Many portfolio decisions in chemical companies begin with products. Organizations evaluate performance by product family, allocate resources by product line, and measure growth through product-specific metrics. While this approach provides useful operational structure, it can obscure an important reality: Customers do not buy products simply because they are available. They buy solutions to accomplish a specific objective within a specific application.
As a result, margin potential is often more dependent on the application the product serves than on the product itself.
Two customers may purchase the same chemistry, yet assign dramatically different value to its performance. One application may treat the material as a commodity, while another may depend on it for critical functionality, risk reduction, or operational reliability. The product remains the same, but the economics surrounding it are fundamentally different.
For strategy leaders, business unit leaders, and commercial teams, this creates an important question: Are portfolio decisions being driven by products, or by the applications where value is actually created?
Beyond the Product Portfolio
Most product portfolios evolve over time through acquisitions, product development efforts, manufacturing investments, and customer relationships. The result is often a portfolio organized around technical categories rather than customer use cases.
While this structure is useful internally, it can make it difficult to identify where the most attractive opportunities exist. Products that appear similar from a technical perspective may serve applications with vastly different growth rates, competitive dynamics, and profitability profiles.
This is where application strategy provides a different perspective. Rather than asking which products deserve additional investment, organizations begin by examining the applications they serve. They evaluate where customers place the highest value on performance, where customers are least likely to change suppliers, where technical differentiation matters most, and where future demand is expected to grow.
Viewed through this lens, opportunities that were previously hidden often become visible. Some applications support premium positioning and stronger margins despite modest volumes. Other applications may consume significant resources while generating limited strategic value. Understanding these differences allows leaders to prioritize investments based on market opportunity rather than product familiarity.
Why Applications Matter
Not all applications contribute equally to long-term profitability.
In some markets, products are easily substituted and purchasing decisions are driven primarily by cost. In other markets, performance requirements are more demanding, validation cycles are longer, and customers place greater emphasis on reliability, consistency, or regulatory compliance.
These factors influence how customers evaluate value and ultimately shape margin potential.
For example, a material used in a highly regulated application may command greater pricing power, because qualification requirements make supplier changes difficult. Similarly, a product that directly influences customer performance outcomes may be viewed differently than one that performs a supporting function.
The implication for portfolio strategy is significant. Organizations that understand where value is created can concentrate commercial resources, innovation investments, and market development efforts on the applications most likely to generate sustainable returns.
This does not mean abandoning lower-margin opportunities. Rather, it means understanding the distinct role each application plays within the broader portfolio and making deliberate decisions about where growth investments will create the greatest impact.
Putting Applications First
Developing an effective application strategy requires combining market insight, customer understanding, and commercial discipline.
Voice of the customer research helps reveal how customers define value within specific applications. Market segmentation clarifies where buying criteria differ. Competitive analysis identifies areas where differentiation is strongest and where commoditization pressures are increasing.
Together, these insights help organizations understand not only what customers buy, but also why they buy it.
This perspective often changes strategic priorities. Product development efforts become more closely connected to market opportunities. Commercial teams gain greater clarity around target accounts and growth segments. Resource allocation decisions become easier because investments can be evaluated against the value potential of specific applications rather than broad product categories.
Over time, organizations become better positioned to identify emerging opportunities, respond to changing customer requirements, and direct resources toward markets with the greatest strategic value.
Where Margin Lives
The profitability of a product often depends less on the chemistry itself than on the application it serves. Customer priorities, performance requirements, competitive dynamics, and purchasing criteria all influence how much value customers assign to a solution and what they are willing to pay for it.
Organizations that focus exclusively on products risk overlooking these differences. Those that adopt a stronger application strategy gain a clearer understanding of where differentiation matters most, which markets support premium positioning, and where future growth opportunities are most likely to emerge.
As competition intensifies, application-level insight can become a significant strategic advantage. It helps organizations make better portfolio decisions, direct resources toward higher-value opportunities, and focus growth investments where the greatest returns are most likely to be realized.


