknesses and external opportunities and threats that will influence the future direction and success of a business
Strengths/weaknesses
internal factors about a business that can help it gain/lose competitive advantage
- management
- workforce
- product range/USP
- location
- quality
- reputation
- any other aspect that adds/deducts value to product/service
Opportunities
potential areas for expansion of the business and future profits
identified by an external audit of the market the firm operates in and its major competitors3
e.g. a new/developing market, mergers, joint ventures, strategic alliances, new market segment
Threats
external factors gained frm external audit which analyses the business and economic environment, market conditions and strengths of competitors
e.g. new comp, globalisation driving prices down, changes in the law regarding sales of products, gov economic policy
Advantages of SWOT analysis
- It is a source of information for strategic planning.
- Builds organization’s strengths.
- Reverse its weaknesses.
- Maximize its response to opportunities.
- Overcome organization’s threats.
- It helps in identifying core competencies of the firm.
- It helps in setting of objectives for strategic planning.
- It helps in knowing past, present and future so that by using past and current data, future plans can be chalked out.
Disadvantages of SWOT analysis
- Subjectivity is a limitation as no 2 managers would necessarily arrive at the same assessment of the company they work for
- Not a quantitative form of assessment so the cost of correcting a weakness cannot be compared with the potential profit from pursuing an opportunity
- Used as a management guide for future strategies, not a prescription
Define PEST analysis
the strategic analysis of a firm’s macroenvironment including political, economic, social and technolgical factors
Political factors
- Stability of government
- Changes in the law that will particularly affect the industry
- Environmental regulations
- Employment law
- Competition regulations
- Consumer protection laws
- Gov attitude to free market or controls over the business
Economic factors
- rate of economic growth/recession
- exchange rate stability
- country’s membership of free-trade areas
- tax rates
- interest rates
- inflation rates and stage of the business cycle
Social factors
- demographic changes. e.g. ageing/youthful population
- dominant religion and impact this could have
- education standards. e.g. skilled workforce
- roles of men and women in society
- social and environmental issues could be increasing concern to the population
- labour and social mobility. e.g. urbanisation and migration
- languages
Technological factors
- rapidly changing technology allowing products to be made more cheaply
- government support for R&D spending
- internet access, speed of broadband and its impact on marketing and other strategies
- renewable energies and the cost of these compared to fossil fuels
- new product inventions and importance of these to consumers
- changes in IT speed and range of applications
Advantages of PEST analysis
- Provides a simple and easy-to-use framework for your analysis.
- Involves cross-functional skills and expertise.
- Helps to reduce the impact and effects of potential threats to your organization.
- Aids and encourages the development of strategic thinking within your organization.
- Provides a mechanism that enables your organization to identify and exploit new opportunities.
- Enables you to assess implications of entering new markets both nationally and globally
Disadvantages of PEST analysis
- Must be constantly updated and reviewed, especially in rapidly changing environment
- Users can oversimplify the information that is used for making decisions
- Users’ access to quality external information is often restricted because of the cost and time needed to collate it.
- Assumptions often form the basis for most of the data used, making any decision made based on such data subjective.
Define mission statement
a statement of the business’ core purpose and focus, phrased in a way to motivate employees and to stimulate interest by outside groups
Define vision statement
a statement of what the organisation would like to achieve or accomplish in the long term