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How To
Size An Emerging Market in Your Business Plan
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by:
Dave Lavinsky
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In developing their business plans, companies
of all sizes face the challenge of determining the size of their
markets. To begin, companies must present the size of their “relevant
market” in their plans. The relevant market equals the company's sales
if it were to capture 100% of its specific niche of the market.
Conversely, stating that you were competing in the $1 trillion U.S.
healthcare market, for example, is a telltale sign of a poorly reasoned
business plan, as there is no company that could reap $1 trillion in
healthcare sales. Defining and communicating a credible relevant market
size is far more powerful than presenting generic industry figures.
The challenge that many firms face is their inability to size their
relevant markets, particularly if they are competing in new or rapidly
evolving markets. On one hand, the fact that the markets are new or
evolving is the reason why there may be a large opportunity to
establish them and become the market leader. Conversely, investors,
shareholders and senior management are often skeptical to invest
resources because, since the markets do not yet exist, the markets may
be too small, or not really exist at all.
Growthink has encountered the challenge of sizing emerging markets
numerous times and has developed a proprietary methodology to solve the
problem. To begin, it is critical to understand why traditional market
sizing methodologies are ill-equipped to size emerging markets. To
illustrate, if a research firm were to use traditional methods to size
a mature market such as the coffee market in the United States, it
would consider demographic trends (e.g., aging baby boomers),
psychographic trends (e.g., increased health consciousness), past sales
trends and consumption rates, price movements, competitor brand shares
and new product development, and channels/retailers among others.
However, conducting such an analysis for emerging markets presents a
challenge as several of these factors (e.g., past sales, demographics
of the customer when there are no current customers) don’t exist
because the markets are presently untapped.
The methodology required to size these new markets requires two
approaches. Each approach will yield a different approximation of the
potential market size, and often the figures will work together to
provide a solid foundation for the market’s potential. Growthink calls
the first approach “peeling back the onion.” In this approach, we start
with the generic market (e.g., the coffee market) that that company is
trying to penetrate, and remove pieces of that market that it will not
target. For instance, if the company created an ultra high-speed coffee
maker that retailed for $600, it would initially reduce the market size
by factors such as retail channels (e.g., mass marketers would not
carry the product), demographic factors (lower income customers would
not purchase the product), etc. By peeling back the generic market, you
eventually will be left with only the relevant portion of it.
The second methodology requires assessing the market from several
angles to approximate the potential market share, answering questions
including:
- Competitors: who is competing for the customer that you will be
serving; what is in their product pipeline; once you release a
product/service, how long will it take them to enter the market, who
else may enter the market, etc.
- Customers: what are the demographics and psychographics of the
customers you will be targeting; what products are they currently using
to fulfill a similar need (substitute products); how are they currently
purchasing these products; what is their degree of loyalty to current
providers, etc.
- Market factors: what other factors exist that will influence the
market size – government regulations; market consolidation in related
markets, price changes for raw materials, etc.
- Case Studies: what other markets have experience similar
transformations and what were the customer adoption rates in those
markets, etc.
While these methodologies are often more painstaking than traditional
market research techniques, they can be the difference in determining
whether your company has the next iPod or the next Edsel.
About the author:
GT Business
Plans has developed over 200 business plans for clients that
have collectively raised over $750 million in financing, launched
numerous new product and service lines and gained competitive advantage
and market share. GT Business Plans is the sister site of GT Venture Capital
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