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Internal Analysis

Strategic Capabilities — Learn

Simple explanation + practical steps + how to turn insights into decisions.

Tip: start with Learn, then run the Tool, then save actions/checkpoints.

Strategic Capabilities — Learn

Understand what your business can do better than competitors and how to build long-term advantage.

Strategic capabilities are the combination of resources, skills, processes and culture that allow an organisation to deliver value in a way competitors cannot easily copy.

What are Strategic Capabilities?

Strategic capabilities describe what a business is really good at doing. They go beyond individual resources (like money or technology) and focus on how those resources are used together through routines, knowledge, and systems.

Resources (what you have)

  • Physical (equipment, buildings)
  • Financial (capital, cash flow)
  • Human (skills, experience)
  • Intellectual (brands, patents, data)

Capabilities (how you use them)

  • Customer service excellence
  • Product innovation
  • Fast delivery systems
  • Efficient operations

Core competencies

A core competence is a capability that:

  • Creates clear customer value
  • Is difficult for competitors to copy
  • Can be applied to multiple products or markets
Example: Amazon’s logistics system, Apple’s product design capability, Toyota’s production system.

Dynamic capabilities (adapting to change)

Dynamic capabilities describe how well an organisation can adapt and renew itself in changing environments.

Sense

Identify opportunities and threats in the environment.

Seize

Invest in new products, markets, or processes.

Transform

Reconfigure resources and structures over time.


Why Strategic Capabilities matter

  • Support competitive advantage: difficult to copy strengths.
  • Guide investment: focus spending on what really matters.
  • Improve resilience: survive industry disruption.
  • Enable growth: apply capabilities to new markets.
Common mistake: confusing tools or assets with capabilities. A CRM system is not a capability — the capability is how your team uses it to serve customers better than competitors.

How to use Strategic Capabilities (simple steps)

  1. List your key resources and skills.
  2. Group them into capabilities (what you can do well).
  3. Test them using VRIO/VRIN.
  4. Identify which capabilities deserve investment.
  5. Build a capability roadmap over time.

Learn more

Deep dive article (recommended before using Tool or AI Assist):

Strategic Capabilities

Evaluate what your business can do better than competitors — and what you must improve to compete (threshold) vs what you can turn into a moat (distinctive).


What it is
A competitor-relative assessment of execution strength across key capability areas.
What you get
A capability scorecard + gaps, strengths, and improvement actions.
Where it fits
Internal Analysis → Choices → Execution plan & KPIs.
Truth: You don’t need to be “best at everything”. You need to be best at what your strategy requires.

Diagram

Capability Map
Diagram placeholder
Add: image_tag "diagrams/strategic_capabilities.png"
Suggested diagram: a radar chart (capability scores 1–5) or a heatmap grid vs competitors.
Recommended: show “You vs Top Competitor” scores to make the learning visual.

Resources vs Capabilities (basic building blocks)

Many people confuse “resources” with “capabilities”. A resource is what you have. A capability is what you do well consistently.

Resources
What you have (assets): people, cash, brand, data, IP, tech, relationships.
Capabilities
What you can do repeatedly: your routines, processes, execution speed, quality.
Competences
Capabilities that matter strongly to customers and performance.
Core Competences
The few competences that support advantage across products/markets.
Example: “CRM software” is a resource. “Fast lead follow-up with a repeatable process” is a capability.

Threshold vs Distinctive capabilities

This split matters because it tells you where to invest first.

Threshold capabilities
Minimum required to compete (table stakes). Without them, you lose.
Distinctive capabilities
Capabilities that outperform rivals and create defensible advantage.
Rule: Fix threshold gaps first. Then invest aggressively in distinctive capabilities.

Capability areas (what to score)

Use these lenses to build your scorecard. You only need 8–12 areas to get a strong output.

People
Skills, hiring, training, leadership, culture, incentives.
Examples
  • Onboarding speed
  • Sales skill
  • Domain expertise
  • Customer success quality
Processes
How work flows: standardisation, quality control, cycle time.
Examples
  • Delivery lead time
  • Bug-to-fix time
  • Quote-to-cash
  • Return handling
Technology & Data
Systems, automation, integration, analytics, data quality.
Examples
  • Automation rate
  • Reporting accuracy
  • Integrations
  • Data compounding
Relationships
Suppliers, partners, community, distribution channels, trust.
Examples
  • Partner pipeline
  • Supplier reliability
  • Affiliate network
  • Referral rate
Brand & Trust
Reputation, credibility, social proof, compliance posture.
Examples
  • Reviews
  • Case studies
  • Certifications
  • Security posture
Financial strength
Cash runway, access to finance, cost discipline, unit economics control.
Examples
  • Runway months
  • Gross margin
  • Burn multiple
  • Pricing power
Tip: keep capability areas measurable (cycle time, defect rate, conversion, retention, cost per unit).

Scoring guide (1–5)

Score each capability area relative to competitors in your segment. Add one sentence of evidence per score.

Score Label Meaning Outcome
1 Weak Behind most competitors Risk / disadvantage
2 Below average Needs improvement Constraint on growth
3 Average Table stakes Parity
4 Strong Better than many rivals Potential advantage
5 Leading Best-in-class Distinctive capability
Don’t guess: even rough evidence is better than vibes (e.g., “Response time 2h vs competitor 24h”).

Workflow (practical)

1) Define the arena
Choose a clear market + segment + competitors. Capabilities are relative — compare against real rivals.
2) List 8–12 capability areas
Use a capability map (people, process, tech, partnerships, brand, finance). Keep it focused.
3) Score vs competitors (1–5)
Score each area: 1 weak, 3 average, 5 leading. Add one sentence of evidence per score.
4) Identify gaps & strengths
Find: (a) threshold gaps that could kill you, (b) distinctive strengths to double down on.
5) Convert to actions
Pick 3–6 moves: hire, process changes, automation, partnerships, training, pricing, positioning.
Deliverable: 3–5 improvement bets + KPIs + owners (this becomes your execution plan).

Common mistakes

Scoring without evidence
If you can’t justify a score, it becomes marketing, not analysis.
Not comparing to real competitors
Capabilities are relative. ‘Good’ only matters compared to others in your segment.
Ignoring threshold gaps
Missing table-stakes (compliance, delivery, reliability) can kill a business even with strong ideas.
Trying to improve everything
Choose a few high-leverage capability upgrades that support your strategy.
Focus: improve the few capabilities that your strategy depends on (not everything).

Mini example

Example: SaaS product for small service businesses (UK).

Capability area Score Evidence Action
Onboarding & activation 2 Only 40% activate in week 1 Guided onboarding + templates + checklists
Customer support response time 4 Median first reply 1h (competitors ~12–24h) Promote as differentiation + keep staffing coverage
Partnership channel 3 Some referrals but no repeatable process Create partner program + assets + tracking
Key lesson: gaps become priorities; strengths become positioning and investment.

Next steps

After capabilities, move to Strategic Choices (e.g., Porter’s Generic Strategies).
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