Growth Planner

The Ansoff Matrix, often called the Product/Market Expansion Grid, is a two-by-two framework used by management teams and the analyst community to help plan and evaluate growth initiatives. In particular, the tool helps stakeholders conceptualize the level of risk associated with different growth strategies.


    Market Penetration – The concept of increasing sales of existing products into an existing market. The least risky, in relative terms, is market penetration.

    When employing a market penetration strategy, management seeks to sell more of its existing products into markets that they’re familiar with and where they have existing relationships. Typical execution strategies include: - Increasing marketing efforts or streamlining distribution processes - Decreasing prices to attract new customers within the market segment - Acquiring a competitor in the same market

    Market Development – Focuses on selling existing products into new markets

    A market development strategy is the next least risky because it does not require significant investment in R&D or product development. Rather, it allows a management team to leverage existing products and take them to a different market. Approaches include: - Catering to a different customer segment or target demographic - Entering a new domestic market (regional expansion) - Entering into a foreign market (international expansion)

    Product Development – Focuses on introducing new products to an existing market

    A business that firmly has the ears of a particular market or target audience may look to expand its share of wallet from that customer base. Think of it as a play on brand loyalty, which may be achieved in a variety of ways, including: - Investing in R&D to develop an altogether new product(s). - Acquiring the rights to produce and sell another firm’s product(s). - Creating a new offering by branding a white-label product that’s actually produced by a third party.