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Growth–share matrix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stylised example of a BCG matrix. The products with the same colour belong to the same market. The products with a black outline indicate the products that belong to the own company. The chart was created with the online tool Fancy BCG Matrix[1].

The growth–share matrix[2] (aka the product portfolio matrix,[3] Boston Box, BCG-matrix, Boston matrix, Boston Consulting Group analysis, portfolio diagram) is a chart created in a collaborative effort by BCG employees: Alan Zakon first sketched it and then, together with his colleagues, refined it.[4] BCG's founder Bruce D. Henderson popularized the concept in an essay titled "The Product Portfolio" in BCG's publication Perspectives in 1970.[5] The purpose of this matrix is to help corporations to analyze their business units, that is, their product lines. This helps the company allocate resources and is used as an analytical tool in brand marketing, product management, strategic management, and portfolio analysis.

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  • Episode 96: How the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) Growth-Share Matrix Works
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Transcription

Well thank you for watching this video on the BCG Matrix. Over the course of the next several minutes, what we're going to do is define and describe what the BCG Matrix is, it's purpose and what it's used for. We're going to walk through the matrix and graphically kind of graph this out for you so you can see how the matrix looks and what its purpose is. And we'll go over some strategies on what to do based on your findings in the BCG Matrix. Essentially, how do we use it? So the BCG Matrix was developed in the early 1970s, and it was developed by the Boston Consulting Group, which is a popular consulting firm. And it was developed as a way of determining how companies can allocate their financial resources. So the idea is is that many company's have different product lines, and we need to be able to figure out how we're going to allocate resources. We shouldn't necessarily just you know split everything 50-50 where each particular product line gets the same amount of resources. We should have a little bit of a maybe better methodology for distributing those funds. There should be a more accurate where for us to determine how to get a better return on our investment. And so that's kind of the purpose of the BCG Matrix. And so the matrix itself looks at a couple different areas. The first thing that it looks at is what we refer to as market share. And so market share just very simply is the percentage of the market, so the overall market, that the company controls. And market share is expressed as a percentage. So that if I were to give you an example and say the company owns or has 40 percent market share and the market itself is worth a total of $100 billion, well then our company holding 40 percent market share would have revenue roughly of $40 billion. Because it maintains 40 percent market share. And so typically we look at revenues when establishing market share. So that's one of the variables that the BCG Matrix considers. The next variable is what we call market growth. And so market growth is the percentage that the market is expanding. Market growth is a measure of market attractiveness. So obviously markets that are growing at higher percentages are much more attractive to companies because their is more opportunity there. In markets that a very very, not necessarily small in size but not growing significantly there not as attractive because typically what happens is you have already established and very dominant companies. And competition is very very fierce in markets that are characterized by low growth. Because you're fighting over a fixed pie if you want to kind of imagine it kind of like an actual pie that you would eat. The size of that isn't growing so that what happens is the companies have to fight over their piece of the pie. Now with market growth if it's increasing significantly then the size of that pie is changing. So competition is less fierce because everyone can kind of stake their own claim a little bit. Because the market is still growing by a significant rate. And so those are the two variables. Now with market share, one of the assumptions that the BCG Matrix makes is that if a company has market share then usually it's fairly successful from a financial standpoint. And usually to have high market share, if you look at it from that perspective, you typically have to be around a long time, benefit from economies of scale, customers have purchased your products and probably been somewhat satisfied if you're going to generate high market share. So usually that's a reasonable assumption although there is probably always exceptions to everyone. So now that we know the variables in the BCG Matrix, lets go ahead and plot out the matrix itself and go over some of the different components and things that are included in the actual matrix. Alright so here is the actual matrix. Now what we have to do is we kind of have to plot our variables. And so down here we're going to go ahead and list market share. And this is going to be high market share here. And this is going to be low. In this area we're going to list market growth. With high market growth here and low market growth is going to go here. So a little different right? Usually you'd think that the high side would go be over here but it's kind of reversed. At least for market share. So there are four total boxes in this matrix, and each of these boxes signifies kind of a label that we put on a particular product. And so just going through these one by one. The first one is what we call a dog. Now dogs are characterized by both low market share and low market growth. So what that means for you as the business owner is that you don't necessarily have a big position in this market. It's very small. And so if you were to look at this, you know this product generates such a little number of sales or revenue for you that it's relatively insignificant. So it's not important to you. Now the other side of it is the market growth. It's very very low, which means that the market is very competitive. So if you were to look at what do we have to do to change this. What do we have to do to get this product off the ground? Well you have low market share so chances are people don't even know about you. So you have to increase awareness, which means you're going to have to advertise, promote, and that costs money and time. But then you look at market growth. Do we even want to be in this market to begin with? It's a low growing market, if anything it may even be declining. So if spent all the money and resources trying to establish a position are we even going to be around in this market? Is it going to be present in five years? If that's the case, maybe it's not worth it. Now the next area is what we call our question markets. Some versions of the BCG Matrix also refer to these as problem children. And the reason that these are referred to as question marks is because we really don't know what to do with these. And problem children, because they generally are problematic. Because this is kind of an executive managers or business owners worst nightmare. These operate in low market share right? So we don't have, we have a very small position in the market. Similar to, similar to dogs. But they have high market growth.And so there's potential here. There's less competition. It's probably a newer market if it's at a higher growth rate. And so what we have to do here is we have to commit financial resources to figure out if this product could potentially be successful. Now truthfully we don't know, which is why it's a question mark. Because we can commit financial resources to it, but at the end of the day it might still be a dog. And so that's the decision that management has to make. And this is why this is probably the most difficult area of the BCG Matrix to figure out what to do with. The others are straight forward. But this particular area here, there's a number of different strategies which we're going to go over, you can do depending upon what you believe I suppose. Now the next area is what we call our starts. Now notice the starts are characterized by both high market share as well as high growth. So that means a couple of different things. The first of which is that we have a large position in the market. We are likely the dominant player, right, the market leader or maybe two or three. We have a very large market share. So this product, whatever it is, generates a great deal of revenue for our company. Because once again, keeping with the assumption that higher market share leads to high revenues. Which is fairly, fairly reasonable. But the other end is that it's in a high growth area, which means that the market is continuing to expand by large, large percentages. Which means there's still opportunity for us. So there still is certainly potential in this market as well. And so these are definite stars obviously, thus the actual label. They generate a great deal of revenue for the company, but they're also in growing industries that are very very attractive. So certainly a place where all businesses would hope to be in. Now the last area of the BCG Matrix are what we refer to as our cash cows. Now the reason that these are cash cows is because these are in high market areas, meaning that we control once again a large position in the market. Most likely a controlling stake. But the difference between this and stars is that we have a very low growth rate in this market. Which means that there's not a lot of potential, but there's also a great deal of competition. Now the different between this though, is that we're not trying to establish ourselves as the dominant player in the market. We already are the dominant player. And so we don't have to be concerned with advertising and promoting because we are already going to benefit from having that large position. And so usually what happens here, the reason they're called cash cows is because they kind of sell themselves. There's brand awareness, there's recognition, you don't have to promote and advertise. It's in a declining market so usually what happens is companies reduce support as a way of generating as much cash as possible. Because once again, there's already a great deal of awareness about these products. So now that we know what the BCG Matrix is, and some of the components included, we have to figure out well what are our strategies going to be. There's a number of different things that we can do to develop an actual strategy related to these areas. So lets identify some of those strategies. What we can do, we can build market share. We can execute what we call a hold strategy. We can go with a harvest strategy. Or we can divest. And so really quickly, building market share means that we're going to make additional investment. We're going to increase our investment in this particular product. Hold we're going to do what we call maintain the status quo. We pretty much do nothing. Harvest, we're actually going to go ahead and reduce our financial support. And so with build market share we're investing. Harvest we're reducing investments. Maybe not eliminating them altogether, but we're going to reduce the amount that we put into the product for advertising, promotion, and those different sorts of things. And then lastly divest, we eliminate these. And so looking at these strategies and applying them to the BCG Matrix, the first thing that we do is, dogs we eliminate those. They're sucking up a lot of cash. We don't necessarily want to invest in them. Remember we have very small positions to begin with. It's going to take so much just to generate any type of market share. And truthfully it's a low growth market, very competitive, it's declining, we don't necessarily want to be there. Now the problem though is the question marks and the problem children. Now technically we can eliminate these. We can go ahead and divest from our position. But truthfully you don't know if they're going to be profitable. You don't know if they can turn into starts, and that's what the goal is. To get your question marks or problem children into stars. And so to do that, you're going to maintain or build market share. So you have two options really. Either you turn you put a little investment in them to figure out if they can potentially be a star or you get rid of them so you can use your financial resources to put towards something else. Now with regards to stars, you can do a couple different things. Usually you would execute a hold strategy. You can also utilize a build market share strategy. Once again you're in a high growth rate so you can certainly carve out a bigger piece of the market for yourself. You can just hold, you are the dominant player in the market so simply we're going to maintain the status quo. That's certainly an option. Now eventually starts become cash cows. With cash cows you usually engage in a harvest strategy. Meaning we reduce financial support. The product is already going to sell itself. It doesn't make sense if we continue to put more advertising dollars into it. Instead our focus here is on generate as much cash flow as possible. Kind of milking this thing for all of its worth. Thus the turn cash cow. And so those are the strategies that you would use depending upon which area your product lies in the BCG Matrix. So once again, you certainly have to consider the market share. What do you control related to this market specifically? But also, what is the market growth like? As a way of determining how are we going to allocate resources.

Overview

To use the chart, analysts plot a scatter graph to rank the business units (or products) on the basis of their relative market shares and growth rates.

  • Cash cows is where a company has high market share in a slow-growing industry. These units typically generate cash in excess of the amount of cash needed to maintain the business. They are regarded as staid and boring, in a "mature" market, yet corporations value owning them due to their cash-generating qualities. They are to be "milked" continuously with as little investment as possible, since such investment would be wasted in an industry with low growth. Cash "milked" is used to fund stars and question marks, that are expected to become cash cows some time in the future.[6]
  • Dogs, more charitably called pets, are units with low market share in a mature, slow-growing industry. These units typically "break even", generating barely enough cash to maintain the business's market share. Though owning a break-even unit provides the social benefit of providing jobs and possible synergies that assist other business units, from an accounting point of view such a unit is worthless, not generating cash for the company. They depress a profitable company's return on assets ratio, used by many investors to judge how well a company is being managed. Dogs, it is thought, should be sold off once short-time harvesting has been maximized.[6]
  • Question marks (also known as a problem child or Wild dogs) are businesses operating with a low market share in a high-growth market. They are a starting point for most businesses. Question marks have a potential to gain market share and become stars, and eventually cash cows when market growth slows. If question marks do not succeed in becoming a market leader, then after perhaps years of cash consumption, they will degenerate into dogs when market growth declines. When shift from question mark to star is unlikely, the BCG matrix suggests divesting the question mark and repositioning its resources more effectively in the remainder of the corporate portfolio.[6] Question marks must be analyzed carefully in order to determine whether they are worth the investment required to grow market share.
  • Stars are units with a high market share in a fast-growing industry. They are graduated question marks with a market- or niche-leading trajectory, for example: amongst market share front-runners in a high-growth sector, and/or having a monopolistic or increasingly dominant unique selling proposition with burgeoning/fortuitous proposition drive(s) from: novelty, fashion/promotion (e.g. newly prestigious celebrity-branded fragrances), customer loyalty (e.g. greenfield or military/gang enforcement backed, and/or innovative, grey-market/illicit retail of addictive drugs, for instance the British East India Company's, late-1700s opium-based Qianlong Emperor embargo-busting, Canton System), goodwill (e.g. monopsonies) and/or gearing (e.g. oligopolies, for instance Portland cement producers near boomtowns),[citation needed] etc. The hope is that stars become next cash cows.
Stars require high funding to fight competitors and maintain their growth rate. When industry growth slows, if they remain a niche leader or are amongst the market leaders, stars become cash cows; otherwise, they become dogs due to low relative market share.

As a particular industry matures and its growth slows, all business units become either cash cows or dogs. The natural cycle for most business units is that they start as question marks, then turn into stars. Eventually, the market stops growing; thus, the business unit becomes a cash cow. At the end of the cycle, the cash cow turns into a dog.

As BCG stated in 1970:

Only a diversified company with a balanced portfolio can use its strengths to truly capitalize on its growth opportunities. The balanced portfolio has:

  • stars whose high share and high growth assure the future;
  • cash cows that supply funds for that future growth; and
  • question marks to be converted into stars with the added funds.

Practical use

To be successful, a company should have a portfolio of products with different growth rates and different market shares. The portfolio composition is a function of the balance between cash flows. High growth products require cash inputs to grow. Low growth products should generate excess cash. Both kinds are needed simultaneously.

— Bruce Henderson[7]

For each product or service, the 'area' of the circle represents the value of its sales. The growth–share matrix thus offers a "map" of the organization's product (or service) strengths and weaknesses, at least in terms of current profitability, as well as the likely cashflows. Common spreadsheet applications can be used to generate the matrix. In addition, designated online tools are available.

The need which prompted this idea was, indeed, that of managing cash-flow. It was reasoned that one of the main indicators of cash generation was relative market share, and one which pointed to cash usage was that of market growth rate.

Relative market share

This indicates likely cash generation, because the higher the share the more cash will be generated. As a result of 'economies of scale' (a basic assumption of the BCG Matrix), it is assumed that these earnings will grow faster the higher the share. The exact measure is the brand's share relative to its largest competitor. Thus, if the brand had a share of 20 percent, and the largest competitor had the same, the ratio would be 1:1. If the largest competitor had a share of 60 percent, however, the ratio would be 1:3, implying that the organization's brand was in a relatively weak position. If the largest competitor only had a share of 5 percent, the ratio would be 4:1, implying that the brand owned was in a relatively strong position, which might be reflected in profits and cash flows. If this technique is used in practice, this scale is logarithmic, not linear.

On the other hand, exactly what is a high relative share is a matter of some debate. The best evidence is that the most stable position (at least in fast-moving consumer goods markets) is for the brand leader to have a share double that of the second brand, and triple that of the third. Brand leaders in this position tend to be very stable—and profitable; the Rule of 123.

The selection of the relative market share metric was based upon its relationship to the experience curve. The market leader would have greater experience curve benefits, which delivers a cost leadership advantage.

Another reason for choosing relative market share, rather than just profits, is that it carries more information than just cash flow. It shows where the brand is positioned against its main competitors, and indicates where it might be likely to go in the future. It can also show what type of marketing activities might be expected to be effective. [citation needed]

Market growth rate

Rapidly growing in rapidly growing markets, are what organizations strive for; but, as we have seen, the penalty is that they are usually net cash users – they require investment. The reason for this is often because the growth is being 'bought' by the high investment, in the reasonable expectation that a high market share will eventually turn into a sound investment in future profits. The theory behind the matrix assumes, therefore, that a higher growth rate is indicative of accompanying demands on investment. The cut-off point is usually chosen as 10 per cent per annum. Determining this cut-off point, the rate above which the growth is deemed to be significant (and likely to lead to extra demands on cash) is a critical requirement of the technique; and one that, again, makes the use of the growth–share matrix problematical in some product areas. What is more, the evidence, from fast-moving consumer goods markets at least, is that the most typical pattern is of very low growth, less than 1 per cent per annum. This is outside the range normally considered in BCG Matrix work, which may make application of this form of analysis unworkable in many markets. [citation needed] Where it can be applied, however, the market growth rate says more about the brand position than just its cash flow. It is a good indicator of that market's strength, of its future potential (of its 'maturity' in terms of the market life-cycle), and also of its attractiveness to future competitors. It can also be used in growth analysis.

Critical evaluation

While theoretically useful, and widely used, several academic studies have called into question whether using the growth–share matrix actually helps businesses succeed, and the model has since been removed from some major marketing textbooks.[8][9] One study (Slater and  Zwirlein, 1992) which looked at 129 firms found that those who follow portfolio planning models like the BCG matrix had lower shareholder returns.

There are further criticisms to the BCG Matrix. The Matrix defines dogs as having low market share and relatively low market growth rate.[10]

Misuse

As originally practiced by the Boston Consulting Group,[11] the matrix was used in situations where it could be applied for graphically illustrating a portfolio composition as a function of the balance between cash flows.[3] If used with this degree of sophistication its use would still be valid. However, later practitioners have tended to over-simplify its messages.[citation needed] In particular, the later application of the names (problem children, stars, cash cows and dogs) has tended to overshadow all else—and is often what most students, and practitioners, remember.

Such simplistic use contains at least two major problems:

  • 'Minority applicability'. The cashflow techniques are only applicable to a very limited number of markets (where growth is relatively high, and a definite pattern of product life-cycles can be observed, such as that of ethical pharmaceuticals). In the majority of markets, use may give misleading results.
  • 'Milking cash cows'. Perhaps the worst implication of the later developments is that the (brand leader) cash cows should be milked to fund new brands. This is not what research into the fast-moving consumer goods markets has shown to be the case. The brand leader's position is the one, above all, to be defended, not least since brands in this position will probably outperform any number of newly launched brands. Such brand leaders will, of course, generate large cash flows; but they should not be 'milked' to such an extent that their position is jeopardized. In any case, the chance of the new brands achieving similar brand leadership may be slim—certainly far less than the popular perception of the Boston Matrix would imply.

Perhaps the most important danger[11] is, however, that the apparent implication of its four-quadrant form is that there should be balance of products or services across all four quadrants; and that is, indeed, the main message that it is intended to convey. Thus, money must be diverted from 'cash cows' to fund the 'stars' of the future, since 'cash cows' will inevitably decline to become 'dogs'. There is an almost mesmeric inevitability about the whole process. It focuses attention, and funding, on to the 'stars'. It presumes, and almost demands, that 'cash cows' will turn into 'dogs'.

The reality is that it is only the 'cash cows' that are really important—all the other elements are supporting actors. It is a foolish vendor who diverts funds from a 'cash cow' when these are needed to extend the life of that 'product'. Although it is necessary to recognize a 'dog' when it appears (at least before it bites you) it would be foolish in the extreme to create one in order to balance up the picture. The vendor, who has most of their products in the 'cash cow' quadrant, should consider themselves fortunate indeed, and an excellent marketer, although they might also consider creating a few stars as an insurance policy against unexpected future developments and, perhaps, to add some extra growth. There is also a common misconception that 'dogs' are a waste of resources. In many markets 'dogs' can be considered loss-leaders that while not themselves profitable will lead to increased sales in other profitable areas.

Alternatives

As with most marketing techniques, there are a number of alternative offerings vying with the growth–share matrix although this appears to be the most widely used. The next most widely reported technique is that developed by McKinsey and General Electric, which is a three-cell by three-cell matrix—using the dimensions of 'industry attractiveness' and 'business strengths'. This approaches some of the same issues as the growth–share matrix but from a different direction and in a more complex way (which may be why it is used less, or is at least less widely taught). Both growth-share matrix and Industry Attractiveness-Business Strength matrix developed by McKinsey and General Electric, are criticized for being static as they portray businesses as they exist at one point in time. Business environment is subject to constant changes, hence, businesses evolve over time. The Life Cycle-Competitive Strength Matrix was introduced to overcome these deficiences and better identify "developing winners" or potential "losers".[6] A more practical approach is that of the Boston Consulting Group's Advantage Matrix, which the consultancy reportedly used itself though it is little known amongst the wider population.

Other uses

The initial intent of the growth–share matrix was to evaluate business units, but the same evaluation can be made for product lines or any other cash-generating entities. This should only be attempted for real lines that have a sufficient history to allow some prediction; if the corporation has made only a few products and called them a product line, the sample variance will be too high for this sort of analysis to be meaningful.

References

  1. ^ "Fancy BCG Matrix". Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  2. ^ Stern, Carl W.; Deimler, Michael S. (2006). The Boston Consulting Group On Strategy: Classic Concepts and New Perspectives: Second Edition. New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-75722-5.
  3. ^ a b Henderson, Bruce D. "The Product Portfolio". Retrieved 16 May 2013.
  4. ^ Richard Godfrey, Strategic Management: A Critical Introduction (London and New York: Routledge, 2016).
  5. ^ "What Is the Growth Share Matrix?". Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Pearce, John A. (2000). Strategic management : formulation, implementation, and control. Robinson, Richard B. (Richard Braden), 1947- (7th ed.). Boston: Irwin/McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-229075-7. OCLC 41488602.
  7. ^ Henderson, Bruce. "The Product Portfolio". Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  8. ^ Competitor-oriented Objectives: The Myth of Market Share http://cogprints.org/5196/1/myth_of_market_share.pdf See discussion on page 14.
  9. ^ J. Scott Armstrong and Roderick J. Brodie (1994). "Effects of portfolio planning methods on decision making: experimental results" (PDF). International Journal of Research in Marketing. 11 (1): 73–84. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.708.5557. doi:10.1016/0167-8116(94)90035-3. S2CID 11220583. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-20.
  10. ^ Duica, Andrea (July 2014). "The rise and fall of B.C.G. Matrix" (PDF). PROCEEDINGS OF THE 8th INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE. 1: 3.
  11. ^ a b the Rule of 123 Archived 2006-10-03 at the Wayback Machine
This page was last edited on 14 April 2024, at 23:37
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