My Beverage Company Launched a Sunscreen. Here's How We Knew It Was the Right Time to Diversify Our Business.If you're thinking of introducing a new product or entering a new market, ask yourself these four questions.

ByKara Goldin

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

FangXiaNuo | Getty Images

Last year, my company launched a new product, hint sunscreen. It's unusual for a beverage business to suddenly move into personal care. But our goal has always been to solve problems for consumers, and creating a fruit-scented sunscreen that improves the experience of sunscreen application while eliminating some questionable ingredients fits with our mission to make America healthy.

Related:3 Key Ways to Diversify Your Ecommerce Store

Launching a completely new product is also about diversification, and expanding the scope of what you do has many benefits. Not being dependent on one product or market helps your company be more stable. You make new contacts and learn lessons that benefit the rest of your business. And of course, you're furthering your overall mission.

Diversification is also a risk. The effort involved in launching an additional product or service can mean you lose focus on your core business. Entering into any new market is a gamble. But, this time, the stakes you're playing with include the successful company you've spent years building.

When you have a great idea for broadening your business offering, how can you be sure that it's the right time to make it happen? The first thing to always ask yourself is,Does this stay true to my ultimate goals and company mission?If the answer is no, then I strongly suggest reconsidering and taking a hard look at what you hope to accomplish by diversifying. Based on our positive sunscreen experience, I also suggest answering the following four questions:

1. Is it the right time for your customers?

Media and publishing jobs site MediaBistro was a dot-com boom success story. But after that bubble burst, many of the company's customers went bust and the rest were no longer hiring. No job listings meant no revenue, leaving founder Laurel Toubyscrambling for a way to save her business.

Related:Risky Business: Should You Diversify?

The downturn in hiring was also bad news for job hunters, and Touby realized that she could help. MediaBistro diversified its service to include retraining classes and workshops, which was exactly what these customers needed. This move saved the business, which Toubylater sold for $23 million in 2007.

Listen carefully to your customers to understand the range of problems they face. If your new solution is increasingly relevant, the timing might be right for everyone.

2. Is your business well-positioned to make it work?

Just over 10 years ago, Netflix and Blockbuster were both in the DVD rental business. Today, Netflix is a video streaming service and content producer, while Blockbuster is a cautionary business lesson about not keeping up withtechnologyand changing customer demands.

Yet, Blockbuster hadbeen exploring on-demand streaming optionsas far back as 2001. But it was still primarily a real-world retail business and couldn't find the right partner to deliver an online audience. By contrast, Netflix's audience was entirely digital. When it launched streaming in 2007, the service was part of the same site where customers managed their DVD lists.

When we launched sunscreen, we were able to go direct to our customers through our already strong DTC business, and those customers were loyal fans who were excited to try our next offering. Whether it's the right assets or a ready-made audience, you need to launch your new offering from an advantageous position.

Related:住啊n Track While Diversifying a Business

3. Do you really have the right skills to succeed?

In 1997,Quaker Oats bought soft drinks brandSnapple for $1.7 billion. Many observers thought that this attempt to diversify its business was a high-risk strategy. But Quaker believed it had a key asset that would ensure its success: a highly effective retail distribution network.

The problem was that the company's distribution contacts were primarily with supermarkets, whereas half of Snapple's sales happened in convenience stores and gas stations. The acquisition proved to be a disaster, and three years later,Quaker sold Snapple for just $300 million.

Markets and customers can often seem superficially similar. You need to dig deeper and ensure your assets will really make a difference in your new field.

Related:How to Diversify Your Company and Tackle New Industries

4. Will moving fast help you win?

When I was developing hint water, I met an executive from a major soda company who dismissed my product because "Americans only want sweet." This told me that my competitors hadn't yet recognized the business opportunity I saw. By moving fast, I got a head start.

We were in a similar situation with our sunscreen. Many of the big players in the cosmetics industry are complacent about what customers want. We've moved quickly to launch a sunscreen with a scent that makes it more enjoyable to apply and doesn't contain some potentially harmful chemicals.

If you have a solution to a problem no one has solved yet, and you're ready and well-placed to jump on that opportunity before anyone else, it's a good time to diversify.

Each of the products I've created has begun life as an answer to an issue I was personally facing. As long as you continue solving genuine problems that are relevant to your purpose and mission, customers will trust your brand and you'll reap all the benefits of diversification.

Related Video:How This Entrepreneur Diversified His Business When His Industry Was Turned Upside Down

Wavy Line
Kara Goldin

Founder and CEO of Hint

Kara Goldin is the founder & CEO of Hint, a healthy lifestyle brand that produces unsweetened flavored water, sunscreen that’s oxybenzone and paraben-free and deodorant made from 100% plant-derived ingredients. Her podcastUnstoppable with Kara Goldin特性与伟大的企业家聊天。狗万官方

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

An 81-Year-Old Florida CEO Just Indicted for a $250 Million Ponzi Scheme Ran a Sprawling Senior Citizen Crime Ring

Carl Ruderman is the fifth senior citizen in the Miami-Fort-Lauderdale-Palm Beach metropolitan area to face charges in connection with the scam.

Business News

Steve Jobs's Son Is Diving Into Venture Capital — and His Focus Hits Close to Home

Reed Jobs, 31, launched venture capital firm Yosemite, which already boasts $200 million from investors and institutions.

Business News

Goldman Sachs Senior Analyst Vanishes After Concert in Brooklyn

John Castic, 27, was last seen around 2:30 a.m. Saturday.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

企业家是不能过度指狗万官方望太多a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.

Science & Technology

Why Businesses Should Implement Passwordless Authentication Right Now

Highlight the growing cybersecurity threats and the need for businesses to adopt passwordless authentication to stay ahead of hackers.

Business News

'You Need to Stand for Your Values': Heineken CEO Dolf van den Brink Talks Bud Light Beer Sales Decline

The company posted a 5.6% decline in beer sales in the first half earnings report of 2023.