Market Analysis

During the Market Research phase, you gathered facts. During the Market Analysis phase, you will analyze those facts to understand better your customers, competition, and industry you operate in.

When conducting a market analysis, you should cover the following three angles:

  1. Industry analysis to assess the general industry environment in which you compete
  2. Target market analysis to identify and quantify the customers that you will be targeting for sales.
  3. Competitive analysis to identify your competitors and analyze their strengths and weaknesses.

Industry Analysis
Conducting an industry analysis is usually easy because market reports for industries are readily available on the Web. Find out the industry’s size, how it is segmented, and who the big players are.

Three commonly used methods for performing industry analysis are: 
Competitive Forces Model (Porter’s 5 Forces) 
– Broad Factors Analysis (PEST Analysis) 
– SWOT Analysis 

To find out more on each of the three above methods, read our Industry Analysis post.

Target Market Analysis
No one can afford to market to everyone. Defining a target market allows you to focus your marketing dollars on the market that is the most likely to buy from you.

Your target market analysis should answer who, what, when, where, why, and how. Find out who your potential customers are by defining their age, gender, ethnic background, education, occupations, and income levels. What are their lifestyles, attitudes, interests, hobbies, aspirations, and needs? When are they going to buy in terms of seasons, days, or hours? Where do your potential customers live, work, shop, hang out? Why would they purchase from you rather than the competitors? How do they search, find, select and buy?

Competitive Analysis
You must get a comprehensive understanding of where you are positioned within the competitive landscape.

Who are your direct competitors?
What is their market share?
What are their strengths and weaknesses?
Who are your indirect competitors?
What products and services do they offer?
How do they market their products?
How do they price their products and services?
Where do they stand in terms of the use of technology?
What are they doing right?
What other products and services can be substituted for yours?
Where will you position yourself in terms of size, price, quality, or other? What makes you unique?

A good article on competitive analysis can be found at https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/competitive-analysis-kit.


Market Analysis – Industry Analysis

Conducting an industry analysis is usually easy because market reports for industries are readily available.  If you are planning to sell cheese, do a Google search on “cheese market report,” and you’ll find several documents.   Find out the industry’s size, how it is segmented, and who the big players are. An industry analysis confirms the existence of a strategic opportunity.

There are three commonly used and important methods of performing industry analysis.  The three methods are: 

Competitive Forces Model (Porter’s 5 Forces) 
Broad Factors Analysis (PEST Analysis) 
SWOT Analysis 

Competitive Forces Model (Porter’s 5 Forces)

Is there are a large number of competitors in your industry?
Are there a lot of barriers to entry in the industry?
How powerful are the suppliers?
How powerful are the customers?
Are there substitute products and services?

Broad Factors Analysis (PEST Analysis) 

How likely is this industry to be impacted by government policy and changes in legislation?
Is this industry sensitive to exchange rates, economic growth, inflation, supply, demand, or recessions?
Does this industry depend on demographics, age distribution, and social trends?
Is this industry dependent on technology and at risk if technologies change?

SWOT Analysis 
SWOT analysis is a great way to understand where you stand in terms of your competition.

What are your strengths compared with others within this industry?
What are your weaknesses when compared to others in this industry?
What opportunities do you see for yourself within the industry?
What are the possible threats to succeeding in this industry?

 

For more, consider the following link: 

https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/knowledge/strategy/industry-analysis-methods/