Consultancy Report with SWOT Analysis — Part 1
The following report is for the Employee’s State Insurance, the Indian Parliament, and Mumbai State Government. The issue we’re dealing with is poor healthcare management as a result of lousy governance.
In today’s world, all health care facilities are expensive, and not everyone as a Victim can afford them. It is the responsibility of the Municipal Government to ensure that all available amenities are made available to victims in severe need. Victims are losing family members because of misappropriation of funds and ineffective plans not being made available to them.
Government hospitals do not receive adequate funding from the State government, and as a result, no experienced doctors are hired, resulting in poor treatment quality. The monies granted to the healthcare sector by the state government are being misused. There is no effective administration for government hospitals to oversee all concerns and public funds.
SWOT Analysis:
SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) is a framework for assessing a company’s competitive position and developing strategic plans. Internal and external elements, as well as existing and future possibilities, are all evaluated in a SWOT analysis.
A SWOT analysis is a tool for taking a realistic, fact-based, data-driven look at an organization’s, initiative’s, or industry’s strengths and weaknesses. The organisation must maintain the accuracy of the study by avoiding preconceived notions or grey zones and instead focusing on real-world scenarios. It should be used as a recommendation rather than a prescription by businesses.
· SWOT analysis is a strategic planning technique that gives you tools to examine your situation.
· Fact-based analysis, new views, and new ideas result from identifying core strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
· When different groups or voices inside an organisation are free to present realistic data points rather than predefined messaging, SWOT analysis works best.