I was approached recently by the CEO of an upstart software as a service company to consider helping his company develop a corporate finance strategy and raise the requisite capital. We talked at length about the application that the company had built, the customer base, the channels that the company sold through, and the market opportunity. We also talked about some of the obstacles that the company faced in order to be successful.
It appeared to me on first blush, that while the product was a great solution, the "problem" wasn't painful enough to the prospective customers to cause them to beat a path to the new application or even make the purchase if proactively presented with the solution. But that was only my first reaction and I've been wrong before. We needed to dig a little deeper.
I offered to review the business plan and bring in our part time CIO to help assess the technology and the opportunity. But before we had received the information for our discovery process, we received an interesting call from the CEO.
The company had decided to put everything on hold. Everything. The board had met over the weekend and decided that it would take too long to pull together the necessary funding to continue the next phase of the product development plan. The other option would be to attempt to grow the business organically but they didn't feel that could be done successfully either.
What initially appeared as an incredibly large target market was actually not nearly as large as thought. The challenge? The pain factor, or lack thereof, that I mentioned before. I was afraid of that...
It's difficult for early stage or startup companies to consider spending time or money on market research - largely because both resources are so scarce. The other concerns are that asking prospects for feedback and input could "let the cat out of the bag" too early, cause challenges with meeting deliverables, create competitors, or put intellectual property at risk.
All of these concerns are legitimate and should be addressed and treated with caution. However, the risk of spending time in production or development ahead of completing a thorough market research process can cause greater problems down the road.
If you have a great idea that you are considering turning into a product or business, work with an individual or firm that can provide you with the market research services to support business plans for small business. You'll be glad you did and you'll be better positioned as a result.
It appeared to me on first blush, that while the product was a great solution, the "problem" wasn't painful enough to the prospective customers to cause them to beat a path to the new application or even make the purchase if proactively presented with the solution. But that was only my first reaction and I've been wrong before. We needed to dig a little deeper.
I offered to review the business plan and bring in our part time CIO to help assess the technology and the opportunity. But before we had received the information for our discovery process, we received an interesting call from the CEO.
The company had decided to put everything on hold. Everything. The board had met over the weekend and decided that it would take too long to pull together the necessary funding to continue the next phase of the product development plan. The other option would be to attempt to grow the business organically but they didn't feel that could be done successfully either.
What initially appeared as an incredibly large target market was actually not nearly as large as thought. The challenge? The pain factor, or lack thereof, that I mentioned before. I was afraid of that...
It's difficult for early stage or startup companies to consider spending time or money on market research - largely because both resources are so scarce. The other concerns are that asking prospects for feedback and input could "let the cat out of the bag" too early, cause challenges with meeting deliverables, create competitors, or put intellectual property at risk.
All of these concerns are legitimate and should be addressed and treated with caution. However, the risk of spending time in production or development ahead of completing a thorough market research process can cause greater problems down the road.
If you have a great idea that you are considering turning into a product or business, work with an individual or firm that can provide you with the market research services to support business plans for small business. You'll be glad you did and you'll be better positioned as a result.
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