Common Pitfalls when estimating Market Share
There are a few things that seem to pop up on a regular basis when a business analysis / business plan is being developed. More often than not, these are the product of biases and short-circuited heuristics on the part of the analysts and business owners involved.When I'm doing an analysis review (and especially when I'm doing a long day of these reviews) I start with this list and immediately look to make sure these problems don't exist:
Competitive environment is poorly understood
Most of our business decisions address a competitive environment in which we are the incumbent. This sometimes trips up business managers who are looking to extend our business into adjacencies or into transformational arenas. If the plan doesn't comprehend the current competitive situation as well as how that competitive environment is evolving, it's time to go back and break out Porter's Five Forces again.Market share ramps too quickly
I occasionally see some really enthusiastic projections. I mean, really enthusiastic. For example, a brand new product, that serves a market we're not familiar with, customers we don't currently do business with, through channels we're unfamiliar with, but we'll ramp up our volume faster than the last iPhone.Peak market share is too aggressive
I see this one a lot. The logic seems to be "if we can't capture first place in the market, why would we even enter?" This might be true, but it doesn't mean that we will capture first place in the market. If the peak market share for a product introduction is not consistent with the competitive environment, it needs to be adjusted. Similarly, if the peak market share makes volume assumptions that we can't physically produce with our current manufacturing facilities, supply chain and channel structure, it needs to be adjusted, too.(more to come)
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