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Drawing a new road map for growth

New findings show how large and small companies grow—and reveal the startling performance of emerging-market players.

In The Granularity of Growth,1 we used insights from a proprietary database of large companies to argue that executives need to pursue growth in multiple ways. We disaggregated growth into three drivers: portfolio momentum, or the market growth of the segments in a company’s portfolio; M&A; and market share gains. The exercise showed us that companies outperforming their peers on two or three of these drivers grow faster and achieve better returns than those that outperform on just one. Now, three years later, we can reiterate our advice with more assurance because it’s clear that these multi-faceted growers have withstood the test of the financial crisis and the economic downturn—and continued to outperform.

That’s the first of three findings we share in this research update, which reflects the growth of our database from some 400 companies in 2007 to more than 700 today, as well as the addition of a significant set of smaller companies with annual revenues of less than $3 billion. The second finding is that companies from emerging markets are outgrowing competitors from developed ones at a startling pace. The third is that the smallest companies in our database, with revenues of less than $1 billion, are growing by increasing their market share to a much greater extent than larger companies are. For the latter, the role of share gain is marginal or even negative.

Companies that fared better in the downturn grew in multiple ways

The downturn had a dramatic effect on the global GDP growth rate, which swung from 10 percent in 2007–08 to –5 percent in 2008–09. The global corporations in our database had an even gloomier experience: their average topline growth nosedived from 15 percent in 2007–08 to –11 percent in 2008–09. Corporate growth was harder hit than GDP growth, in part because government spending increased, dampening the effects of falling private investment and consumption on GDP.

Amid the gloom and doom, the top-quartile companies in our database on two or more of the three drivers of growth—portfolio momentum, M&A, and market share gain—stood out as relative winners. Before the downturn, they enjoyed a 24-percentage-point differential in their compound annual growth rate (CAGR) against the poor performers. During the downturn, outperformers boasted a more than 3-point advantage (Exhibit 1).

For companies defining their growth ambitions, this consistent outperformance underscores the importance of examining how they are doing on all three sources of growth and how they can raise their game.

Companies from emerging markets are growing much faster

Revenues are increasing much more quickly for companies that have their headquarters in emerging economies than for their counterparts from developed economies—overall, at home, in advanced economies, and in other emerging markets (Exhibit 2). The difference in growth rates is most startling in emerging economies where both categories of companies are off their home turf—30.7 percent growth for business units of those based in emerging markets, compared with 12.6 percent for their counterparts from the developed world. This wide gap suggests that its companies should ask themselves whether they are paying enough attention to emerging markets and allocating sufficient financial and human resources to them. Chances are the answer is no.

It’s less surprising that companies based in advanced economies are being outgrown by those in developing economies in their own home market segments. Growth is, after all, stronger in emerging markets. And in advanced economies—where companies from emerging markets are growing twice as fast as those from the advanced economies themselves—these are often attackers starting from a small base and taking market share.

Indeed, across segments, part of the outperformance may well reflect the fact that companies based in emerging markets are starting from a smaller base. In our database, the average revenue of business units from companies headquartered in developed economies was $5.9 billion, three times larger than the units from emerging economies. This relative size difference held true in emerging markets where both categories of companies compete off their own turf. Still, it’s clear in the numbers that players from emerging markets are serious competitors everywhere; their continued improvement will accentuate the growth challenge for their rivals from developed countries.

Smaller companies exhibit different growth patterns

In The Granularity of Growth, we emphasized that portfolio momentum, coupled with M&A, was much more important for corporate growth than winning market share. This advice still holds for large companies, which usually have significant share positions in reasonably mature markets. For the smallest of the new companies in our database (those with less than $1 billion in revenue), a different growth pattern emerges (Exhibit 3). Share gain represents almost four percentage points of annual growth for them, compared with a very small or negative role for the growth of larger companies.

Intuitively, this should not come as a big surprise. Smaller companies usually grow faster than their industries because they are not constrained by size, and their growth is often based on a new business model they can pursue without fear of cannibalizing revenues. Still, there may be a lesson for large corporations: study the action among smaller companies and consider whether they might be the right peer set for benchmarking the growth drivers of your smaller divisions. Looking through this new lens may help leaders set targets that stretch their ambitions yet are still realistic.

About the Authors

Sumit Dora is a consultant in McKinsey’s Gurgaon Knowledge Center, Sven Smit is a director in the Amsterdam office, and Patrick Viguerie is a director in the Atlanta office.

Notes

1 Mehrdad Baghai, Sven Smit, and Patrick Viguerie, The Granularity of Growth, first published in 2007, by Cyan Books, and in 2008, by Wiley.

Recommend (48)
  • 3 MAY 2011
    Cy Heidari
    CEO
    ValueTelligence
    New York, NY USA

    ...Companies in emerging markets...are familiar with the regional culture and political economy of the regions where they are operating, which puts them in a highly competitive position that is difficult to break...

    .
    Cy Heidari
    CEO
    ValueTelligence
    New York, NY USA

    Companies that can see the accumulation of clouds in the sky before the storm starts can prepare better to deal with it. Since those companies were prepared and had a plan to deal with the economic downturn, they will outperform other companies who did not have a plan and did not prepare. Companies in emerging markets do better than the companies of developed economies because they are familiar with the regional culture and political economy of the regions where they are operating, which puts them in a highly competitive position that is difficult to break, and these competitive advantages are cost-free to these companies. In order for the companies in the developed economies compete with the companies in emerging economies, they should developed a very flexible game plan and be ready to adjust decisively when needed.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2011
    Pramod Agarwal
    Vice President Finance
    Procter & Gamble
    Singapore

    ...Wall Street needs to immerse themselves a lot more into emerging markets, understand the power of growth and power of consumer spending, and appropriately reflect it in their risk/reward model....

    .
    Pramod Agarwal
    Vice President Finance
    Procter & Gamble
    Singapore

    Interesting article and completely agree with the findings. I think the Wall Street needs to immerse themselves a lot more into emerging markets, understand the power of growth and power of consumer spending, and appropriately reflect it in their risk/reward model. This will be key to rebalancing resources and fully exploiting the emerging-market opportunity.

    .
  • 18 APRIL 2011
    Folarin Mabawonku
    Head, Strategy
    Worldbay Limited
    Leeds, UK

    ...whatever state the global economy is, if an organization pursues a new game strategy, they will definitely grow and gain market share.

    .
    Folarin Mabawonku
    Head, Strategy
    Worldbay Limited
    Leeds, UK

    i think this write-up failed to look at social media companies that have used new game strategies, which have helped them to win market share. They also grew organically while some didn’t and were involved in acquisitions instead. My opinion is that whatever state the global economy is, if an organization pursues a new game strategy, they will definitely grow and gain market share.

    .
  • 18 APRIL 2011
    Abiodun Akintayo
    Manager Strategy
    Adroit Continental Professional Services
    Abuja, Nigeria

    ...Also of importance is how long the comparative or competitive advantages held by the emerging economies will stay or be sustained....

    .
    Abiodun Akintayo
    Manager Strategy
    Adroit Continental Professional Services
    Abuja, Nigeria

    Growth is a relative term and it depends largely on the strategy a firm deploys. A key fallout from the global economic crisis is that strategies for business units should be given more focus while also emphasizing corporate strategies. Also of importance is how long the comparative or competitive advantages held by the emerging economies will stay or be sustained. The hegemony of the West is still too strong to beat, if you ask me; Africa is just now rising beyond collecting grants and aid, and developing so-called technical know-how by fighting corruption, graft, red tape, infrastructure problems, diseases, non-existent political structures and institutions. The train is heading toward Africa, and I advise multinational corporations and enterprises to start investing in Africa. The Europeans are proposing Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) between West Africa and the EU, while the United States is proposing the African Investment and Diaspora Act (AIDA).

    .
  • 17 APRIL 2011
    Iqbal Kazi
    Executive Director
    DYL Motorcycles Ltd
    Karachi Pakistan

    Setting up headquarters in the emerging markets will certainly yield better results, as this will show the company’s commitment to stay very long...

    .
    Iqbal Kazi
    Executive Director
    DYL Motorcycles Ltd
    Karachi Pakistan

    Setting up headquarters in the emerging markets will certainly yield better results, as this will show the company’s commitment to stay very long—provided ownership laws are well defined and governments are willing to address the issues of red tapism and corruption.

    .
  • 14 APRIL 2011
    Padmakar Jawadekar
    Director
    PSJ Business Solutions
    Bangalore, India

    ...Inorganic growth, portfolio momentum, and market share growth are sustainable, provided that a company adopts a strategy of achieving cost and price leadership with a major thrust on R&D and a lean approach...

    .
    Padmakar Jawadekar
    Director
    PSJ Business Solutions
    Bangalore, India

    In today’s hyper competitive world, one may observe that companies which work for developing cost and price leadership grow even during times of recession/slow down and remain on a road map of growth for a longer period of time. Inorganic growth, portfolio momentum, and market share growth are sustainable, provided that a company adopts a strategy of achieving cost and price leadership with a major thrust on R&D and a lean approach in managing its entire supply chain.

    .
  • 14 APRIL 2011
    Abhijeet Sharma
    Senior Manager, Research and Retail
    Time Analytics Services
    Bangalore, India

    We are constantly reinforcing the facts for growth in emerging markets but questions on the sustainability of smaller businesses are less often answered....

    .
    Abhijeet Sharma
    Senior Manager, Research and Retail
    Time Analytics Services
    Bangalore, India

    We are constantly reinforcing the facts for growth in emerging markets but questions on the sustainability of smaller businesses are less often answered. Governments in emerging markets have to play a better role to ramp up the existing infrastructure, remove roadblocks such as corruption and red-tape, become sensitive to the needs of middle class, and create an overall favorable environment to support further growth and sustainability. In turn, the organizations have to join hands with local governments to contribute towards the community and become more responsible towards the environment.

    .
  • 14 APRIL 2011
    Jun Huang
    student
    Columbia University
    New York, USA

    ...Big firms are more capable of absorbing costs and integrating resources, thus possibly enjoying a higher growth rate. At an extreme, this may lead to the “Matthew Effects” on market competition....

    .
    Jun Huang
    student
    Columbia University
    New York, USA

    On aggregate, company growth seems to exhibit diminishing return to scale. Parallel to this, I wonder if the data also imply the possible growth advantages of large-scale firms (at least for some industries). Big firms are more capable of absorbing costs and integrating resources, thus possibly enjoying a higher growth rate. At an extreme, this may lead to the “Matthew Effects” on market competition. In fact, the last exhibit in the article seems to suggest that the very large firms have a higher growth rate than their slightly smaller counterparts.

    .
  • 13 APRIL 2011
    Henk-Jan Wesselink
    Hungary

    ...data are up to 2008, though 2009 and 2010 have been very significant ‘shift-years’ across the world. What is the impact of this (if not available, why publish an article in 2011 about something from 2007, updated in 2008?).

    .
    Henk-Jan Wesselink
    Hungary

    I am very excited and inspired by the article—great work. However, and I hope I do not sound too critical, would you please define ‘emerging markets’ here? It is too simple to group the world in two parts, and it would help understand the background a bit more.

    Also, data are up to 2008, though 2009 and 2010 have been very significant ‘shift-years’ across the world. What is the impact of this (if not available, why publish an article in 2011 about something from 2007, updated in 2008?).

    .
  • 13 APRIL 2011
    Thelonious Llamosas
    Consultant
    Tormo & Asociados
    Madrid, España

    What about profit pools? Are those companies with the highest growth rate the most profitable ones?...

    .
    Thelonious Llamosas
    Consultant
    Tormo & Asociados
    Madrid, España

    What about profit pools? Are those companies with the highest growth rate the most profitable ones? Are revenue-oriented companies erasing their profits? Were the stock market values of those companies higher, either before the revenue growth or after it? Is in-this-moment performance linked to revenues or profits?

    .
  • 13 APRIL 2011
    Rahul Singhal
    Strategy Leader
    GE
    India

    ...The need of the hour is for global companies to have separate P&Ls for their respective emerging markets.

    .
    Rahul Singhal
    Strategy Leader
    GE
    India

    Well, most of the points discussed in this article are obvious facts rather than new revelations. Emerging markets is where the growth is because of the nascent state of the markets here, higher consumption, lower entry barriers, etcetera. Companies in developed markets do realize this. It doesn’t matter whether companies have their HQ’s in emerging markets, it’s about the investments and the growth plan they devise. They can very well achieve this by having their HQ still in the home country. The need of the hour is for global companies to have separate P&Ls for their respective emerging markets.

    .
  • 13 APRIL 2011
    Satyabroto Banerji
    Technology Coordinator
    Safety Brigade
    Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

    ...I feel that Swiss corporations have a more balanced approach to growth, which is conservative in the short-term, but which adds more reliable value over the long-term.

    .
    Satyabroto Banerji
    Technology Coordinator
    Safety Brigade
    Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

    Contradictions are possible between growth, risk management, and non-financial considerations. Some organizations for example, may opt to stay away from totalitarian regimes, and from countries with corrupt structures, though they constitute rapidly emerging markets. Growth-related ambition may also have contributed to debacles on Wall Street. I feel that Swiss corporations have a more balanced approach to growth, which is conservative in the short-term, but which adds more reliable value over the long-term.

    .
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