Glossary of Growth and Strategy Terms
Every growth journey begins not with a grand idea, but with a shared understanding of the language used to build it. Too often, beginners stumble not from lack of ambition, but from misunderstanding core terms—mistaking “market development” for “product innovation” or confusing “diversification” with “expansion.” This glossary cuts through that noise. I’ve spent years helping teams align around strategy, and I’ve seen how a single misused term can derail planning. That’s why clarity isn’t a luxury—it’s the foundation.
This section defines key vocabulary from the book, not as isolated definitions, but as tools shaped by real-world use. You’ll find explanations that reflect actual business decisions, not textbook abstractions. When you finish, you’ll speak the language of strategy with confidence—ready to map, plan, and execute with precision.
Core Growth Strategy Concepts
Market Penetration
Increasing market share for an existing product in an existing market. It’s the least risky strategy, focusing on gaining more customers, selling more units, or raising prices. Common tactics include promotions, loyalty programs, and competitive pricing.
Market Development
Expanding an existing product into a new market. This could be a new geographic region, a new customer segment, or a different distribution channel. Success depends on understanding the new market’s needs and adapting your go-to-market approach.
Product Development
Creating new or improved products for an existing market. This strategy leverages your customer base’s trust and habits. It requires innovation, testing, and feedback loops—especially critical in fast-changing industries.
Diversification
Entering a new market with a new product. It’s the most complex and risky strategy. Requires significant investment, new capabilities, and often, a shift in company culture. Can be related (leveraging existing strengths) or unrelated (venture into a completely new space).
Key Strategic Elements
Growth Strategy Framework
A structured approach to planning business expansion. The Ansoff Matrix is one example, but others exist. These frameworks help leaders evaluate risk, align teams, and make deliberate choices—rather than react to opportunities as they arise.
Strategic Planning
The process of defining a company’s strategy, allocating resources, and setting measurable goals. It’s not a one-time event. Effective planning includes continuous review, testing assumptions, and adapting based on performance data.
Market Research
Data collection and analysis about customers, competitors, and market trends. Essential for validating assumptions in each Ansoff quadrant. Quantitative (surveys, sales data) and qualitative (interviews, user testing) methods together form a complete picture.
Customer Segmentation
Dividing a market into groups with similar characteristics—demographics, behaviors, needs. Critical when evaluating market development or product development. Helps target messaging, pricing, and product features effectively.
Common Pitfalls and Clarifications
Confusing Diversification with Market Expansion
Many assume “new market” means “new customers.” But if your product changes, it’s diversification. If only the market changes, it’s market development. A retail chain opening in a new country with the same products? Market development. Opening a new brand in a different industry? Diversification.
Assessing Risk in Strategy Selection
Risk isn’t just financial. It includes operational disruption, cultural resistance, or brand dilution. Market penetration carries the lowest risk, diversification the highest. Always pair strategy choice with a risk assessment—ask: What can go wrong? How bad would the impact be?
Measuring Strategy Success
Each strategy needs its own KPIs. Market penetration: market share growth. Market development: new customer acquisition rate. Product development: time-to-market, product adoption rate. Diversification: revenue contribution from new segment.
Ansoff Matrix Terms and Business Strategy Definitions
Below is a concise reference of terms you’ll encounter throughout the book, with practical context.
| Term | Definition | Real-World Example |
|---|---|---|
| Market Penetration | Growing within existing markets | A coffee shop increases loyalty points to boost repeat visits. |
| Market Development | Expanding to new markets with existing product | A U.S. software company launches in Germany using the same platform. |
| Product Development | Creating new products for existing customers | An app that tracks sleep adds a meditation feature for users. |
| Diversification | New product in a new market | A fitness brand launches a line of organic protein bars in a new market. |
| Related Diversification | Entering a new market using existing capabilities | A solar panel company opens an electric vehicle charging network. |
| Unrelated Diversification | Entering a market with no current synergy | A food company acquires a mobile gaming startup. |
FAQs: Growth Strategy Glossary
What’s the difference between market development and product development?
Market development means you keep the product the same but sell it to a new group of customers. Product development means you keep the same customers but introduce a new or improved product. The key is which variable changes: the market or the product.
Can a business pursue multiple strategies at once?
Yes—but with caution. Most companies focus on one primary strategy at a time. However, a larger organization might run market penetration in one division while pursuing product development in another. Balance is key: don’t overextend resources.
Why is the Ansoff Matrix still relevant today?
It forces clarity. In a world of constant options, it cuts through noise by asking two simple questions: “Do we have a new product or market?” and “Which one?” It’s a mental model that prevents guesswork and aligns teams.
Is diversification always risky?
Not inherently—but it’s riskier than the other paths. The danger lies in losing focus or overextending. Related diversification—where there’s synergy—carries lower risk. Unrelated diversification requires deep due diligence and often a new leadership team.
How do I know which strategy to pick?
Ask: What can we reasonably do with our current resources, skills, and data? Market penetration is safest. Product development builds on existing customer trust. Market development depends on new market readiness. Diversification demands the most preparation—and the highest tolerance for uncertainty.
Can a startup use the Ansoff Matrix?
Absolutely. Startups often begin with market penetration—refining their product and gaining early adopters. As they grow, they may explore product development or market development. The matrix helps them avoid jumping into diversification too soon, which is a common early failure.