Why would two companies in
the same industry, with the same financial performance, command vastly
different valuations? The answer often comes down to how much each business is
likely to grow in the future.
The problem is that a lot of
successful businesses reach a point where their growth starts to slow as the
company matures. In fact, the price of doing a great job carving out a unique
niche is that the specialty that made you successful can start to hold you
back.
If you make the world’s
greatest $5,000 wine fridge, you may have a successful, profitable business
until you run out of people willing to spend $5,000 to keep their wine cool.
Demonstrating how your
business is likely to grow in the future is one of the keys to driving a
premium price for your company when it comes time to sell. To brainstorm how to
grow beyond the niche that got you started, consider the Ansoff Matrix. It was
first published in the Harvard Business Review in 1957 but remains a helpful
framework for business owners today.
Sometimes called the
Product/Market Expansion Grid, the Ansoff Matrix shows four ways that
businesses can grow, and it can help you think through the risks associated
with each option.
Imagine a square divided
into four quadrants representing your four growth choices, which include
selling… 1. existing products to existing customers, 2. new products to
existing customers, 3. existing products to new markets, and 4. new products to
new markets.
The choices above are
presented from least to most risky. In a smaller business, with few dollars to
gamble, focusing your attention on the first two options will give you the
lowest risk options for growth.
Existing products to
existing customers
It’s natural to feel like
you’re being greedy when you go back to the same customers for more of their
dollars, but the opposite can often be true. Your best customers are usually
the ones who know and like you the most and are often pleased to find out that
you – someone they trust – are offering something they need.
Greg is a hardware store
owner who came to understand the Ansoff Matrix. Greg earns a 150% mark up on
cutting keys but his cutter was hidden in a corner of the store where nobody
could see it. As a result, he didn’t cut many keys. One day, Greg decided to
move the key cutter and position it directly behind the cash register so
everyone paying for his or her hardware could see the machine. Customers
started seeing the cutter and realized – often to their pleasant surprise –
that Greg cut keys.
Not surprisingly, Greg
started selling a lot more keys to his loyal customers. The key cutter didn’t
woo many new customers, but it did increase his overall revenue per customer.
If you want to sell more of
your existing products to your existing customers, draw up a simple chart of
your products and services. Don’t be afraid to dust off those old products that
you haven’t paid much attention to lately. List your best customers’ names down
one side of the paper and your products across the top. Then cross-reference
your customer list with your product list to identify opportunities to sell
your best customers more of your existing products.
New Products to Existing
Customers
Another approach to growth
is to sell new products to existing customers. For example, there is a BMW
dealership owner in the Midwest whose typical
customer is a family patriarch in his forties. When he felt like he had
saturated the market for well-heeled forty-something men in his trading area,
he thought about what other products he could sell his existing customers. But
instead of defining his customer as the forty-something man, he decided to
think of his customer as the financially successful family and his market as
their driveway.
Instead of trying to sell
more BMWs into a market of diminishing returns, he bought a Chrysler dealership
so he could sell minivans to the spouses of his BMW buyers. He then realized
that a lot of his customers had kids in their teens so he bought a Kia
dealership to sell the family a third, inexpensive car.
Once you become successful,
it can be tempting to sit back and enjoy your success. But in order to drive up
the value of your business, you need to be able to demonstrate how you can
grow, and the least risky strategy will be to figure out what else you could
sell to your existing customers.
If you are curious to see
how your growth stacks up and if you're building a business you could sell one
day, take the 13 minute Sellability Score questionnaire: http://www.sellabilityscore.com/sunbelt-advisors-bay-area/joan-young
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