17.3.2010 Archives / Assess Your Work

Analyze Your Career with a Personal SWOT

by Ian Christie
Blaze Your Own Career Expert

Want a fresh way to size up the state of your career? How about taking a page from the business-school playbook and running a SWOT analysis? SWOT, which stands for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, is a simple yet powerful model MBA students use to analyze the strategic positions of companies, products or business situations. But you don't need to be an MBA to apply the SWOT technique to your own career planning.

How to Create a SWOT Analysis

The model is a basic two-by-two table, with strengths and weaknesses laid out in the top two boxes and opportunities and threats in the bottom two. You've probably considered your strengths and weaknesses already, but the SWOT model takes it a step further by making you think about the external factors that bear heavily on the health and direction of your career. These factors -- mainly physical location, industry, company and profession -- signal potential opportunities and threats. Looking at the quadrants together can be a creative way to think about where you are in your career and the directions you could take.

To get an idea of what you could incorporate into your own SWOT chart, look at some examples in each category:

Strengths

Strengths are your internal, positive attributes and selling points. You have some control over these. Examples include:

Weaknesses

Weaknesses are your internal negative attributes. You have some control over these as well. Examples include:

Opportunities

Opportunities are uncontrollable external events that you can potentially leverage. Examples include:

Threats

Threats are uncontrollable external factors that may work against you and require you to take protective action. Examples include:

Do Your Own SWOT Analysis

1. Draw a two-by-two grid on a sheet of paper, or create one in a word-processing program.

2. In each quadrant, write out ideas in bullet-point form. Be as specific as possible.

3. Stretch to come up with true insights. Take a break if you have to, and revisit your analysis when you're fresh. You can even show your SWOT to a few close contacts to get their views.

4. Edit. Delete repetitive ideas, and sharpen less specific ones.

5. Analyze what it all means. Use the tool to:

6. Determine possible actions. There are four types of actions you could take:

Ian Christie founded BoldCareer.com to help individuals build bold, fulfilling careers and help organizations attract, develop and retain talent. A career coach, consultant, three-time entrepreneur, former senior director at Monster and former retained executive search consultant, Ian is an expert in the fields of careers and recruitment. He believes that career management is a central theme to both personal and organizational effectiveness. BoldCareer.com offers career services to companies and individuals as well as free career resources.