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Market Development In A Nutshell

Market Development is a growth-centric strategy that businesses use to identify or develop new Market segments for existing products. Companies utilize the market development strategy to discover new potential buyers of their products or services.

Understanding market development

In essence, the purpose of market development is to expand into untapped markets which may or may not be served by established competitors.

Market development starts with a segmentation analysis of the market in which the business currently sells.

To find a new target market segment, the company may consider different customer needs, preferences, interests, or even demographics.

It can also consider geographical areas, product-benefit factors, or psychographic factors such as values or lifestyle.

The company should then shortlist a list of potential market segments before deciding which to pursue.

Once a market has been identified, it is time to devise a promotional strategy tailored to that segment.

In markets with competition, many marketers opt for an aggressive, priced-based strategy to undercut other products and rapidly establish market share.

Market development considerations

Market development may seem simple on paper, but there are several important questions to consider before time and resources are allocated to expansion:

  • Is there a specific target audience that has been overlooked, ignored, or otherwise underserved? Would this audience benefit from the product in question? What would they be willing to pay?
  • Will the resources required to reach this market be worth the investment from an ROI perspective? It’s also important to consider the talent acquisition strategy and other costs related to establishing in a new market.
  • Is the company (or the marketing team) willing and able to conduct an exhaustive market development strategy and then implement the findings? The market development strategy checklist (MDSC) is a good baseline.
  • Can the company build a competitive advantage in the new market? In foreign countries, in particular, domestic companies with local knowledge and existing infrastructure may be difficult to outcompete. 

Market development strategies

Geographic expansion

Geographic expansion is one of the more obvious ways to expand the market for a product or service.

For example, an eCommerce company serving the Saudi Arabian market may choose to expand into other wealthy Arab states such as Qatar, UAE, Kuwait, and Bahrain. 

Product development

Product management has become a key role within most organizations and startups as it combines product development with experimentation to create a successful product in the market. Product management requires a combination of strategic thinking, problem-solving skills, and a relentless focus on customer needs and delivering the right product at the right time. Top product managers use a customer obsession approach to build and launch successful products.

When a company discovers new uses for an existing product, it can also expand into new markets and appeal to new buyers.

To that end, businesses can take advantage of the discrepancy between how it thinks customers use their products and how they actually use them.

Example

Slack is a company that obsesses over user behavior and has turned product refinement into an art form.

By listening to how customers used its platform, the company was able to differentiate itself from competitors who offered products with similar features. 

Today, Slack is far more than an instant messaging platform.

Slack follows a freemium model, where a free version is offered, and users can convert in paying customers if they want more usage or advanced functionalities. Slack combines the free model with a direct sales force to acquire enterprise customers with yearly recurring revenue of over 100K. Those customers were 575 in 2019, and they accounted for 40% of its revenues. 

The company instead sells organizational transformation which, according to customers, means a reduction in communication costs, knowledge management with zero effort, and “75% less email”, among many other benefits.

Distribution

Distribution represents the set of tactics, deals, and strategies that enable a company to make a product and service easily reachable and reached by its potential customers. It also serves as the bridge between product and marketing to create a controlled journey of how potential customers perceive a product before buying it.

New distribution channels are another type of market development strategy. 

The vast majority of brick-and-mortar businesses have used this strategy to take advantage of the boom in eCommerce.

Increasingly, however, online retailers have moved in the opposite direction and have opened physical stores to bolster revenue. 

Examples include Amazon, Warby Parker, and Bonobos.

Warby Parker is a prescription and sunglasses retail company, which focuses on vertical integration to enhance the customer experience by owning the optical laboratories where lenses are developed, and by owning both physical and online stores to enable customers to choose from a variety of products. Warby Parker leverages programs like the Home-Try-On program and the “Buy a Pair, Give a Pair” to lower up long-term customer acquisition costs, incentivize recurring purchases and referrals from existing customers.

Key takeaways

  • Market development is a growth-centric strategy that businesses use to identify or develop new market segments for existing products.
  • Market development starts with a segmentation analysis of the market in which the business currently sells. The company can consider different customer needs, preferences, interests, psychographics, or even demographics to discover a new market segment to enter.
  • Three market development strategies include those based on geographic expansion, product development, and distribution.

FourWeekMBA Business Toolbox

Business Engineering

Tech Business Model Template

A tech business model is made of four main components: value model (value propositions, mission, vision), technological model (R&D management), distribution model (sales and marketing organizational structure), and financial model (revenue modeling, cost structure, profitability and cash generation/management). Those elements coming together can serve as the basis to build a solid tech business model.

Web3 Business Model Template

A Blockchain Business Model according to the FourWeekMBA framework is made of four main components: Value Model (Core Philosophy, Core Values and Value Propositions for the key stakeholders), Blockchain Model (Protocol Rules, Network Shape and Applications Layer/Ecosystem), Distribution Model (the key channels amplifying the protocol and its communities), and the Economic Model (the dynamics/incentives through which protocol players make money). Those elements coming together can serve as the basis to build and analyze a solid Blockchain Business Model.

Asymmetric Business Models

In an asymmetric business model, the organization doesn’t monetize the user directly, but it leverages the data users provide coupled with technology, thus have a key customer pay to sustain the core asset. For example, Google makes money by leveraging users’ data, combined with its algorithms sold to advertisers for visibility.

Business Competition

In a business world driven by technology and digitalization, competition is much more fluid, as innovation becomes a bottom-up approach that can come from anywhere. Thus, making it much harder to define the boundaries of existing markets. Therefore, a proper business competition analysis looks at customer, technology, distribution, and financial model overlaps. While at the same time looking at future potential intersections among industries that in the short-term seem unrelated.

Technological Modeling

Technological modeling is a discipline to provide the basis for companies to sustain innovation, thus developing incremental products. While also looking at breakthrough innovative products that can pave the way for long-term success. In a sort of Barbell Strategy, technological modeling suggests having a two-sided approach, on the one hand, to keep sustaining continuous innovation as a core part of the business model. On the other hand, it places bets on future developments that have the potential to break through and take a leap forward.

Transitional Business Models

A transitional business model is used by companies to enter a market (usually a niche) to gain initial traction and prove the idea is sound. The transitional business model helps the company secure the needed capital while having a reality check. It helps shape the long-term vision and a scalable business model.

Minimum Viable Audience

The minimum viable audience (MVA) represents the smallest possible audience that can sustain your business as you get it started from a microniche (the smallest subset of a market). The main aspect of the MVA is to zoom into existing markets to find those people which needs are unmet by existing players.

Business Scaling

Business scaling is the process of transformation of a business as the product is validated by wider and wider market segments. Business scaling is about creating traction for a product that fits a small market segment. As the product is validated it becomes critical to build a viable business model. And as the product is offered at wider and wider market segments, it’s important to align product, business model, and organizational design, to enable wider and wider scale.

Market Expansion Theory

The market expansion consists in providing a product or service to a broader portion of an existing market or perhaps expanding that market. Or yet, market expansions can be about creating a whole new market. At each step, as a result, a company scales together with the market covered.

Speed-Reversibility

Asymmetric Betting



This post first appeared on FourWeekMBA, please read the originial post: here

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Market Development In A Nutshell

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