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The BCG matrix

IB Business Management • Unit 6

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📊 What is the BCG matrix?

Big Idea: The BCG (Boston Consulting Group) matrix is a 2×2 grid that helps businesses manage their product portfolio by classifying products based on market share and market growth. 🧮

It helps answer: Which products should we invest in? Which should we drop?

⭐🐕 The four quadrants

⭐ Stars (high share + high growth)

  • Market leaders in a fast-growing market
  • Generate high revenue BUT need heavy investment to maintain position
  • Strategy: invest to keep them growing — they are the future cash cows

🐄 Cash cows (high share + low growth)

  • Market leaders in a mature (slow-growing) market
  • Generate lots of cash with little investment needed
  • Strategy: milk them — use the profits to fund Stars and Question Marks

❓ Question marks (low share + high growth)

  • Small share in a fast-growing market — potential but uncertain
  • Need heavy investment to grow share, but might fail
  • Strategy: invest selectively or divest — decide carefully

🐕 Dogs (low share + low growth)

  • Small share in a stagnant or declining market
  • Generate little cash and have little future potential
  • Strategy: divest or discontinue — unless they serve a niche

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🔄 How to use the BCG matrix

  • Analyse the whole product portfolio — not just one product
  • A healthy portfolio has a mix: cash cows funding stars and promising question marks
  • Too many dogs = the business needs to innovate
  • No stars = the business has no future growth products
  • Helps prioritise where to invest and where to cut
Example: A hotel chain might classify its luxury suites as a Star (high share, growing market), standard rooms as a Cash Cow (high share, stable market), and a new budget range as a Question Mark.

⚠️ Limitations

  • Only uses two measures — market share and market growth (ignores profit, brand strength, etc.)
  • Assumes high market share = high profitability (not always true)
  • Hard to accurately measure market share and growth in some industries
  • Static snapshot — products move between quadrants over time
  • 'Dogs' may still be valuable for brand completeness or niche markets

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