Business growth
Why do businesses grow?
Growth is a common business objective once survival is secured. Benefits include:
- Economies of scale (lower average costs as output rises).
- Greater market power (negotiating leverage over suppliers and distributors).
- Increased brand recognition and customer loyalty.
- Ability to invest in R&D and new products.
- Attracting better talent.
Internal (organic) growth
Organic growth is achieved by the business itself, from within, without merging with or acquiring another company.
Methods:
- New products (product development): investing in R&D to create new or improved products. Example: Dyson developing cordless vacuums alongside its original corded range.
- New markets (market development): selling existing products in new geographic markets or to new customer segments. Example: Greggs expanding from the North East to become a national chain.
- E-commerce: building or improving online sales capability to reach customers beyond the physical store footprint. Example: a local florist setting up a Shopify store to sell nationally.
- Increasing promotional activity: higher marketing spend to attract new customers.
Organic growth is typically slower but less risky than external growth — the business retains full control and avoids the cultural clashes of mergers.
External growth
External growth happens when a business combines with another organisation.
- Merger: two businesses agree to combine and form a new, larger entity. Both companies' shareholders agree; neither firm "wins." Example: the merger of Sainsbury's and Asda (proposed 2018, blocked by CMA).
- Takeover (acquisition): one business buys a controlling stake in another, often without the target's full agreement. Example: Amazon acquiring Whole Foods (2017) to enter US grocery retail.
Horizontal integration: combining with a business at the same stage in the supply chain and in the same industry. Gains: instant market share, eliminates a competitor, achieves scale economies.
Vertical integration: combining with a business at a different stage of the supply chain.
- Forward vertical integration: acquiring a distributor or retailer closer to the customer.
- Backward vertical integration: acquiring a supplier.
Sources of finance for growth
| Source | Description | Suitable for |
|---|---|---|
| Retained profit | Reinvesting profits already earned | Steady organic growth; no interest cost |
| Share capital | Selling new shares (Ltd → Plc) | Large-scale expansion; dilutes ownership |
| Loan capital (bank loan) | Borrowing from a bank | Specific projects; fixed repayment schedule |
| Venture capital | Investment from specialist growth-equity firms | High-growth startups with scale potential |
Risks of growth
- Loss of control (especially if new shareholders join).
- Integration challenges in mergers (different cultures, IT systems, management styles).
- Overtrading: growing faster than cash flow can support.
- Diseconomies of scale: at very large scale, average costs can rise (coordination costs, bureaucracy).
Edexcel exam note
Theme 2 questions frequently present a large-business scenario and ask: "Assess the most appropriate method of growth for [company X]." Frame your answer around the company's specific context (size, cash position, industry), not generic theory.
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