
A Structured Approach Based on BDA BoCK®
Business development strategies are often discussed in broad and inconsistent terms.
Many organisations refer to “growth strategies” without clearly defining how those strategies are structured, selected, or executed.
From a professional perspective, business development strategies are not generic approaches.
They are structured pathways through which organisations identify, create, and capture value in alignment with their strategic objectives.
Within a competency-based framework such as the BDA BoCK®, these strategies are not isolated concepts.
They are directly linked to:
- market intelligence
- opportunity identification
- partnership development
- and execution capability
To understand how these capabilities are structured:
https://bda-global.org/en/business-development-competency-framework/
What Defines a Business Development Strategy
A business development strategy is not a list of initiatives.
It is a coherent approach to growth that answers four critical questions:
- Where will the organisation grow?
- How will it access those opportunities?
- Which capabilities are required?
- How will value be created and captured?
Without clear answers to these questions, strategies remain conceptual and difficult to execute.
Core Types of Business Development Strategies
Leading organisations typically operate across a set of structured strategy types.
These strategies are not mutually exclusive—but often interconnected.
1. Market Expansion Strategy
This strategy focuses on entering new markets or segments.
It involves:
- identifying new geographic or industry opportunities
- assessing market attractiveness
- defining entry models
This aligns directly with structured approaches to expansion:
https://bda-global.org/en/market-expansion-strategy/
2. Partnership and Alliance Strategy
Growth is increasingly enabled through collaboration.
This strategy focuses on:
- forming strategic partnerships
- leveraging external capabilities
- expanding market access
It is particularly relevant in complex or highly competitive environments.
3. Customer Expansion Strategy
This strategy focuses on increasing value within existing customer bases.
This includes:
- cross-selling and upselling
- long-term relationship development
- enhancing customer lifetime value
While often associated with sales, this strategy requires structured business development input to identify and enable opportunities.
4. Innovation and Business Model Strategy
This strategy involves:
- developing new offerings
- redefining value propositions
- exploring new business models
It aligns with innovation-focused competencies within business development.
5. Strategic Positioning Strategy
This strategy focuses on how the organisation positions itself within the market.
It includes:
- differentiation
- competitive positioning
- long-term market presence
Positioning influences all other business development strategies.
Selecting the Right Strategy
One of the most critical challenges is not defining strategies—but selecting the right ones.
Leading organisations apply structured evaluation criteria, including:
- alignment with organisational objectives
- market opportunity
- capability readiness
- risk exposure
This ensures that strategies are not chosen based on trends—but on strategic relevance.
Integrating Strategies into a Growth System
The effectiveness of business development strategies depends on how they are integrated.
Strategies should not operate in isolation.
Instead, they should form a coherent growth system:
- Market expansion creates access
- Partnerships enable execution
- Innovation drives differentiation
- Customer expansion strengthens value capture
This integration ensures consistency across growth initiatives.
Execution as a Strategic Discipline
Even the most well-defined strategies fail without execution.
Execution requires:
- structured processes
- defined roles and responsibilities
- performance measurement
- governance mechanisms
This aligns with broader business development performance frameworks:
https://bda-global.org/en/business-development-metrics/
Common Strategic Mistakes
1. Strategy Without Structure
Defining high-level ambitions without clear frameworks
2. Overextension
Pursuing too many strategies simultaneously
3. Capability Misalignment
Selecting strategies that exceed organisational capacity
4. Lack of Integration
Treating strategies as independent initiatives
External Perspective on Strategy
In established disciplines, structured strategy frameworks are widely adopted.
For example:
- Strategic management frameworks emphasise positioning and competitive advantage
https://hbr.org - Project frameworks focus on execution discipline
https://www.pmi.org
Business development integrates these perspectives into a unified growth approach.
Business Development Strategies as Organisational Capability
The key distinction is this:
Business development strategies are not one-time decisions.
They are part of a broader capability that organisations must develop and refine over time.
This capability enables organisations to:
- respond to market changes
- identify new opportunities
- execute consistently
- and sustain growth
Conclusion
Business development strategies provide the foundation for structured organisational growth.
However, their effectiveness depends on:
- clarity in definition
- alignment with strategy
- integration across functions
- and disciplined execution
Through frameworks such as the BDA BoCK®, organisations can move beyond fragmented approaches and build coherent, scalable growth systems.





