Lifecycle of Idea
The concept of the business lifecycle reflects the natural stages that all businesses go through, from the moment that the idea is developed into a business, until the moment that the business wraps up. For some businesses, the stages can last a long time, but for other businesses, the stages are relatively short, and the progression through them can be quite fast. In other cases, the business hits a point of maturity, starts into decline, and then is re-invented, to start the business life cycle over again.
The five stages of the business life cycle are development, startup, growth and establishment, expansion and, finally, the maturity and possible exit stage (Petch, 2016). Target’s business is in the maturity stage, but the company is highly successful as a competitor in the big box retail space, and therefore not at all considering exit. It is what would in the BCG matrix be considered a cash cow – a large stable and consistently profitable business. It is precisely because of that maturity that Target is seeking to revamp and enhance its digital presence. The company needs to spur growth in an industry that is not experiencing a lot of that. This means that Target needs to not only defend its existing market share, but also to win share from its major competitors like Walmart and Amazon, and furthermore to win business from smaller players as well.
The e-commerce side of retail is a growing business still. This side of the retail business is growing at 15% per year, which means that it is not a mature business, but rather e-commerce exists in the expansion stage of growth (Ali, 2019). It is long past the startup stage, which was twenty years ago, but that is a much higher growth rate than the retail business or US economy as a whole, both of which are more in the maturity phase. This expansion stage is why Target is aiming to enhance its digital business, because this is one of the areas where there is much stronger growth potential than exists in the rest of its business.
The expansion stage is characterized as a situation where the business is firmly established, which is the case for e-commerce in general, but firms in the industry seek to capitalize on its stability by broadening their horizons. For Target, that is precisely what this strategy is about. E-commerce is seeing continual evolution in terms of technologies and consumer preferences, and these changes are a large part of what is driving this business forward. For retailers, staying on top of the latest e-commerce trends is critical to matching the growth of the industry as a whole, and a failure to keep modern will likely result in the company falling behind the competitors that are leading the way in terms of innovating new strategies and adopting new ideas.
Continued success during the expansion stage relies on the business having a plan to expand, but doing so with a degree of caution. Expanding too quickly, or too rashly, without a coherent...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now