"Examples of growth strategy goals include increasing market share and revenue, acquiring assets, and improving the organization's products or services."
--Gartner
In general, a growth strategy means thinking outside the norm. Marketers need to first work with the strategic team to understand the company's growth goals. They may include:
What is the opportunity in your existing market? What does it cost you to get a new customer/client?
Understanding your category, the size of the potential market, and having a realistic understanding of your place in the market will set you up to succeed.
Once you know where you belong, it is time to take the growth goals you have set (or have been set for you) and start evaluating how you can achieve further market penetration.
Launching new products or services into previously unexplored markets, while riskier than increasing market penetration, may be part of your growth strategy.
Using metrics to understand your client's needs and wants and sharing that information with the executive, sales, and customer success teams is critical in developing and implementing a growth strategy.
Diversification opportunities include selling new/different products or features to your customers. It also includes exploring new segments of your vertical. And it may include investigating new verticals.
When you consider diversification, work with other members of the team to:
Product development can extend your offering to existing clients and potentially attract new customers. Working as a team, marketing, sales, and product development need to identify and quantify the value and expenses involved carefully.
Treating the new product or service as a start-up and viewing it with a fresh set of eyes will help you identify the best path forward. Consider:
Marketing is a critical contributor to a growth strategy. Working closely with other departments will help ensure success once all of the puzzle pieces are in place.