HO 2-5 (continued)
Unit
2
The
environmental analysis has provided
a series of im
portant insights into the
firm's external situation.
It has helped
the business owner
view the business
more clearly in its
com
petitive environment
and has prompted
awareness of and
focus
on key environmental
threats and opportunities.
This
chapter
extends the
analysis phase of the
strategic planning
model by
examining
the firm's internal condition.
The internal
analysis
offers a
profile of the company's
internal operations
and is
geared
towards pinpointing
and assessing the
key internal
strengths
and weaknesses of
the firm.
VALUE OF INTERNAL
ANALYSIS
Objective
internal analysis
is essential for
at least two reasons.
First, many
managers of small
businesses have
totally inaccurate
conceptions
of the firm's internal
rotate of affairs.
Often, they
rely on personal
opinion or
feel to assess their firm's
internal
condition. This
biased view may
result in an unrealistic
per
spective of the
company's capacit)y
potential, and areas
of con
cern. Only through
a careful and
systematic internal
analysis
can a reasonable
and meaningful
profile be attained.
The significance
of developitig
an accurate business
profile
becomes more relevant
as one considers
a second reason
or
rationale for internal
analysis. Essentially,
internal analysis
in
dicates whether the
business has available
the means for
han
dling the previously
realized environmental
opportunities
and
threats. This realization
is =ritical.
It can change the
focus of a
company's activities
and strategies
and, in many situations,
save
the business from
disaster. Yet, for
many companies and
man
agers, it is a forgotten
step in the logical
planning sequence.
Consider
the example of Tannert
Video in Capsule
2-1.
Here, environmental
analysis was
performed successfully
and
54
Part One The
Annlysi Phase
197