
From Ad-Hoc Growth to Structured Capability
In many organisations, business development exists—but not as a defined system.
Activities take place. Opportunities are pursued. Partnerships are formed.
Yet these efforts are often fragmented, inconsistent, and dependent on individual capability rather than organisational structure.
This is not a capability issue.
It is a standardisation issue.
As business development continues to evolve into a strategic growth function, organisations increasingly require a structured approach—one that defines how business development is understood, implemented, and governed.
This is where business development standards become critical.
From Activity to Capability
Without standards, business development tends to operate as:
- opportunistic deal-making
- relationship-driven growth
- reactive market engagement
While such approaches may generate short-term results, they rarely produce sustainable growth.
Standards shift business development from:
activity → capability
They establish:
- clear definitions
- structured processes
- consistent expectations
- measurable outcomes
This transformation enables organisations to move from isolated successes to repeatable growth systems.
What Business Development Standards Define
Business development standards—such as those outlined in the BDA BoCK®—provide a structured foundation for how organisations approach growth.
To understand how these standards are built, it is essential to explore the underlying competency model:
https://bda-global.org/en/business-development-competency-framework/
They define:
1. The Role of Business Development
Clarifying what business development is responsible for—and what it is not.
This includes distinguishing it from related functions such as sales and marketing, as explored in:
https://bda-global.org/en/learning-and-development/bda-blogs/
2. Competency Requirements
Defining the behavioural and knowledge-based competencies required for effective practice.
These competencies form the foundation of structured growth capability, as outlined in the BDA competency framework.
3. Processes and Methodologies
Establishing structured approaches for:
- opportunity identification
- market analysis
- partnership development
- growth execution
A structured process is critical to consistency, as demonstrated in the Business Development Process framework:
https://bda-global.org/en/learning-and-development/bda-blogs/
4. Governance and Decision-Making
Defining how decisions are made, who owns them, and how accountability is maintained.
5. Performance Measurement
Aligning business development activities with measurable growth outcomes.
Together, these elements transform business development into a managed organisational function.
How Organisations Apply Business Development Standards
Applying standards is not a theoretical exercise.
It is an operational transformation.
Organisations typically apply business development standards across four key areas:
1. Structuring the Function
The first step is defining how business development is positioned within the organisation.
This includes:
- role definitions
- reporting structures
- interaction with sales, marketing, and strategy
Without this clarity, duplication and misalignment are inevitable.
2. Aligning with Strategy
Business development must be directly linked to organisational strategy.
This ensures that:
- opportunities pursued are aligned with long-term direction
- partnerships support strategic priorities
- growth initiatives are intentional, not reactive
3. Standardising Processes
Standards introduce consistency in how business development activities are executed.
This includes structured approaches to:
- evaluating opportunities
- entering new markets
- forming partnerships
- managing pipelines
Consistency enables scalability.
4. Building Capability
Standards define what competencies are required—but organisations must also develop them.
This involves:
- capability development
- training aligned with frameworks
- performance evaluation based on defined competencies
5. Establishing Governance
Effective business development requires clear governance.
This includes:
- decision-making frameworks
- approval processes
- risk management structures
- accountability mechanisms
Governance ensures that growth is not only pursued—but managed responsibly.
The Role of Leadership
The adoption of business development standards is not purely operational.
It requires leadership alignment.
Senior leaders must recognise that:
- growth is a strategic function
- business development is not a support role
- standards enable consistency, not restriction
Without leadership commitment, standardisation efforts often remain superficial.
From Individual Performance to Organisational Capability
One of the most significant impacts of applying standards is the shift from:
individual dependency → institutional capability
Instead of relying on:
- individual relationships
- personal judgement
- isolated experience
Organisations build:
- structured systems
- shared methodologies
- scalable growth models
This transition is essential for organisations seeking long-term, sustainable growth.
Why Standards Matter in Modern Growth Environments
Today’s business environment is defined by:
- increasing market complexity
- evolving partnership ecosystems
- global competition
- rapid technological change
In such an environment, informal approaches to business development are no longer sufficient.
Standards provide:
- clarity in decision-making
- consistency in execution
- alignment across functions
- resilience in uncertain markets
Business Development as an Organisational System
When applied effectively, business development standards do more than improve performance.
They redefine how organisations approach growth.
Business development becomes:
- integrated with strategy
- supported by structured processes
- enabled by defined competencies
- governed by clear frameworks
It evolves from a function into a system that connects insight, opportunity, and execution.
Conclusion
Business development standards are not about imposing structure for its own sake.
They are about enabling organisations to approach growth in a consistent, scalable, and strategic manner.
Through frameworks such as the BDA BoCK®, organisations gain a foundation for:
- defining the role of business development
- building capability
- aligning with strategy
- and executing growth initiatives effectively
For further insights on business development practices and frameworks, explore the BDA Knowledge Centre:
https://bda-global.org/en/learning-and-development/bda-blogs/





