The roots of organic growth
There
are many paths to growth, and high performers take more than one—supported by
reinforcing capabilities such as advanced analytics and digital
customer-experience management.
Growth is a tonic for most companies. It
attracts talent and creates strategic options while generating financial resources to fund new moves—provided the growth is profitable.
It’s also been harder to come by over the past decade, as a sluggish
macroeconomic environment and accelerating,
technology-driven disruption have ratcheted up pressure on businesses.
Digital technologies and the pace of
competition, however, also open new avenues to organic growth for those
companies that have the capabilities and dexterity to take advantage of them.
Today’s fastest growers, for example, price products in real time; they create
meaningful and positive customer experiences with digital interactions; and
they refine products continually with customer feedback. To understand the
relationship between organic growth approaches, capabilities, and performance
in this environment, we recently surveyed approximately 600 executives at leading companies in
the European Union and North America. We found that companies exhibit three
basic growth tendencies; that an approach combining two or more of these holds particular power in driving growth; that advanced analytics is
an ingredient of standout growth; and that success depends on nurturing a set
of reinforcing capabilities that fit the growth approach.
Three
growth profiles
The corporate growth
goals and the behavior tracked by our survey show that companies can be described as having three broad growth profiles.
Investors have a clear understanding of
sources of growth from existing products and services and squeeze funds from a
variety of areas, such as low-growth initiatives or unproductive costs, to reallocate capital and double down on winners.
Creators build value by developing new
products, services, or business models.
And performers grow
by constantly optimizing core commercial capabilities in sales, pricing, and
marketing.
Understanding each profile is helpful
because leaders tend to fall back on what has worked for them in the past, and
this can often blind them to new growth opportunities. In our experience, companies that
carefully evaluate each growth profile, and make choices based on the strategic
fit, will increase their chances of achieving above-market growth rates.
The
power of the diversified approach
While approximately 60 percent of those
surveyed identified one of the approaches as their primary source of growth,
the largest group in our sample—representing about 40 percent of companies surveyed—were
those that diversified their organic growth portfolio. A disproportionate
number of the companies that grew significantly—at 4 percent greater than the
rate of their sector’s over the past three years—were in this group.
These results make intuitive sense:
companies creating new products or services frequently need to reallocate
capital so they can place their bets, while an exceptional sales force or
top-flight marketing team can accelerate a variety of new product or service
initiatives. Our analysis further showed that companies exhibiting strong
investor and creator tendencies particularly benefited from a diversified
approach to changing their growth trajectory.
The
potential of advanced analytics
Across all the growth lenses, we found
significant potential for an upside in advanced analytics. Even at today’s low
levels of penetration, advanced-analytics capabilities were strongly associated
with the highest levels of
growth, suggesting they will be a critical platform for the next generation of performance.
The importance of reinforcing capabilities
Like a triathlete who needs to develop
different sets of muscles to effectively compete, delivering on a diversified growth strategy requires building the right reinforcing capabilities. Our research indicated that there
are table stakes for growers across all dimensions:
nimble resource reallocation, effective branding, and growth-oriented
organizational culture. There were other areas that, predictably, seemed more
tightly linked with individual strategies. Sales and pricing were key to
faster-growing performers while the ability to develop products and services
differentiated investors and creators.
These capabilities, combined with an understanding
of the options for activating growth, are fundamental to building up a
company’s growth DNA. And, as our research shows, a purposeful approach across
a diverse portfolio of growth strategies increases the odds of success.
By Kabir Ahuja, Liz Hilton Segel, and Jesko Perrey
McKinsey QuarterlyAugust 2017
http://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/marketing-and-sales/our-insights/the-roots-of-organic-growth?cid=other-eml-alt-mkq-mck-oth-1708&hlkid=72a7e381cf8c4ff1b0c4cc2a9748f170&hctky=1627601&hdpid=0b2a6f9c-3e84-4606-a2c1-d4ba80ae4065
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