inspired-for-business-growth-how-five-companies-beat-the-market
Inspired for business growth:
How five companies beat
the market
Just about one in seven companies has outperformed in the past five years.
This latest installment of our landmark series for CEOs highlights business
growth strategies that work.
This article is a collaborative effort by Andy West, Dago Diedrich, David Schiff, Greg Kelly, Jill Zucker,
Kate Siegel, Rebecca Doherty, and Sascha Lehmann, representing views from McKinsey’s Growth,
Marketing & Sales, Strategy & Corporate Finance, and Transformation Practices.
February 2026
Growth, Marketing & Sales and Strategy & Corporate Finance Practices
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Do you think of Walmart as a media or technology company? If not, maybe you should. More
than half of Walmart’s operating-income growth now comes from its newer growth platforms:
online retail media, membership services, and marketplace operations.1 For a business founded
on everyday low prices and physical stores, this development reflects something bigger:
Walmart has been on a more than decade-long journey to deliberately build new engines of
growth on top of its core, and those engines are now materially reshaping performance.
Walmart’s performance may not seem out of place at a time when the S&P 500 has enjoyed an
exceptional run, with a 15 percent CAGR over the past five years.2 But more than half of the
index’s gains in 2024 were concentrated in the so-called Magnificent Seven.3 Six in seven
companies have actually failed to achieve double-digit revenue growth over that time.4
In that context, Walmart’s profitable business growth stands out, but it is not alone. Our analysis
in the latest installment of our research series on growth whittled down the performance of a
broad range of companies to 61 businesses that outperformed their peers in profitable revenue
growth over the past five years (see sidebar, “About the research”). These top 15 percent of
companies outstripped their peers by an average of five percentage points in revenue growth
and seven percentage points in profitability annually, translating into a five-point edge in total
shareholder returns.
What sets them apart is not luck or timing. It is how they commit to growth, how they develop
growth engines, and how they accelerate with technology.
1 “From retailer to platform: How Walmart is redefining growth in the age of retail media,” Winning with Walmart, July 28, 2025.
2 The analysis draws on data from the McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
3 The Magnificent Seven are Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, Meta (Facebook), Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla. Data is from the
McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
4 The analysis draws on data from the McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 2
About the research
We analyzed approximately 5,000 global companies across all sectors (including insurance, banking,
materials, advanced industry, consumer, financials, healthcare, and technology). We then narrowed
the sample to around 3,000 companies with recorded revenues of at least $1 billion in 2019 and full
financial reporting from 2019 to 2024 (revenue, TSR, and economic profit). In nine subsectors of this
broader landscape, we assessed around 400 companies and identified 61 that outperformed their
subsector peers in revenue growth from 2019 to 2024 and ranked in the top quartile of their sector.1
Growth outperformers are defined as companies that grew faster and more profitably than their
subsector peers over the 2019 to 2024 period. We analyzed these 61 growth outperformers to
identify how they outcompeted their peers.
1 Companies based in China and Russia (and their subsidiaries) were excluded.
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How leaders get ahead and stay ahead
We identified three common characteristics that leaders
embody to drive sustained, profitable business growth
and outperform the competition.
Consistent commitment to funding
business growth
To fund growth, you have to fuel it. While every CEO says
growth matters, outperformers translate growth ambitions
into concrete, sustained commitments. They articulate a clear
growth strategy, commit resources to it, and move decisively.
This level of commitment is evident in how growth outperformers
invested through downturns. They continued to fund R&D, launch
products, and build capabilities while peers slowed spending—
typically investing multiples more than competitors. Leaders do
not treat growth as a one-time plan but as an ongoing process,
regularly refreshing portfolios and entering new categories.
Outperformers build a portfolio of growth engines
over time rather than relying on one or two bets.
They strengthen the core business, expand into close
adjacencies, and test new sources of growth, allocating
talent and capital to each with clear accountability.
Crucially, this portfolio is actively managed and well executed.
Leaders track performance closely, double down on growth
engines that are working, and stop or pivot initiatives that are not
delivering. Many turn to adjacencies that build on existing assets,
such as omnichannel models or platform-based businesses.
Technology as an accelerator to value
Business growth leaders know how to harness
technology not just to drive growth but to accelerate it.
They are successful because they don’t simply develop
use cases but systematically integrate data, digital tools,
and AI into strategy, operations, and decision-making.
That focus is evident today, with many top growers
investing in AI to redesign end-to-end workflows,
improve speed and precision, and unlock new business
opportunities. A deliberate mix of organic investment
and targeted M&A helps build capabilities to
accelerate pace.
3 Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market
A diversified portfolio of business
growth engines
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Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 4
By the numbers: The data behind business growth leaders
The 61 outperformers we identified (Exhibit 1) share two key business growth identifiers: above-
median revenue CAGR and above-median profitability. Many peers grow revenue but dilute their
margins while doing so; outperformers engineer growth engines that scale margins.
From 2014 to 2019 and 2019 to 2024, 34 percent of the companies we analyzed moved up to a
higher quartile in their sector in revenue CAGR, while about the same number (35 percent)
moved down. Notably, 16 percent of companies in the lowest quartile moved to the top quartile
outperformer set in revenue CAGR.5 These are sizable shifts, underscoring the ability of
companies to improve. Every sector has multiple outperforming companies, except beauty,
where only a single company counted as an outperformer.
McKinsey’s projections estimate that 18 future business arenas could generate $29 trillion to
$48 trillion in revenue by 2040. While competing in these arenas increases a company’s
chances of growing, doing so doesn’t guarantee that it can outperform the market. To beat the
market, companies have to develop better strategies and build stronger capabilities.
Exhibit 1
5 The analysis draws on data from the McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
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Retail: Walmart’s business growth mindset
The pandemic accelerated the shift to e-commerce, while inflation later squeezed consumer
spending, particularly among lower- and middle-income households. Through this volatility,
Walmart’s leadership stayed committed to growth. Instead of slowing investment, the company
continued to fund growth by building new capabilities, growth engines, and technology—both
organically and inorganically—even when near-term returns were uncertain and the market was
skeptical.
Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 5
Beating the market: Leaders’ stories
We analyzed the practices of five companies to better understand how they continually
outperformed over the five-year period of our analysis (Exhibit 2). Each of these companies
operates in an industry where the majority of peers failed to achieve profitable growth over the
same period. Their stories illustrate how different choices, aligned with the three business
growth themes, helped them beat the odds.
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That commitment showed up in Walmart’s deliberate effort to build a diversified portfolio of
growth engines alongside its core stores. Over time, Walmart transformed from a predominantly
offline retailer into the largest omnichannel and second-largest e-commerce player in the
United States. It did so by acquiring more than 20 digital-native and tech companies, scaling a
third-party marketplace, and launching Walmart+, a membership program whose members now
spend roughly twice as much as nonmembers.6
Walmart also pushed into adjacencies, such as retail media. Built on Walmart’s customer reach
and transaction data, its advertising business has grown rapidly and accounted for roughly 30
percent of operating profit in 2024—a powerful driver of margins and valuation.7
Underlying these growth engines is an operating model with technology at the core. Walmart
has invested heavily in data, automation, and AI to rewire how the business operates, from
predictive maintenance in stores and distribution centers to AI-enabled customer service across
digital and physical channels8 to drone delivery.9 These capabilities not only improve efficiency
but also accelerate the scaling of Walmart’s growth platforms.
Building materials: Builders FirstSource’s diversity and scale
The building materials industry has experienced sharp swings, with a COVID-19-era boom in
new construction and renovation followed by supply chain disruptions, labor shortages, and
rising interest rates. Input costs have risen by roughly 40 percent since 2020, while higher
borrowing costs slowed housing transactions and depressed demand for both new construction
and remodeling.
While many companies struggled to adapt, Builders FirstSource (BFS) maintained a consistent
commitment to fuel its growth, both organically and inorganically. To build a diversified portfolio
of growth engines, BFS made a series of acquisitions, which helped make it the largest building
materials supplier in the United States. But scale was not the end goal. BFS used M&A to move
beyond commodity distribution and expand into higher-margin manufactured components,
installed services, and value-added solutions. These adjacencies reduced exposure to pure
volume swings and strengthened relationships across professional builders, contractors, and
developers so BFS could grow even as end-market demand softened.
6 Q4 2024 earnings call, Walmart, February 20, 2024.
7 Mitchell Parton, “Almost a third of Walmart’s profit now comes from selling ads,” Modern Retail, November 19, 2024.
8 “Walmart’s expanding one-of-a-kind associate genAI tool to 11 countries in 2024: Tool saves time, allows associates to focus
on human-centric work,” Walmart press release, January 9, 2024.
9 “Walmart drone delivery by the numbers,” Walmart press release, January 5, 2023.
Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 6
The takeaway
Walmart’s results are anchored in its ability to invest through uncertainty and deliberately create a
broad portfolio of breakout growth engines on top of its core. By building a portfolio of platform
businesses and using technology to scale them across its massive footprint, Walmart turned
disruption in retail into a source of durable, profitable growth.
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To accelerate its growth, BFS invested heavily in digital platforms and automation to modernize
the builder journey. Examples include its “myBLDR” digital ordering and design tools, factory
automations, and logistics optimization. These capabilities improved speed and accuracy while
enabling sales reps to cross-sell higher-margin products and services.
Semiconductors: ASML’s chip shot
AI has fueled huge economic profit growth in the semiconductor industry across equipment
players, fabless players (which design, develop, and market their own chips), and foundries
(which manufacture the chips).
In this field, ASML (an equipment player) has emerged as a business growth leader. The
company recorded a revenue CAGR around ten percentage points higher than that of its median
peers from 2019 to 2024.10 Long before AI became a dominant force, the company committed
capital to advanced lithography and expanded capacity while maintaining a high rate of
innovation execution.
This foundation provided ASML with the ability to strengthen and expand its growth engines.
While its core remains lithography systems, ASML expanded into software, metrology, and a
growing services business in line with its commitment to developing products and services tied
to its customers’ technology road maps. Partnerships with, or acquisitions of, companies (for
example, Brion Technologies, HMI, Cymer, and Berliner Glas Group) have provided ASML with
capabilities that deepened customer relationships, reduced supply chain risks, and enabled
high-margin, recurring revenue from upgrades and maintenance. These moves made
lithography systems more valuable for customers and tightened integration across design,
exposure, and inspection.
10 The analysis draws on data from the McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 7
The takeaway
BFS’s path to outperforming was defined by funding growth during a volatile cycle and using M&A
to assemble a diversified portfolio of higher-margin adjacencies. By pairing that scale with digital
platforms and automation, BFS reduced its exposure to commodity swings and built a more
resilient, technology-enabled business growth model.
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To power this growth, ASML has integrated technology into its operating model. Its customer
coinvestment program secured long-term demand, reduced investment risk, and strengthened
its leadership in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. At the same time, ASML invested heavily
in supply chains and manufacturing resilience to support scale and reliability. More recently,
partnerships such as a minority stake in Mistral AI reflect a commitment to staying at the fore of
technological innovation.11
P&C insurance: Progressive’s technology bet
From 2019 to 2024, growth in the property and casualty insurance sector was driven largely by
price increases rather than policy expansion, while rising claims costs compressed profitability.12
Progressive, however, delivered revenue growth of roughly 14 percent annually—nearly three
times the growth rate of its peers—while maintaining strong profitability.13
Rather than relying on price alone, Progressive’s strong results reflected its continued
investment in tech-intensive capabilities such as Snapshot (for individual auto) and Smart Haul
(for commercial trucks). These moves have helped Progressive price more accurately and attract
safer drivers.
That focus on technology is further reflected in Progressive’s efforts over decades, integrating
data, analytics, and AI into pricing, underwriting, claims, and marketing. Machine learning models
(via H2O.ai, Snowflake) enable faster fraud detection, billing optimization, and granular pricing.
Telematics, along with sustained product innovation, have helped Progressive deliver superior
segmentation, detect cost changes earlier, and deploy rate adjustments faster than the rest of
the industry, supporting both growth and profitability.14
Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 8
11 “ASML, Mistral AI enter strategic partnership,” ASML press release, September 9, 2025.
12 Global Insurance Report 2025: The pursuit of growth, McKinsey, November 19, 2024.
13 The analysis draws on data from the McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
14 Q2 2025 earnings call, The Progressive Corporation, August 5, 2025.
The takeaway
ASML stands out for committing capital years before demand was certain and deepening its core
technology beyond what peers could match. That long-term investment, supplemented by
thoughtful acquisitions, unlocked high growth in its core and in adjacencies such as software
and services, allowing ASML’s advantage to compound.
The takeaway
Progressive’s success reflects how deeply embedded data and technology can improve and
accelerate business growth. By investing consistently and using analytics and AI to power pricing,
underwriting, and new growth engines beyond premiums, Progressive grew faster and more
profitably than peers in an otherwise constrained industry.
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Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 9
Banking: JPMorgan Chase’s bold discipline
Rate volatility, regulatory swings,15 and rising customer expectations for seamless digital
experiences have put pressure on traditional models, made planning difficult, and created more
opportunities for fintech disruption.16 Despite these challenges, JPMorgan Chase has
distinguished itself by committing to growth—expanding into adjacencies to reduce reliance on
any single growth driver, rewiring operations with technology, and remaining willing to change
course when conditions shifted.
That commitment showed up in a series of bold but disciplined decisions. During the COVID-19
pandemic, when many banks were shrinking their physical footprints, JPMorgan Chase built
roughly 900 branches to deepen customer relationships. As digital adoption accelerated,
however, the company quickly adjusted, consolidating locations rather than clinging to past
choices. This ability to invest early, learn quickly, and pivot has become a defining advantage.
JPMorgan Chase also built a diversified portfolio of growth engines across consumer, corporate,
and wealth businesses. It acquired First Republic Bank in 2023 to add about $92 billion in
deposits and secure a high-net-worth client base.17 At the same time, JPMorgan Chase funded
new offerings such as buy now, pay later, consumer lending products, and digital treasury and
payments solutions.18 These moves were designed to broaden revenue streams and reinforce
the core, not simply “buy” scale.
At the center of this strategy is a tech-enabled “acceleration engine,” investing $18 billion
annually in technology—more than its peers.19 Those investments enabled faster product
launches, improved risk management, and enterprise-wide use of generative AI to streamline
workflows and support decision-making. These investments also helped the firm stay ahead of
regulatory change while improving efficiency. Investors have noticed: JPMorgan Chase’s price-
to-book ratio ranged from 1.5 to 2.0 from 2019 to 2024, surpassing its peers’ equivalent ratio of
0.9 to 1.2.20
The takeaway
JPMorgan Chase’s advantage came from committing to growth while deliberately diversifying its
growth engines to future-proof the core. By combining adjacencies in payments and lending with
sustained, large-scale technology investment, the firm expanded relevance and resilience as
banking economics and customer expectations shifted.
15 “Congress repeals CFPB’s overdraft rule,” Congressional Research Service, September 10, 2025.
16 “Fintechs: A new paradigm of growth,” McKinsey, October 24, 2023.
17 “JPMorgan Chase acquires substantial majority of assets and assumes certain liabilities of First Republic Bank,” JPMorgan
Chase press release, May 1, 2023.
18 “J.P. Morgan agrees to acquire OpenInvest, a pioneer in values-based investing: Accelerates ESG investing capabilities for
wealth management clients,” JPMorgan Chase press release, June 29, 2021.
19 “We’re one of the world’s largest tech and data-driven companies,” JPMorgan Chase, January 16, 2026.
20 The analysis draws on data from the McKinsey Value Intelligence platform.
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Andy West is a senior partner in McKinsey’s Boston office, Dago Diedrich is a senior partner in the Düsseldorf
office, David Schiff is a senior partner in the Austin office, Greg Kelly is a senior partner in the Atlanta office, Jill
Zucker is a senior partner in the New York office, Kate Siegel is a partner in the Detroit office, Rebecca Doherty
is a partner in the Bay Area office, and Sascha Lehmann is a senior partner in the Hamburg office.
The authors wish to thank David Lara, Karin Löffler, Laura LaBerge, Lisa Harkness, Marc de Jong, Michelle
Wycoff, Qian Wan, Thomas Kilroy, and Wilson McCrory for their contributions to this article.
Copyright © 2026 McKinsey & Company. All rights reserved.
Inspired for business growth: How five companies beat the market 10
What distinguishes business growth leaders is not better foresight but greater conviction. They
invest when uncertainty is highest, build capabilities rather than chase headlines, and treat
growth as something to be engineered rather than hoped for. In a world where only a small
minority truly outperforms, those choices increasingly determine who pulls ahead and who falls
behind.
• Are our growth aspirations and commitments bold enough to allow us to grow
faster and more profitably than the market?
• Do our resource allocations match our growth priorities?
— Development of a diversified portfolio of business growth engines
• How many independent growth engines do we actually have today—and how many
rely entirely on the core?
• Which adjacencies genuinely build on our strengths, and which are distractions
dressed up as growth?
— Innovation engine with technology at the core
• Where can AI and agentic AI help us build up our competitive advantages?
• Which strategically critical capabilities should we build organically, and which would
benefit from being developed through thoughtful partnerships or acquisitions?
Leading tomorrow: Questions for leaders
Building a company that grows consistently ahead of its peers takes effort, resources, and
commitment. But, as our stories show, even large, well-established companies can compete and
win—growth is not just the arena of start-ups.
Leaders at companies with aspirations to outperform should consider these questions:
— Consistent commitment to business growth
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