Successful Project Managers Road Map by Mostafa Alshimi - HTML preview

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How to use SWOT Analysis results?

 

1- Form your planning team. The team should include key members  of your operating staff and represent a diverse section of your  company.

 

2- Consider conducting a smaller SWOT analysis on a specific aspect  of the business to prime your team for the SWOT evaluation that  is company-wide.

 

3- Set meeting times. Make sure you schedule plenty of time for the  team to look over the SWOT analysis. Planning these meetings for  the same time each week will help ensure everyone gets into the  routine. Although you could also plan a weekend retreat,  spreading the meetings out may help your staff generate new  ideas and not get stuck in a rut.

 

4- Make sure everyone is on the same page. Your staff should have  trust in each other that their ideas will be respected. Each  member should also have the desire to make changes to the  company.

 

5- Define goals for the evaluation at the first meeting. Once  everyone has a chance to look over the SWOT analysis, definitive  goals should be set. For example, "create three new procedures to  ensure customer satisfaction" is a more tangible goal than "plan  to increase customer satisfaction."

 

6- Look over the analysis. See if any line items can fit into multiple  categories. For example, a threat of a competitor opening up shop  across the street could be an opportunity to solidify your standing  in the community by providing exemplary service.

 

7- Collect data. Although a strength of your business may be your  ability to effectively sell to a minority group, that strength will  become a weakness if statistics demonstrate a negative growth of  the minority group in your community.

 

8- Decide what you need to improve on. Make a list of all of these  goals, and then create a SMART objective for each one.

 

Make SMART Objectives: Know that SMART stands for specific,  measurable, achievable, realistic and time-bound.

 

9- Define specific objectives. You will need to have objectives with  tangible results. One goal may have several objectives---for  example, improving your customer service may include  performing an annual survey, conducting monthly staff meetings  on improving service and hiring more friendly candidates.  10- Decide what you will use to measure your objective. Without  standards, there will be no way of demonstrating success or  failure of each objective.

 

11- Brainstorm whether the objective is achievable and how it will be  achieved. If your objective is to conduct monthly staff meetings on  customer service, then it would be achievable if an appropriate  trainer were identified and if time and wages could be allocated to  the project.

 

12- Put some realism into it. Your team will need to really look at each  objective to determine if it is realistic. Monthly staff meetings may  not seem like a big deal in the meeting room, but coming up with  a time that everyone can meet may be.

 

13- Come up with a timeline. Objectives should be time-bound with  start and end dates.

 

14- Rewrite each objective to take into consideration all of the SMART  components. For example, the goal of improving customer service  will be transformed into the SMART objective of "Hire a  consultant to conduct a staff-wide training on customer service on  the first Sunday of each month from January to November of  2010."

 

Notes (Place Your Notes Here)