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Strategy Tools

Strategy Tools: The Ansoff Matrix

Strategy Tools: The Ansoff Matrix

The Ansoff Matrix is a strategic-planning tool that provides a framework to help executives, senior managers, and marketers devise strategies for future growth. It is named after Russian American Igor Ansoff, who came up with the concept. Ansoff suggested that there were effectively only two approaches to developing a growth strategy; through varying what is sold (product growth) and who it is sold to (market growth).

“When we are in peak, we make a ton of money, as soon as we make a ton of money, we are desperately looking for ways to spend it. And we diversify into areas that, frankly, we don’t know how to run very well,” mused Bill Ford, great grandson of Henry. Ford’s story is neither unique nor new and companies often choose sub-optimal growth paths.

Igor Ansoff created the product / market matrix to illustrate the inherent risks in four generic growth strategies:

  1. Market penetration / consumption – the firm seeks to achieve growth with existing products in their current market segments, aiming to increase market share.
  2. Market development – the firm seeks growth by pushing its existing products into new market segments.
  3. Product development – the firm develops new products targeted to its existing market segments.
  4. Diversification – the firm grows by developing new products for new markets.

Ansoff’s Matrix
Ansoff's Matrix

Selecting a Product-Market growth strategy

Market penetration / consumption

Market penetration and consumption covers products that are existent in an existing market. In this strategy, there can be further exploitation of the products without necessarily changing the product or the outlook of the product. This will be possible through the use of promotional methods, putting various pricing policies that may attract more clientele, or one can make the distribution more extensive.

Market penetration or consumption can also be increased is by coming up with various initiatives that will encourage increased usage of the product. A good example is the usage of toothpaste. Research has shown that the toothbrush head influences the amount of toothpaste that one will use. Thus if the head of the toothbrush is bigger it will mean that more toothpaste will be used thus promoting the usage of the toothpaste and eventually leading to more purchase of the toothpaste.

In market penetration / consumption, the risk involved is usually the least since the products are already familiar to the consumers and so is the established market.

Market development

In this strategy, the business sells its existing products to new markets. This can be made possible through further market segmentation to aid in identifying a new clientele base. This strategy assumes that the existing markets have been fully exploited thus the need to venture into new markets. There are various approaches to this strategy, which include: new geographical markets, new distribution channels, new product packaging, and different pricing policies.

Going into new geographies could involve launching the product in a completely different market. A good example is Guinness. This beer had originally been made to be sold in countries that have a colder climate, but now it is also being sold in African countries.

New distribution channels could entail selling the products via e-commerce or mail order. Selling through e-commerce may capture a larger clientele base since we are in a digital era where most people access the internet often. In new product packaging, it means repacking the product in another method or dimension. That way it may attract a different customer base. In different pricing policies, the business could change its prices so as to attract a different customer base or create a new market segment.

Product development

With a product-development growth strategy, a new product is introduced into existing markets. Product development can be from the introduction of a new product in an existing market or it can involve the modification of an existing product. By modifying the product one could change its outlook or presentation, increase the product’s performance or quality. By doing so, it can be more appealing to the existing market. A good example is car manufacturers who offer a range of car parts so as to target the car owners in purchasing additional products.

Diversification

This growth strategy involves an organisation marketing or selling new products to new markets at the same time. It is the most risky strategy as it involves two unknowns:

  • New products are being created and the business does not know the development problems that may occur in the process.
  • There is also the fact that there is a new market being targeted, which will bring the problem of having unknown characteristics.

For a business to take a step into diversification, they need to have their facts right regarding what it expects to gain from the strategy and have a clear assessment of the risks involved. There are two types of diversification – related diversification and unrelated diversification.

In related diversification, the business remains in the same industry in which it is currently operating. For example, a cake manufacturer diversifies into fresh-juice manufacturing. This diversification is within the food industry.

In unrelated diversification, there are usually no previous industry relations or market experiences. One can diversify from a food industry into the personal-care industry. A good example of the unrelated diversification is Richard Branson. He took advantage of the Virgin brand and diversified into various fields such as entertainment, air and rail travel, foods, etc.

Conclusion

The Ansoff matrix gives managers a framework for surveying all the initiatives the business has under way – how many are being pursued in each realm and how much investment is going to each type, and also allows managers to understand the risks and thus probability of success of each initiative.

To use the tool effectively, a company may take its sales initiatives for the next 3-5 years and place them in each of the quadrants in the matrix and analyse which quadrant shows the greatest uplift in sales. If it is in existing products to existing or new markets, or new products to existing products, there should be no cause for alarm. If it is in the new products to new markets quadrant, then this will require a greater effort at greater risk.

Companies that focus on the three quadrants other than diversification find more success as these strategies are built on familiar skills in production, purchasing, sales and marketing. An HBR study found that companies that invested 70% of their resources in core operations i.e. the market penetration quadrant, out-performed those that did not.

A diversification strategy operates in a higher plane of risk than the other three strategies. Superficially attractive and practiced by many companies, it is distracting and absorbs a disproportionately high proportion of managerial and engineering resources due to the lack of familiarity with the new venture.

Sources

  1. Evans, V – “25 need-to-know strategy tools” – FT Publishing – 2014
  2. Anonymous – “Ansoff Matrix” – Strategic Management – Quick MBA – http://www.quickmba.com/strategy/matrix/ansoff/
  3. Anonymous – “What is the Ansoff matrix?” – http://www.ansoffmatrix.com/
  4. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ansoff_Matrix
  5. Nagji, B; Tuff, G – “Managing Your Innovation Portfolio” – Harvard Business Review – 2012 – https://hbr.org/2012/05/managing-your-innovation-portfolio
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Fast Facts

South African retailers have maintained flat margins on lamb and seen declining margins on beef

South African retailers have maintained flat margins on lamb and seen declining margins on beef

  • Beef producers’ share of retail prices has increased from 43% to 45% from 2000 to 2013 while lamb producers’ share has decreased from 55% to 53%
  • Lamb prices have escalated above other meat prices as producers have passed on supplier increases
    • Retailers have been unwilling to cushion these increases
  • Retailers have cushioned an increase in beef producer prices and taken smaller margins
    • Retail prices of beef have risen at a slower rate than producer prices
  • Beef consumption is growing with the rise of the middle class while lamb consumption is declining
  • Demand for beef is higher than lamb due to affordability
    • Retailers are willing to take less margin on beef in order to maintain foot traffic through their stores
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Selected News

Quote: Jensen Huang – CEO Nvidia

Quote: Jensen Huang – CEO Nvidia

“Oftentimes, if you reason about things from first principles, what’s working today incredibly well — if you could reason about it from first principles and ask yourself on what foundation that first principle is built and how that would change over time — it allows you to hopefully see around corners.” – Jensen Huang – CEO Nvidia

Jensen Huang’s quote was delivered in the context of an in-depth dialogue with institutional investors on the trajectory of Nvidia, the evolution of artificial intelligence, and strategies for anticipating and shaping the technological future.

Context of the Quote

The quote was made during an interview at a Citadel Securities event in October 2025, hosted by Konstantine Buhler, a partner at Sequoia Capital. The dialogue’s audience consisted of leading institutional investors, all seeking avenues for sustainable advantage or ‘edge’. The conversation explored the founding moments of Nvidia in the early 1990s, through the reinvention of the graphics processing unit (GPU), the creation of new computing markets, and the subsequent rise of Nvidia as the platform underpinning the global AI boom. The question of how to ‘see around corners’ — to anticipate technology and industry shifts before they crystallise for others — was at the core of the discussion. Huang’s answer, invoking first-principles reasoning, linked Nvidia’s success to its ability to continually revisit and challenge foundational assumptions, and to methodically project how they will be redefined by progress in science and technology.

Jensen Huang: Profile and Approach

Jensen Huang, born in Tainan, Taiwan in 1963, immigrated to the United States as a child, experiencing the formative challenges of cultural dislocation, financial hardship, and adversity. He obtained his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from Oregon State University and a master’s from Stanford University. After working at AMD and LSI Logic, he co-founded Nvidia in 1993 at 30, reportedly at a Denny’s restaurant. From the outset, the company faced daunting odds — neither established market nor assured funding, and frequent existential risk in the initial years.

Huang is distinguished not only by technical fluency — he is deeply involved in hardware and software architecture — but also by an ability to translate complexity for diverse audiences. He eschews corporate formality in favour of trademark leather jackets and a focus on product. His leadership style is marked by humility, a willingness to bet on emerging ideas, and what he describes as “urgent innovation” born of early near-failure. This disposition has been integral to Nvidia’s progress, especially as the company repeatedly “invented markets” and defined entirely new categories, such as accelerated computing and AI infrastructure.

By 2024, Nvidia became the world’s most valuable public company, with its GPUs foundational to gaming, scientific computing, and, critically, the rise of AI. Huang’s awards — from the IEEE Founder’s Medal to listing among Time Magazine’s 100 most influential — underscore his reputation as a technologist and strategic thinker. He is widely recognised for being able to establish technical direction well before it becomes market consensus, an approach reflected in the quote.

First-Principles Thinking: Theoretical Foundations

Huang’s endorsement of “first principles” echoes a method of problem-solving and innovation associated with thinkers as diverse as Aristotle, Isaac Newton, and, in the modern era, entrepreneurs and strategists such as Elon Musk. The essence of first-principles thinking is to break down complex systems to their most fundamental truths — concepts that cannot be deduced from anything simpler — and to reason forward from those axioms, unconstrained by traditional assumptions, analogies, or received wisdom.

  • Aristotle was the first to coin the term “first principles”, distinguishing knowledge derived from irreducible foundational truths from knowledge obtained through analogy or precedent.
  • René Descartes advocated for systematic doubt and logical rebuilding of knowledge from foundational elements.
  • Richard Feynman, the physicist, was famous for urging students to “understand from first principles”, encouraging deep understanding and avoidance of rote memorisation or mere pattern recognition.
  • Elon Musk is often cited as a contemporary example, applying first-principles thinking to industries as varied as automotive (Tesla), space (SpaceX), and energy. Musk has described the technique as “boiling things down to the most fundamental truths and then reasoning up from there,” directly influencing not just product architectures but also cost models and operational methods.

Application in Technology and AI

First-principles thinking is particularly powerful in periods of technological transition:

  • In computing, first principles were invoked by Carver Mead and Lynn Conway, who reimagined the semiconductor industry in the 1970s by establishing the foundational laws for microchip design, known as Mead-Conway methodology. This approach was cited by Huang as influential for predicting the physical limitations of transistor miniaturisation and motivating Nvidia’s focus on accelerated computing.
  • Clayton Christensen, cited by Huang as an influence, introduced the idea of disruptive innovation, arguing that market leaders must question incumbent logic and anticipate non-linear shifts in technology. His books on disruption and innovation strategy have shaped how leaders approach structural shifts and avoid the “innovator’s dilemma”.
  • The leap from von Neumann architectures to parallel, heterogenous, and ultimately AI-accelerated computing frameworks — as pioneered by Nvidia’s CUDA platform and deep learning libraries — was possible because leaders at Nvidia systematically revisited underlying assumptions about how computation should be structured for new workloads, rather than simply iterating on the status quo.
  • The AI revolution itself was catalysed by the “deep learning” paradigm, championed by Geoffrey Hinton, Yann LeCun, and Andrew Ng. Each demonstrated that previous architectures, which had reached plateaus, could be superseded by entirely new approaches, provided there was willingness to reinterpret the problem from mathematical and computational fundamentals.

Backstory of the Leading Theorists

The ecosystem that enabled Nvidia’s transformation is shaped by a series of foundational theorists:

  • Mead and Conway: Their 1979 textbook and methodologies codified the “first-principles” approach in chip design, allowing for the explosive growth of Silicon Valley’s fabless innovation model.
  • Gordon Moore: Moore’s Law, while originally an empirical observation, inspired decades of innovation, but its eventual slow-down prompted leaders such as Huang to look for new “first principles” to govern progress, beyond mere transistor scaling.
  • Clayton Christensen: His disruption theory is foundational in understanding why entire industries fail to see the next shift — and how those who challenge orthodoxy from first principles are able to “see around corners”.
  • Geoffrey Hinton, Yann LeCun, Andrew Ng: These pioneers directly enabled the deep learning revolution by returning to first principles on how learning — both human and artificial — could function at scale. Their work with neural networks, widely doubted after earlier “AI winters”, was vindicated with landmark results like AlexNet (2012), enabled by Nvidia GPUs.

Implications

Jensen Huang’s quote is neither idle philosophy nor abstract advice — it is a methodology proven repeatedly by his own journey and by the history of technology. It is a call to scrutinise assumptions, break complex structures to their most elemental truths, and reconstruct strategy consciously from the bedrock of what is not likely to change, but also to ask: on what foundation do these principles rest, and how will these foundations themselves evolve.

Organisations and individuals who internalise this approach are equipped not only to compete in current markets, but to invent new ones — to anticipate and shape the next paradigm, rather than reacting to it.

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