3.3.3

Product Portfolio & The Boston Matrix

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Product Portfolio

A product portfolio is the full range of products and services that a company offers. Having a wide range of products can be good for a business, but it can make it harder to make business decisions.

Complexity

Complexity

  • Deciding which products or services to invest in can become more difficult and maintaining all the products or services can be difficult.
  • In 2009, General Motors went bankrupt. it was offering 9 different brands of cars in a price range between $20,000 and $30,000. Toyota was only offering two.
  • It would have been harder to make (manufacture) all these different cars and it probably made business decisions more difficult.

The Boston Matrix

The Boston matrix is a way for firms to analyse their product portfolios. It organises products into 4 categories based on two features - market share (% of market sales) and market growth (how fast the market is growing).

Stars

Stars

  • Stars are products (or services) in a portfolio that have a high market share in a fast growing market.
Cash Cows

Cash Cows

  • Cash Cows are products (or services) with a high market share in a slow growing market.
Problem Children (or question marks)

Problem Children (or question marks)

  • Question marks or problem children are products (or services) with a low market share in a fast growing market.
Dogs

Dogs

  • Dogs are products (or services) with a low market share in a slow growing market.
Using the Boston Matrix

Using the Boston Matrix

  • Businesses usually want to have a diversified portfolio because it means not all of their eggs are in one basket, and this reduces risk. However, if all of your products are Stars or Cash Cows, that may be a good thing.
  • It can help allocate investment. Profit from stars can be used to invest in marketing for products that are problem children. This can help problem children to become stars.
Jump to other topics
1

Understanding Business Activity

1.1

Business Activity

1.2

Classification of Businesses

1.3

Enterprise, Business Growth & Size

1.4

Types of Business Organisation

1.5

Business Objectives & Stakeholder Objectives

2

People in Business

3

Marketing

3.1

Marketing & the Market

3.2

Market Research

3.3

Marketing Mix

3.4

Legal Controls

4

Operations Management

5

Financial Information & Decisions

6

External Influences on Business Activity

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