Knowledge base

STEEPLE Analysis

Introduction: STEEPLE Analysis

STEEPLE Analysis is a framework to scan the external environment. It helps teams understand how Social, Technological, Economic, Environmental, Political, Legal and Ethical factors can shape strategy, risk and opportunity. It is used before big choices such as market entry, product launch or investment.

Background

STEEPLE extends PEST. It adds Environmental, Legal and Ethical lenses to give a wider view of context. This matters when regulation tightens, public expectations change or sustainability becomes central to value. By scanning each lens in a structured way, teams avoid blind spots and bring evidence into planning.

Key Elements or Features

  1. Social. Demographics, education, health, culture, lifestyle and work patterns.
  2. Technological. R and D intensity, digital adoption, automation, AI, cybersecurity and IP.
  3. Economic. Growth, inflation, interest and exchange rates, labour costs and access to capital.
  4. Environmental. Climate risk, energy mix, waste and circularity, emissions and biodiversity.
  5. Political. Stability, policy direction, tax, trade, public spending and incentives.
  6. Legal. Laws, standards, compliance burden, liability exposure and data rules.
  7. Ethical. Expectations on fairness, transparency, privacy, diversity and responsible sourcing.

Keep items short and specific. Use sources. Note direction of travel and likely timing.

Applications or Examples

  • Market entry. Compare countries on regulation, ethics norms and green policy.
  • Product roadmap. Anticipate how new laws or tech shifts will affect features and data needs.
  • Supply chain. Map environmental and legal risks across vendors and regions.
  • Risk and controls. Link ethical and legal findings to compliance plans and training.
  • Investment cases. Stress test returns under different policy and climate scenarios.

Relevance or Impact

STEEPLE Analysis improves strategic fit and resilience. It helps time decisions, shape messaging and guide where to build capability. The output should be concise and tied to actions, owners and review dates. Combine it with SWOT or a Confrontation Matrix to move from insights to concrete choices.

See also

Anend Harkhoe
Lean Consultant & Trainer | MBA in Lean & Six Sigma | Founder of Dmaic.com & Lean.nl
With extensive experience in healthcare (hospitals, elderly care, mental health, GP practices), banking and insurance, manufacturing, the food industry, consulting, IT services, and government, Anend is eager to guide you into the world of Lean and Six Sigma. He believes in the power of people, action, and experimentation. At Dmaic.com and Lean.nl, everything revolves around practical knowledge and hands-on training. Lean is not just a theory—it’s a way of life that you need to experience. From Tokyo’s karaoke bars to Toyota’s lessons—Anend makes Lean tangible and applicable. Lean.nl organises inspiring training sessions and study trips to Lean companies in Japan, such as Toyota. Contact: info@dmaic.com

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