AQA A-level Business | Unit 3.3.3 SWOT Analysis

SWOT to Strategy

Build a clear picture of a real company, then turn that picture into a plan.

📺 The brief on the desk

Netflix is one of the best known streaming companies in the world. By the end of 2025 it had grown to around 325 million paying members and made roughly $45 billion in a single year, while pushing into adverts, live sport and new countries. Big and successful, yes. But every big company faces choices about what to do next.

Example data, as of April 2026. Figures are approximate and used here only as a neutral, real world example to analyse.

Cliff Edge
Founder, Opportunity Knocks Strategy (a small consultancy)
"Opportunity knocks. Your job is to answer."

Your role

You have just joined Opportunity Knocks as a junior strategist. Netflix has invited three firms to pitch for advice on its next move, and Cliff has put your small team forward. The file lands on your desk.

"Right, fresh eyes. First job: sort what we know about this company into a SWOT. Strengths and weaknesses are about Netflix itself. Opportunities and threats are about the world outside it. Get that picture straight, then we make it work for the client. Ready?" Cliff Edge, your mentor

WHAT IS AT STAKE This is the biggest client Opportunity Knocks has ever pitched for. Win it and the team has its breakthrough. Hand over a muddled SWOT, or a list that never turns into a plan, and the pitch falls flat and the deal walks out the door.
Data sources & notes

The company used here is real and is included only for neutral, factual analysis. No logos are used and no endorsement or partnership is implied. The consultancy, the mentor and the pitch are invented for the activity.

  • Membership (around 325 million at end of 2025, up from about 301 million a year earlier) and full year revenue (about $45 billion, up roughly 16%): company shareholder updates and reporting, January 2026.
  • Planned content spending (about $20 billion for 2026), advert supported plan growth, live events (NFL games, boxing, WWE) and recent price changes: company reporting and news coverage, 2025 to early 2026.
  • Account sharing across households and reliance on subscription income: company reporting and industry coverage, 2024 to 2026.

Figures are approximate and rounded for teaching. Framing is neutral.