SKILL.md
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Why This Works
- Comprehensive: Covers all major external forces affecting your product
- Proactive: Identifies threats and opportunities before they become critical
- Strategic: Informs long-term planning, not just tactical decisions
- Risk management: Highlights vulnerabilities in your product strategy
Anti-Patterns (What This Is NOT)
- Not competitive analysis: PESTEL looks at macro factors, not competitors
- Not internal analysis: Focuses on external environment, not your company's strengths/weaknesses
- Not static: Macro environment changes—reassess regularly
When to Use This
- Entering a new market or geography
- Strategic planning (annual roadmapping, 3-5 year planning)
- Assessing product viability in a changing environment
- Risk assessment for new product initiatives
- Pitching to execs or investors (shows environmental awareness)
When NOT to Use This
- For tactical, short-term decisions (use competitive analysis instead)
- When external factors are stable and well-understood
- As a substitute for customer research (PESTEL is macro, not micro)
Application
Use template.md for the full fill-in structure.
Step 1: Define the Scope
Clarify what you're analyzing:
## Overview
- **Project/Product Name:** [e.g., "AI-Powered Invoice Automation for SMBs"]
- **Analysis Purpose:** [e.g., "Assess viability of launching in EU market"]
- **Analyst:** [Your name or team]
- **Date:** [Date of analysis]
- **Geographic Scope:** [e.g., "United States and European Union"]
- **Time Horizon:** [e.g., "Next 12-24 months"]
Quality checks:
- Specific: Not "analyze market" but "assess viability of EU launch"
- Time-bound: PESTEL factors change—state your horizon
Step 2: Analyze Political Factors
Examine government and regulatory influences:
## 1. Political Factors
### Government Policies
- [How could government policies impact the product?]
- [Example: "EU's AI Act requires transparency in AI decision-making; our invoice automation must explain recommendations"]
### Political Stability
- [Assess stability in relevant regions]
- [Example: "US political stability is moderate; potential for regulatory changes in financial tech under new administration"]
### Trade Regulations
- [Examine trade regulations and their effects]
- [Example: "Brexit complicates data transfer between UK and EU; may require separate infrastructure"]
### Taxation Policy
- [Analyze taxation policies and implications]
- [Example: "Digital services tax in EU (3% on revenue) could impact pricing strategy"]
Quality checks:
- Specific to your product: Don't list generic policies—explain the impact
- Actionable: Can you adjust strategy based on this insight?
Step 3: Analyze Economic Factors
Examine economic conditions:
## 2. Economic Factors
### Economic Growth
- [Evaluate growth rates and their impact]
- [Example: "SMB sector growing 5% annually in US; strong demand for automation tools"]
### Inflation Rate
- [Consider inflation and its effect on pricing/costs]
- [Example: "High inflation (6%) pressures SMB budgets; price sensitivity increases"]
### Exchange Rates
- [Analyze exchange rate fluctuations]
- [Example: "Weak Euro vs. Dollar makes US pricing less competitive in EU; may need regional pricing"]
### Consumer Spending
- [Assess consumer spending levels]
- [Example: "SMBs cutting discretionary spending due to recession fears; emphasize ROI (time savings) in messaging"]
Quality checks:
- Data-driven: Use real economic indicators (GDP growth, inflation rates, etc.)
- Product-specific: How do these trends affect your product?
Step 4: Analyze Social Factors
Examine societal and cultural trends:
## 3. Social Factors
### Demographics
- [Examine demographics and market influence]
- [Example: "Aging SMB owners (Baby Boomers) less tech-savvy; younger Gen X/Millennial owners more receptive to automation"]
### Cultural Trends
- [Analyze cultural trends and demand impact]
- [Example: "Growing 'hustle culture' among freelancers increases demand for time-saving tools"]
### Lifestyle Changes
- [Consider lifestyle changes and implications]
- [Example: "Remote work boom increases solo entrepreneurs and freelancers; core target market expanding"]
### Consumer Attitudes
- [Assess consumer attitudes and behaviors]
- [Example: "Increasing trust in AI for routine tasks (invoicing, scheduling); less resistance than 5 years ago"]
Quality checks:
- Trend-based: Reference actual cultural shifts, not assumptions
- Validated: Use survey data, research reports, or demographic studies
Step 5: Analyze Technological Factors
Examine technology landscape:
## 4. Technological Factors
### Technological Advancements
- [Identify advancements and their impact]
- [Example: "Large language models (LLMs) enable better invoice data extraction; competitive advantage if adopted early"]
### R&D Activity
- [Evaluate sector R&D levels]
- [Example: "High R&D investment in fintech automation; rapid innovation cycle—need to iterate fast"]
### Automation
- [Assess automation implications]
- [Example: "Competitors adopting AI-powered automation; table stakes for market entry—must match or exceed"]
### Digital Transformation
- [Consider digital transformation trends]
- [Example: "SMBs adopting cloud-first tools (QuickBooks Online, Xero); need strong integrations to succeed"]
Quality checks:
- Competitive context: How does the tech landscape affect your position?
- Actionable: What R&D or partnerships do you need?
Step 6: Analyze Environmental Factors
Examine environmental and sustainability issues:
## 5. Environmental Factors
### Climate Change
- [Analyze climate change implications]
- [Example: "Minimal direct impact; however, B Corps and sustainability-focused SMBs prefer vendors with carbon-neutral operations"]
### Sustainability Practices
- [Evaluate sustainability impact]
- [Example: "Growing demand for 'green tech'; marketing opportunity to highlight cloud efficiency vs. on-prem servers"]
### Resource Scarcity
- [Assess resource scarcity risks]
- [Example: "Low risk; software product doesn't depend on physical resources"]
### Environmental Regulations
- [Examine environmental regulations]
- [Example: "EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) doesn't affect SaaS directly"]
Quality checks:
- Honest assessment: If impact is minimal, say so (don't force relevance)
- Market positioning: Can environmental factors be a differentiator?
Step 7: Analyze Legal Factors
Examine legal and compliance landscape:
## 6. Legal Factors
### Compliance Requirements
- [Identify legal/compliance requirements]
- [Example: "GDPR compliance required for EU customers; must implement data residency, right-to-be-forgotten, consent management"]
### Intellectual Property Rights
- [Evaluate IP importance and protection]
- [Example: "Patent landscape for AI invoice processing is crowded; focus on trade secrets over patents"]
### Employment Laws
- [Consider employment laws and implications]
- [Example: "Remote hiring across EU requires understanding of local labor laws (Germany, France have strict employment contracts)"]
### Health and Safety Regulations
- [Assess health/safety regulations]
- [Example: "Not applicable (software product)"]
Quality checks:
- Legal risk assessment: What could block or delay your product?
- Compliance costs: Budget for legal, data residency, certifications?
Step 8: Synthesize Insights
After analyzing all six factors, summarize:
## Strategic Insights Summary
### Top Opportunities:
1. **[Opportunity 1]** - [Description and action]
- [Example: "Social: Remote work boom expands target market → Increase marketing to freelancers"]
2. **[Opportunity 2]** - [Description and action]
3. **[Opportunity 3]** - [Description and action]
### Top Threats:
1. **[Threat 1]** - [Description and mitigation]
- [Example: "Economic: Recession fears increase price sensitivity → Emphasize ROI in messaging, offer lower-tier pricing"]
2. **[Threat 2]** - [Description and mitigation]
3. **[Threat 3]** - [Description and mitigation]
### Strategic Recommendations:
1. **[Recommendation 1]** - [Action to take]
2. **[Recommendation 2]** - [Action to take]
3. **[Recommendation 3]** - [Action to take]
Step 9: Update Regularly
- Annual review: Reassess PESTEL factors during strategic planning
- Trigger events: Update when major external events occur (new regulations, economic shifts, etc.)
- Track changes: Document how factors evolve over time
Examples
See examples/sample.md for a full PESTEL analysis example.
Mini example excerpt:
### 1. Political Factors
- EU AI Act requires transparency in AI decision-making
### 2. Economic Factors
- High inflation increases SMB price sensitivity
Common Pitfalls
Pitfall 1: Generic Analysis
Symptom: "Political: Regulations exist. Economic: Economy affects spending."
Consequence: No actionable insights.
Fix: Be specific: "EU AI Act requires explainable AI → Need transparency features by Q3 2026."
Pitfall 2: Ignoring Low-Impact Factors
Symptom: Forcing relevance where none exists (e.g., "Climate change affects our SaaS product...")
Consequence: Wastes time, dilutes focus.
Fix: If a factor has low impact, say so. Focus effort on high-impact areas.
Pitfall 3: No Data Sources
Symptom: "Economic growth is strong" (no citation)
Consequence: Unverifiable claims, low credibility.
Fix: Cite sources: "SMB sector growing 5% annually (US Census Bureau, 2025)."
Pitfall 4: Analysis Without Action
Symptom: Long list of factors, no strategic recommendations
Consequence: Insights don't inform decisions.
Fix: Synthesize into "Top Opportunities," "Top Threats," and "Strategic Recommendations."
Pitfall 5: One-Time Exercise
Symptom: PESTEL analysis done once, never revisited
Consequence: Stale insights as macro environment shifts.
Fix: Review annually or when major external events occur (new regulations, economic shifts, etc.).
References
Related Skills
skills/recommendation-canvas/SKILL.md— PESTEL factors inform risk assessment in canvas
skills/positioning-statement/SKILL.md— PESTEL insights shape competitive positioning
skills/problem-statement/SKILL.md— Social/economic factors influence customer problems
External Frameworks
- Francis Joseph Aguilar, Scanning the Business Environment (1967) — Origin of PEST analysis
- PESTEL (extension of PEST to include Environmental and Legal)
- Michael Porter, Competitive Strategy (1980) — Complements PESTEL with industry-level analysis
Dean's Work
- PESTEL Analysis Prompt Template (adapted from Aguilar's framework)
Provenance
- Adapted from
prompts/pestel-analysis-prompt-template.mdin thehttps://github.com/deanpeters/product-manager-promptsrepo.
Skill type: Component
Suggested filename: pestel-analysis.md
Suggested placement: /skills/components/
Dependencies: References skills/recommendation-canvas/SKILL.md, skills/positioning-statement/SKILL.md