How is BCG Growth-Share Matrix applied in real-world business decisions?
Where it shows up in practice
In practice, the BCG growth-share matrix classifies a firm's business units (or products) on two axes: market growth rate and relative market share. The four quadrants — Stars, Cash Cows, Question Marks, and Dogs — guide resource allocation across a portfolio. Application questions reward students who can move from the definition to a concrete decision.
The framework you should know
Stars (high growth, high share) lead growing markets and warrant aggressive investment to maintain leadership. Cash Cows (low growth, high share) generate excess cash that funds the rest of the portfolio. Question Marks (high growth, low share) require selective investment — bet on those that can become Stars, divest the others. Dogs (low growth, low share) typically should be harvested or divested unless they serve a strategic role. The model assumes that high relative share confers cost advantage through experience effects, and that mature markets generate cash because investment needs decline.
An applied example
A diversified consumer goods firm uses the matrix to defend the case that profits from a mature household-cleaning brand (Cash Cow) should fund growth investment in a fast-growing health-food brand (Star), with selective bets on a portfolio of Question Mark startups, while a fading legacy brand (Dog) is sold to a smaller specialist owner.
What to watch out for
The BCG matrix oversimplifies by reducing strategy to two axes. Markets with low overall growth can still hide profitable segments, and relative share is not always a proxy for cost advantage. Modern portfolio analysis uses richer multi-factor models.
How a good analyst evaluates the result
Use BCG as a conversation starter for resource allocation, not as a substitute for business-by-business strategic thinking. The labels matter less than the discipline of confronting the portfolio together.
Source basis: Open Textbook Library: Risk Management for Enterprises and Individuals