Catalog
method#Governance#Product#Delivery#Reliability

SWOT Analysis

A structured method to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to support strategic decisions.

SWOT analysis is a structured method for assessing strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of an organization, product, or project.
Established
Medium

Classification

  • Medium
  • Organizational
  • Organizational
  • Intermediate

Technical context

Documentation in Confluence or SharePointVisual workshops with Miro/MuralData analysis in Excel/Google Sheets

Principles & goals

Clear separation of internal and external factorsFact-based collection before interpretationMultidisciplinary participation for diverse perspectives
Discovery
Enterprise, Domain, Team

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Confirmation bias among stakeholders
  • Incomplete or outdated data basis
  • Focus on listing instead of action implementation
  • Collect facts before opinions
  • Assemble a cross-functional participant list
  • Support results with quantitative data

I/O & resources

  • Strategic objectives
  • Market and competitor information
  • Internal performance and process data
  • Catalog of strengths and weaknesses
  • List of prioritized opportunities and risks
  • Concrete measures with responsibilities

Description

SWOT analysis is a structured method for assessing strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of an organization, product, or project. It aids strategic decision-making by visualizing internal and external factors clearly. Typical uses include strategy development, product planning and team-level risk assessment across organizational contexts.

  • Structured view of opportunities and threats
  • Promotes shared situational awareness
  • Enables prioritized action derivation

  • Purely qualitative without quantitative weighting
  • Prone to subjective assessments
  • May represent external dynamics only roughly

  • Number of identified opportunities

    Covers the count of potential opportunities emerging from the analysis.

  • Implementation rate of prioritized actions

    Percentage of prioritized actions implemented within the defined timeframe.

  • Decision time to action start

    Time span from analysis completion to start of the first action implementation.

Software tool product launch

A mid-sized company used SWOT to adjust go-to-market strategy and reduced market risks.

Non-profit organization evaluation

NGO identified internal funding weaknesses and developed diversification measures.

Team retrospective after release

Development team used SWOT to reveal process bottlenecks and clarify responsibilities.

1

Preparation: clarify goal and collect data

2

Workshop: develop strengths/weaknesses and opportunities/threats

3

Prioritize: derive actions and assign responsibilities

4

Document: consolidate and communicate results

5

Follow-up: measure implementation and adapt

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Outdated SWOT documents without version history
  • No integration of actions into roadmaps or backlogs
  • Missing metrics for measuring the success of actions
limited data availabilitytime pressure in workshopslack of stakeholder involvement
  • SWOT used as inventory without objectives
  • Ignoring external market changes after analysis
  • One-off analysis without follow-up or implementation
  • Too general formulations instead of concrete observations
  • Overrating single opinions as facts
  • Missing documentation hinders follow-up
Facilitation skillsAnalytical skillsStrategic thinking
Decision transparencyStakeholder alignmentRisk mitigation
  • Confidentiality requirements for data
  • Limited time budgets for workshops
  • Divergent stakeholder expectations