Regional development planning begins with a territorial economic assessment that establishes the productive base, specialisation patterns, and growth trajectory of the region in question. This is not a standard SWOT exercise. It draws on quantitative methods — shift-share analysis, economic base modelling, and spatial econometric techniques — to establish which economic activities are structurally grounded in the region's factor endowments and which are dependent on policy support or historical inertia. The assessment is conducted at the sub-regional level wherever data permit, producing a differentiated picture of the territory rather than an averaged regional aggregate.
Strategy design follows the diagnostic. Sector prioritisation is informed by comparative advantage analysis and value chain mapping, identifying where the region sits in national and regional production networks and where the highest-leverage interventions lie. Spatial strategy translates sector priorities into location-specific investment and infrastructure recommendations, drawing on GIS-based accessibility analysis and land-use compatibility assessment to ensure that spatial designations — growth poles, industrial corridors, agricultural development zones — reflect economic logic rather than administrative convenience.
Implementation architecture is treated as a first-order design problem, not an afterthought. Governance frameworks, inter-agency coordination mechanisms, and investment facilitation structures are specified with reference to what comparable regional authorities have successfully implemented, rather than international best-practice templates that exceed local institutional capacity. The strategy concludes with a prioritised investment programme, a monitoring framework with spatial performance indicators, and an explicit theory of change linking public interventions to private investment responses.