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Boston Consulting Group matrix to inform growth strategies

    BCG Matrix

    LEARNING OBJECTIVES

    • Explain how businesses use the Boston Consulting Group matrix to inform growth strategies

    Purpose

    When a company has many different products or even many different lines of business, strategy becomes more complex. The company not only needs to complete a situation analysis for each business, but also needs to determine which businesses warrant focus and investment. The BCG matrix (sometimes called the Growth-Share matrix) was created in 1970 by Bruce Henderson and the Boston Consulting Group to help companies with many businesses or products determine their investment priorities.

    The BCG matrix considers two different aspects of a business unit or product:

    1. What is the current market share?
    2. What is the market’s growth potential?

    Market Share

    Market share is the percentage of a market (defined in terms of units sold or revenue) accounted for by a specific product or entity. For instance, if you run a neighborhood lemonade stand that sells 200 glasses of lemonade each summer, and there are two other competing lemonade stands that sell 50 glasses and 150 glasses, respectively, then you have 50 percent market share. Out of 400 glass sold, you sell 200 glasses, or 50 percent of the total.

    Companies track market share data closely. For example, what is the market share for different types of cell phones in the U.S.? The International Data Corporation reports these numbers quarterly. As the following table shows, Android phones have had the dominant market share over the past several years.

    Period Android iOS Windows Phone BlackBerry OS Others
    2015Q2 82.8% 13.9% 2.6% 0.3% 0.4%
    2014Q2 84.8% 11.6% 2.5% 0.5% 0.7%
    2013Q2 79.8% 12.9% 3.4% 2.8% 1.2%
    2012Q2 69.3% 16.6% 3.1% 4.9% 6.1%[1]

    Market-Growth Potential

    The market-growth potential is more difficult to quantify, but it’s the other important factor in the BCG matrix. Let’s use some of the products in Proctor & Gamble’s portfolio to identify markets with different growth potential. How about bathroom tissue—is that a high-growth market? Probably not. Data show that, in the U.S. anyway, bathroom tissue use tracks closely with population numbers, which have declined 0.7 percent since 1992. How about the market for high-end skin-care products? Generally, markets for products that serve Americans born between 1946 and 1964—the baby boomers—are growing rapidly. The reason is that this large generation is aging with more income and a longer life expectancy that any previous generation.

    Market-growth potential generally includes analysis of similar markets, as well as analysis of the underlying drivers for marketing growth. It can be thought of as a “best guess” at what the future value of a market will be.

    Applying the BCG Matrix

    BCG Growth-Share Matrix showing high and low market growth and market share. A star represents high growth potential because of high market growth and high market share. The question mark represents high growth potential because of high market growth and low market share. A dog represents low growth potential because of low market share and low market growth. A cow with a dollar sign on its forehead represents low growth potential because of low market growth and high market share.

    The BCG Matrix is comprised of four quadrants that show high and low market share and high and low growth potential. Each quadrant has a name and specific characteristics.

    Dog

    A product or business with low market share in a mature industry is a dog. There is no room for growth, which suggests that no new funds should be invested in it.

    Cash Cow

    A cash cow is a product or business that has high market share and is in a slow-growing industry. It’s bringing in more money than is being invested in it, but it doesn’t have much growth potential. The profits from a cash cow can be used to fund high-growth investments, but the cash cow itself warrants low investment.

    Question Mark

    A question mark is a product or business that has low market share currently, but in a growing industry. This case is trickier: the product/business is consuming financing and creating a low rate of return for now, but its direction isn’t clear. A question mark has the potential to become either a star or a dog, so close monitoring is needed to determine its growth potential.

    Star

    A star has high market share in a fast-growing industry. This kind of product or business is poised to bring strong return on the funds invested. It also has the potential to become a cash cow at the end of the product life cycle, which can fund future investments.

    According to the logic of the BCG matrix, as an industry grows, all investments become cows or dogs. The intent of the matrix is to help companies make good portfolio-management decisions, focusing investment in the areas that are likely to provide returns and fund future growth.

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