You know that genius idea you have? The one on which you spend all your free time, ignoring your friends and antagonizing your spouse/sig other? The one where you sell your soul and take out a second mortgage to finance? Yeah, that one. (BTW, I don't recommend any of these. Been there, done that, and having a life is just as important to running a business as are startup capital and sweat equity).
Well, it will be a lost cause if there isn't a market for it. Or if you create something that's off the mark.
This is why market research is so important. Research on your marketplace, prospective customers and competitors tells you whether you should take the risk in the first place and, if you do, gives you a blueprint for what to build, who wants it and what they will pay for it.
But I can't afford research, you say? I hate to sound callous, but let me put it this way ... would you rather lose a couple hundred bucks and a couple dozen hours after a few weeks, or lose thousands of dollars and couple thousand of hours after a year or so? Market research helps you avoid these massive losses when it comes to real dollars as well as sunk opportunity costs.
And, what's even better, you don't have to hire an expensive market research firm or spend tens of thousands of dollars to get good information. (And, for god's sake, don't ever let anyone talk you into doing a focus group. I've been in marketing for 20 years, and, speaking from lots of professional experience, focus groups are a huge waste of time and money. People don't shop in a contrived group setting, and they certainly don't consider ideas, designs, products or services in such a setting, so why the hell would you ask them to. Makes no sense, and I've gotten precious little productive feedback from focus groups. There are very, very few reasonable scenarios for a focus group, so if someone tries to talk you into doing a focus group, they're either clueless or trying to sell you something you don't need. Okay, rant over.)
So here are five easy, inexpensive ways to conduct simple but effective market research on your own.
This does require a few steps...
First, you need to get a Survey Monkey or Google Forms account (both have a free version) and create a survey that asks some basic questions about your proposed product/service. Keep the survey to less than 10 questions so people complete the full survey. And provide some enticement (like a free $5 gift card to Target or Home Depot, or something even more relevant for your industry) for those who complete the full survey.
Then, set up a simple Google AdWords campaign, target keywords that you think people use to search for your proposed product/service and link the ad to your survey.
Yes, it takes a little time to set up and get accustomed to the interfaces of those services, but as a small business owner you should know how to use AdWords and Survey Monkey (or similar survey building tool) anyways, and this will give you some great data. Oh, and next week I will write an article on 10 survey questions to ask your target audience.
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