This article is a reprint of Wise Bread's contribution to OPEN Forum from American Express -- where small business owners can get advice from experts and share tips with each other.
Take a lesson about business growth from one of the world's richest entrepreneurs:
I don't try to jump over seven-foot bars; I look around for one-foot bars that I can step over. —Warren Buffet
In 1957, Igor Ansoff, a Russian-American with a PhD in applied mathematics, developed a model that has served as the foundation to corporate growth strategies for more than five decades.
Called the Product-Market Growth Matrix, it established a framework for looking at the risks inherent in business growth. While his analysis isn't as pithy as Buffet's, it helps grade the strategic risks that fall between the one- foot and seven-foot bars.
The principal of the model is simple. It's cheap, easy, and safe to sell stuff that people already want to people you already know. It's expensive, hard, and risky to blaze new trails with new products or services in unknown markets. In between is, well, in between.
While something of a hybrid between Ansoff's and Buffet's advice, here's a summary of growth strategies from the least to most risky.
The easiest, cheapest, safest way to grow your business is to sell more stuff to existing customers because both are known quantities.
Here's how:
This involves grabbing market share by wooing customers away from competitors. It introduces some risk because you're dealing with new faces, but a long as you don't venture into new markets, they should be similar to your existing customers.
Here's how:
In this approach, you expand your product mix with market-proven products and sell them to existing customers.
Here's how:
To wring more sales out of your existing customer base, you can also grow by developing related products. Obviously, this is riskier than adding known products or services because it carries product development risks.
Here's how:
While you might make a case that the product development element of the last strategy carries more risk than moving into new markets, most experts agree that selling to existing markets is far less risky than selling to new ones where you have no experience.
Here's how:
This is the highest risk, highest cost approach to growth because it suffers from both product and market risks. In the case of growth through acquisition, as is often the strategy, it also introduces a variety of financial, cultural, and management risks. It's not a good place for the weak of budget or nerve. Remember, the pioneers were the ones full of arrows.
Here are some examples:
If you want to grow smart, let the big boys spend the time and money to hoist their mass over the high bar while you step lightly over the low hurdles.
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