A powerful, albeit reactive, growth strategy is to diversify based on direct client requests. Tectonic expanded from a CMS company into IT services, SaaS, and back-office support by responding to clients asking, "Can you solve this problem for us?" This client-led approach ensures immediate product-market fit for new ventures and builds deeper client relationships.
Instead of random growth, businesses have five clear expansion paths: serve wealthier clients (upmarket), serve a mass market (downmarket), enter a new vertical (adjacent), generalize your solution (broader), or hyper-specialize (narrower). This provides a strategic map for growth.
Adding new offerings is a smart growth strategy, but only if your primary business is stable and systemized. Launching a new service to escape existing chaos will only amplify it. Instead, treat the new offering as a separate, dedicated division to maintain focus and quality.
Instead of focusing budgets on acquiring new customers, businesses should invert their spending to serve existing ones. A powerful growth strategy is to identify the needs of your best customers and create new services or premium options specifically for them, maximizing lifetime value from those who already trust you.
When fundamental market changes make your business model obsolete, incremental changes aren't enough. You must consider how your underlying talent and expertise can be repackaged into a completely different business, like turning a tech platform into a consulting service.
Calendly is expanding beyond its core scheduling function to address the full meeting process. They are developing solutions for meeting preparation, in-meeting engagement, and post-meeting follow-ups. This strategy of expanding horizontally around a core user problem illustrates a powerful path for SaaS growth.
Avoid the trap of building features for a single customer, which grinds products to a halt. When a high-stakes customer makes a specific request, the goal is to reframe and build it in a way that benefits the entire customer base, turning a one-off demand into a strategic win-win.
Businesses should operate in a constant state of "offense"—innovating, seeking new clients, and exploring new services. Being forced into offense because of a defensive situation (like losing a major client) is far less effective and more stressful than proactive growth.
Instead of diversifying randomly, a more effective strategy is to expand into adjacent verticals. Leverage your existing, happy clients for introductions into these parallel industries. This approach uses your established credibility and relationships as a bridge to new markets, lowering the barrier to entry.
To grow from $3M to $5M without losing its customer-centric "soul," a printing company was advised to focus on its existing clients. The fastest path to growth isn't chasing new leads but becoming a deeper solutions provider for customers who already trust the brand.
Large enterprise clients are often diversified themselves with multiple departments and divisions. A powerful de-risking strategy is to leverage your existing relationship as a proven vendor to get introductions and sell into these other parts of the organization, effectively diversifying your revenue stream within a single account.