How To Save Your New Business Idea with Market Research
I
recently came across a compelling point of view from the Young Entrepreneur
Council, focused on how to build your business in a local market, and their
advice is valuable to any consumer-facing business. As the CEO of a new-age
market research company, I was thrilled to see that their first recommendation
was diligent market research.
With
any new business or product launch, your passion for the problem you are
looking to address and the ‘solution’ you have come up with could
tempt you to let your gut drive key decisions for your new business.
However, it is critical to take it one step further so you aren’t basing important and
costly decisions on hunches. You can and should use market research to not only
validate your hunch but also to get clarity on consumers’ preferences and opinions
when it comes to the problem you are looking to solve.
One
of the most common market research mistakes I see is when clients look to test
their new business idea. Some are simply focused on proving there is purchase
intent right off the bat, before having delved into the problem they are
looking to address. As a result, they may be testing an implementation of a
possible solution that only solves part of the problem, and they lose the
opportunity to develop their offering into a more holistic solution. In other
words, they come into the market research process with too narrow a focus.
When
companies require capital and human power to get off the ground, it becomes an
even greater risk to launch too quickly with a solution that hasn’t been fully explored. You
can save yourself a lot of time, money and energy by asking key questions to
your consumers before making costly decisions.
As
you think about conducting market research for a new business idea or product,
consider exploring a few of the avenues and questions below to build out your
solution further:
Is
your solution solving a real problem? What you deem a need could be viewed by
others as convenience, i.e. something that’s nice to have.
Is
the problem ‘universal’ or isolated to certain
types of consumer subgroups? This is important to gauge, even in a localized
market strategy.
Are
there other related needs you could address? Through market research, you gain
a deeper understanding of the extent of the problem you’re trying to solve. You may
even discover other helpful features your offering could include.
Are
you talking to an honest audience? It is natural to use your network of friends
and family as an initial gut check, but more importantly, you must test your
idea with people who will be honest and are not worried about hurting your
feelings.
Ultimately,
it’s very possible that you’ll discover that consumers
feel the way you thought they would, and that’s OK. Market research
may not always yield ‘a-ha’ insights, and it doesn’t always have to when you’re looking to validate a
hunch.
How To Save Your New Business Idea with Market Research
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