Decision & Strategy

Finance Transformation Priority Matrix

Prioritize finance transformation work without burning out your team.

Porter’s Five Forces

Analyze industry competition beyond direct rivals to uncover structural profit drivers.

PEST Analysis

Scan political, economic, social, and technological forces to spot macro risks and opportunities early.

PESTEL Analysis

Scan political, economic, social, technological, environmental, and legal forces to reduce strategic blind spots.

Business Model Canvas

Visualize how your business creates, delivers, and captures value on a single page.

SCAMPER Method

Generate new ideas by systematically remixing existing products, processes, and assumptions.

VRIO Framework

Evaluate whether your resources create real, defensible competitive advantage.

Ohmae’s 3C’s Model

Emphasizes the balanced integration of Company, Customer, and Competitor for strategic decisions, avoiding a singular focus.

TOWS Model

Turn SWOT insights into concrete strategic options and actions.

Outcome Discovery Canvas

Define measurable outcomes and success metrics before you commit to building features.

Internal Factor Evaluation (IFE) Matrix

Evaluate internal strengths and weaknesses in strategy.

External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix

Evaluate external opportunities and threats in strategic decision-making.

VUCA Framework

A simple guide to describe the complex environment.

BANI Framework

Move away from confusion via recognizing emotional and chaotic forces.

Four-Step Innovation Model

Turn raw ideas into market-ready products through a disciplined, four-stage innovation pipeline.

STEEP Analysis Framework

Scan external risks and opportunities early using five macro lenses to guide strategy, market entry, and innovation.

FASTR Framework

Filter AI use cases by risk, readiness, and measurable business value before committing real resources.

SWOT Analysis

Evaluate internal strengths and weaknesses against external opportunities and threats to identify real strategic choices.

External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix: Analyzing Business Opportunities and Threats

Evaluate external opportunities and threats in strategic decision-making.

FRAMEWORK CARD

External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix

Goal
Evaluate how effectively a company responds to external forces.
Flow Summary
Identify Factors → Assign Weights → Assign Ratings → Calculate Scores → Interpret Result
Best For
Strategic Audits; SWOT Preparation; Strategy Formulation

Why Businesses Need the EFE Matrix

In a fast-changing world, businesses often face many outside challenges. If companies want to stay strong, they must look beyond their internal performance and understand what’s happening around them.

External Factor Evaluation (EFE) Matrix is a tool that helps organizations identify, organize, and evaluate external opportunities and threats in a clear and structured way.

Alongside the Internal Factor Evaluation Matrix, you get a full view of your situation: what’s happening outside and how ready your company is inside, the result can feed directly into SWOT Analysis.

When Should You Use It?

  • During a strategic audit or internal analysis phase of strategic planning.
  • When conducting a SWOT Analysis:
    • Opportunities and Threats come from the EFE Matrix.
    • Strengths and Weaknesses come from the IFE Matrix.

Steps to Develop an EFE Matrix

Creating an EFE Matrix involves five main steps, each helping you move from raw data to clear insight.

Step 1: Identify Key External Factors

Start by identifying around 20 external factors that affect your business. These should include both opportunities and threats.

  • Opportunities are trends or changes that could help the business grow.
  • Threats are risks or challenges that may harm the business.

Tips:

  • Typically split evenly (like 10 and 10) between opportunities and threats.
  • Be specific and try to include numbers when possible. Please use the AQCD method to evaluate each factor and avoid using vague and unclear statements.

Step 2: Assign Weights to Each Factor

Each factor gets a weight between 0.0 (not important) and 1.0 (very important), based on how much it impacts the business or industry.

  • All weights combined must equal 1.0.
  • Opportunities usually receive higher weights, but serious threats can also rank high.

Step 3: Assign Ratings to Each Factor

Now give a rating from 1 to 4 for each factor. This shows how well the business is responding to that factor:

  • 4 = Excellent response
  • 3 = Above average
  • 2 = Average
  • 1 = Poor response

These ratings are based on the company’s performance, not the industry as a whole.

Step 4: Calculate Weighted Scores

Multiply each factor’s weight by its rating. This gives a weighted score for every factor.

Step 5: Sum the Weighted Scores

Add up all the weighted scores. This gives you the total score for the EFE Matrix.

  • The total score ranges from 1.0 to 4.0.
  • A score close to 4.0 means the business is handling external factors very well.
  • A score close to 1.0 means it is poor at responding to external factors.
  • A score around 2.5 is considered average.

This score can guide strategy formulation, and the identified factors will contribute to the following SWOT Analysis.