5 Levers you can pull for explosive growth in your business

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] In a business environment obsessed with short-term business growth strategy, it’s easy to fall into the trap of focussing on tactics that produce the fast results, such as direct response digital marketing. But this approach distracts businesses from putting focus into other tactics that may have a slower delivery but are actually essential for building a sustainable long-term business. The key to balancing the long and short of it, for any CEO or board looking to deliver shareholder value, is to master the activation of the full suite of available growth strategy levers.  For the purposes of this article we are going to assume that growth means an increase in the overall value of a business to shareholders or private owners over a period of time.   ”All brands are smaller than they want to be”Byron Sharp  And we’ll explore a range of tactics B2B and B2C businesses can flex to generate longer term sustained brand growth:     5 Levers You Can Pull for Explosive Growth in Your Business   There are 5 levers you can use as part of a business growth strategy, to grow your business. The balance is between capability (people and culture) and budget (resources) as to the mix of the levers you use to hit growth goals.    Geography – which markets you are in Channel – how you sell to consumers Customer – the types of customers you target Category – your product or service offering M&A – Mergers and Acquisition       Find out how your business can grow by applying the 5 Levers of Growth Book at free30-minute consultation here   1. Geography All businesses market within particular regions and those areas of focus can range from international down to individual suburbs, depending on the scale of the organisation. Large FMCG brands like Coca-Cola sell in most countries of the world, telcos such as Optus or Telstra sell their services to people and businesses all around Australia while dentists have a hyper-local market with most of their customers coming from a few surrounding suburbs. Expanding outside the geography that businesses currently operate in is a fast way to grow their brands and acquire an entirely new set of customers previously outside their reach. To activate this lever of growth, companies should first test if there is demand in new geographic regions and if their existing product or service will have traction with customers there. Once a market opportunity is identified the cost of opening up that new region needs to be established so business leaders can decide if the investment is a viable one that will deliver a return. Moving into the massive Chinese market can be a very attractive proposition, but with high barriers to entry, it can be very expensive, and many businesses have tried and failed. Done well, opening up new geographic markets can deliver fast customer acquisition and new brand growth.   2. Distribution Channel For many businesses, the advent of digital in the early naughties provided new channels to reach customers. Previously limited to retail stores or face-to-face sales for B2B, companies were limited in the ways they could sell to customers. With the rise in the always on customer it is important for businesses to make sure their product or service is easy to buy, by being just a click or walk away from wherever customers are. Always on and omnipresent is the name of the game to make sure customers spend their hard-earned with our brands rather than competitor brands. To test this Growth Lever, organisations need to make sure they have recent customer research that addresses the question of where potential customers want to be able to purchase (what they say they will do) and where they might purchase (what channels they are active in). If customer behaviour insights identify channels that may drive additional sales with existing customers, or acquire new customers entirely, then the business should activate these new distribution channels as soon as feasible. Some of the distribution channels available include;       Two-sided Marketplaces – B2C platforms like ebay and Amazon and B2B platforms like Alibaba and Joor     Three-sided Marketplaces – platforms like Deliveroo where they connect three parties: customers, restaurants and delivery riders     Physical Retail – traditional brick & mortar     Automated Retail – self-service kiosks and stores like AmazonGo      Ecommerce – direct to customer online sales     Social Media Shopping – growing quickly on Instagram and Facebook      Wholesale – establishing a reseller network      White Label Sales – allowing resellers to rebrand your product      Value Added Resellers – working with resellers who might install or customise your software     Personal Selling – face-to-face sales     Sales Outsourcing – using a third party to sell     Multi-Level Marketing – the model whereby independent contractors or distributors also make money by recruiting other contractors to sell    3. Customer Customer retention is vital for business survival and stability, but new customer acquisition is the best way to drive growth. This can be through marketing and advertising that ensures the brand is front and centre when target customers are considering purchasing. But more importantly, using this Growth Lever means finding new customers outside of existing target customers and then targeting them with marketing and advertising to put a brand on their consideration set. Once the existing target market opportunity has been filled, acquiring more customers within that group will have a high CPA (Cost Per Acquisition). A high CPA can be an indicator to look elsewhere  to find new customers to the buying category. By widening the top of the funnel with more prospects, the customer base can be expanded, and revenue grown. Finding different customers to the product or category means a larger prospective market. This could include targeting a different demographic with similar drivers to a business’ customer, particularly if they risk saturation with their core customer. A recent