Problem Child

Problem Child

A problem child is a business with a small market share in a rapidly growing industry. The x-axis shows relative market share (or the ability to generate cash) and the y-axis shows the rate of market growth (or the need for cash). Cash cows are businesses that have a high market share (and generate lots of cash) but low growth prospects (and therefore a low need for cash). Stars have high growth prospects (need a lot of cash) and a high market share (and generate lots of cash). The problem children have high growth prospects but a comparatively low market share Dogs have small market shares in mature industries.

Problem child is a quadrant in the BCG Matrix and is the triage category among the cash cows, stars, and dogs.

What Is a Problem Child?

A problem child is a business with a small market share in a rapidly growing industry. It is one of the four categories in the BCG Growth-Share Matrix, a management tool introduced by Boston Consulting Group in 1968 to help companies decide which business units or products to invest in and which to sell.

The growth-share matrix is also called the BCG Matrix or Boston Matrix and the problem child designation may also be referred to as a "question mark".

Problem child is a quadrant in the BCG Matrix and is the triage category among the cash cows, stars, and dogs.
A problem child is a business line that has good growth potential but a small share of the growing market.
Making a problem child into a star requires heavy capital investment, so a management misjudgment of the growth prospects can be a costly mistake.

Understanding a Problem Child

The concept behind the BCG Matrix is to help companies with sprawling business interests quickly classify and prioritize different business lines for capital infusion or liquidation. Problem children are plotted on the growth-share matrix, along with other business units. The x-axis shows relative market share (or the ability to generate cash) and the y-axis shows the rate of market growth (or the need for cash).

The BCG framework suggests that surplus cash should be transferred from a conglomerate's cash cows to the stars and the problem children, while the dogs should be divested.

Dealing With a Problem Child

Problem children are particularly challenging, as they consume more cash than they generate. The question that management faces is whether investing in a problem child's business will increase market share enough to turn it into a star. A problem child could still turn into a dog, even after burning cash on marketing and sales. The technology sector, for example, has lots of problem children, because it is so competitive and dynamic.

As the name suggests, problem children require management attention. Problem children should not be invested in unless there is real potential for growth, and it is management's responsibility to judge those prospects. If the prospects look good, then management may need to invest heavily to raise the problem child to star status. If, however, management misjudges this, then they may be left with a dog in the end that will sell for less than they could have realized if they divested early.

Problem Children and the BCG Matrix Today

Matrices like the BCG Matrix were quite fashionable for a while when companies tended to hold a lot of business lines, acquire more and divest rarely. So they tend to be more suited to conglomerates in their 1970s heyday. The 1980s brought a lot more corporate discipline through the disruptive influences of raids, hostile takeovers, and leveraged buyouts (LBOs). Since then, it is rare to find a company that doesn't regularly evaluate all its business lines on a monthly basis with a strict set of key performance indicators. Moreover, market share is no longer a direct predictor of sustained performance.

Today, the ability to adapt to change is an even bigger driver of competitive advantage. If corporate culture shifts once more to conglomeration — something that still hangs on in regions like Asia — then we may see the BCG matrix and others come back into vogue.

Related terms:

BCG Growth-Share Matrix

The BCG growth-share matrix is a heuristic developed by the Boston Consulting Group used to classify a firm's project outlooks. read more

Cash Cow

A cash cow is one of the four BCG matrix categories that represents a product or business with high market share and low market growth. read more

Category Killer

A category killer is a large retail chain superstore that dominates its product category.  read more

Conglomerate

A conglomerate is a company that owns a controlling stake in smaller companies of separate or similar industries that conduct business separately. read more

Divestment

Divestment is the partial or full disposal of a business unit through sale, exchange, closure, or bankruptcy. read more

Dog

A dog is a business unit with a small market share in a mature industry. It neither generates strong cash flow nor requires a big investment. read more

Initial Public Offering (IPO)

An initial public offering (IPO) refers to the process of offering shares of a private corporation to the public in a new stock issuance. read more

Leveraged Buyout (LBO)

A leveraged buyout is the acquisition of another company using a significant amount of borrowed money (debt) to meet the cost of acquisition. read more

Star

A star is a candlestick formation that happens when a small bodied-candle is positioned above the price range of the previous candle.  read more

Technology Sector

The technology sector is a category of stocks relating to the research, development, and/or distribution of technologically based goods and services. read more