A portfolio tool that plots products or income streams by market growth rate and market share to determine where to invest, maintain, or exit.
The BCG Matrix plots a company's product lines on two axes: market growth rate (vertical) and relative market share (horizontal). This produces four quadrants: Stars (high growth, high share), Cash Cows (low growth, high share), Question Marks (high growth, low share), and Dogs (low growth, low share). The framework helps allocate resources by showing where cash is generated and where it should be invested.
// historyBruce Henderson, founder of the Boston Consulting Group, introduced the matrix in 1970. It was designed for large diversified corporations managing multiple business units and became one of the most recognisable strategic planning tools of the 1970s and 1980s. While later critiques have noted its oversimplification, the framework remains a useful starting point for portfolio analysis.
// exampleA creator running multiple income streams uses the BCG Matrix. Their YouTube channel is a Star (fast-growing, strong subscriber base, but demanding constant content investment). Their Etsy print shop is a Cash Cow (mature market, steady revenue, little active management needed). A new podcast is a Question Mark (growing medium, negligible market share so far, consumes time). A dormant Patreon with three patrons is a Dog. The matrix clarifies the decision: reinvest YouTube revenue into growing the podcast, maintain the Etsy shop with minimal effort, and shut down the Patreon to free up attention.
Map your income streams on a BCG Matrix every six months. The most common mistake I see creators make is pouring energy into Dog income streams out of sentimental attachment — a Patreon that never really took off, a course that sells occasionally but requires constant maintenance. Cash Cows (products that sell consistently with minimal effort) should be protected and maintained, not neglected or killed off in favour of something shiny. The right level of energy for a Cash Cow is "just enough to keep it running." Stars get the investment. Dogs get the goodbye.