Penetrating A New Segment

Medium
Transportation
Growth Strategy
Public View

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This case is a classic growth strategy case which involves penetrating a new segment by offering new products. The candidate will be tested on his or her thoughts for achieving organic growth and on some light quantitative analysis.

The client is a $2.5B Fortune 500 worldwide provider of transportation, logistics, and supply chain management solutions. Its product offerings include: • LM: Leasing and programmed maintenance of trucks, tractors, and trailers to commercial customers • SC: Manages the movement of materials and related information from raw materials to delivery • DCC: Turn-key transportation service including vehicles, drivers, routing, and scheduling The focus of the engagement is the LM group. Truck registrations are growing at only 2.2% CAGR, and the LM market is declining. However, the client's LM revenues have remained flat, suggesting survival through acquisitions rather than organic growth. The client seeks significant growth over the next 2 years.

How can the client achieve significant organic growth in its LM business over the next 2 years, given that its core market is declining and its product offering is undifferentiated?

Competitive Landscape • Client holds 24% of the LM market • One competitor also holds 24% of the LM market • Remaining 50% held by smaller players • Product offerings are highly undifferentiated — asset (truck) + mandatory maintenance program
Exhibit 1Exhibit 2
Q1: What are the different ways to achieve organic growth?
Recommended approach:
• Current products to current customers — reduce prices
• New products to current customers — cross-sell
• Current products to new customers — market expansion
• New products to new customers — new segment penetration
Q2: What is the current market dynamic and what organic growth strategy do you recommend?
Recommended approach:
• The LM market is declining but truck registrations overall are growing — this means another segment is gaining share
• That growing segment is Private (60% of market). Private customers (grocery chains, retail outlets) own their trucks but outsourcing maintenance is attractive as it is not their core competency
• Strategy: Introduce a maintenance-only product (no asset) targeted at private fleet owners — this is a new product for a new customer segment (penetration)
• The new maintenance-only product will likely be priced lower than the full LM bundle
Q3: What are the key challenges in launching a lower-priced maintenance-only product?
Recommended approach:
• Cannibalization risk — existing LM customers may defect to the lower-priced maintenance-only product
• Service differentiation — client may be unable to differentiate service levels between customer types, leading to over-servicing
Q4: How would you develop the product offering for private customers?
Recommended approach:
• Qualitative Assessment: Customer interviews, focus groups, expert brainstorming to understand private customer needs
• Hypothesis formulation: Define product attributes (service levels, priority servicing, geographic coverage)
• Quantitative Analysis: Conduct representative survey across private customer industries (construction, grocery, utilities, etc.)
• Capability Assessment: Can existing infrastructure support new product? Cost of investment? Cultural readiness?
• Business Case: Quantify revenue potential using estimated pricing and volumes from survey
Q5: If the client captures 1% of the private market, by how much do overall revenues increase?
Calculation
Step Calculation Result
Current client trucks 24% x 11% x 4.7M ~124,000 trucks (2.6% of total)
1% of private segment 1% x 60% x 4.7M ~28,200 new trucks
New total trucks 124,000 + 28,200 ~152,200 trucks (3.6% of total)
Revenue increase (3.6% - 2.6%) / 2.6% ~38%

This is a market penetration case. The ideal response framework: • Step 1 — Diagnose the market: understand why LM is declining (product commoditization, not demand decline) • Step 2 — Identify growth vectors: use a 2x2 Ansoff matrix (products x customers) to surface options • Step 3 — Size the opportunity: quantify the private segment and calculate revenue uplift • Step 4 — Address risks: cannibalization and service-level differentiation are the two key concerns • Step 5 — Recommend: new maintenance-only product targeting private fleet operators, with product development following qualitative → quantitative → capability → business case sequence

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Published July 17, 2025 • 28 views
Firm/University: Kearney
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