mairi robertson nmp - workshop 2
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champions of change
Scoping the Market Opportunity
Workshop
Mairi Robertson
March 30th 2012
Who are we?
• Advisory and investment boutique that specialises in innovation and enterprise in TMT sector;
• Known as “practitioners that consult”;
• We translate between the technologists and the creatives to make the business case that enables informed decisions to be made;
• We work with corporate and venture-backed start-up clients;
• Track record in creating successful businesses – bigger, better, faster!
• Research and Intelligence Hub coupled with the ability to deliver;
• Offices in Glasgow & London;
• International perspective.
if you don’t move forward,
you’re standing still, or worse.
• Transformation. Innovation, Re-engineering, Business Strategy Development.
• nmp have been championing change, maximising growth and enhancing return on investment since 1999 for some very happy clients; like Samsung, Sony, Oracle, Nokia, TeliaSonera, Orange, BBC, ITV and Channel 4.
• We operate on the cusp of technology and content, bringing business people, technologists and creative people together and bringing clarity, honesty and focus to the table.
champions of change
So you’ve had a good idea ….
What is the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much will
you charge?
Will they buy
it?
Who are your
competitors?
What is the product/ service?
• This should be the easiest question
• Define the product/service in a few sentences
• It needs to be jargon free and not focused on technology
• It should clearly state what the benefits are to the end user
What is
the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much
will you
charge?
Will they
buy it?
Who are
your
competitor
s?
iPad
• “Pick up the new iPad and suddenly, it’s clear. You’re actually
touching your photos, reading a book, playing the piano. Nothing
comes between you and what you love. To make that hands-on
experience even better, we made the fundamental elements of
iPad better — the display, the camera, the wireless connection. All
of which makes the new, third-generation iPad capable of so much
more than you ever imagined”
Media Composer 6
• “Professional editors and producers like you around the world
have told us what you need to succeed. More efficient and easy-
to-use video editing tools. An open platform that enables you to
work with everything you want and integrate into any workflow.
More power to eliminate bottlenecks, so you can work faster than
ever. We listened. We took notes. We made it happen.”
Angry Birds
• “The survival of the Angry Birds is at stake! Dish out revenge on
the green pigs who stole the Birds’ eggs. Use the unique
destructive powers of the Angry Birds to lay waste to the pigs’
fortified castles. Angry Birds features hours of gameplay,
challenging physics-based castle demolition, and lots of replay
value. Use logic, skill, and brute force to crush the enemy.”
Who is the customer?
• Who will buy it?
• Who will use it?
• Are these different?
What is
the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much
will you
charge?
Will they
buy it?
Who are
your
competitor
s?
Understand your customers, market position & how competitors fit
Low cost High cost
Low performance
High performance
Why is it important?
• Enables you to:
– better determine if there is enough
people willing to buy your
product/service
– tailor your offering to better meet the
needs of your potential customer base
– target your marketing efforts to reach
your most promising prospects
– use the right marketing messages
• Defining a target market will not
limit your business
• Defining a target market will
increase cost efficiency
Common consumer characteristics
Target customers
age
gender
income level
buying habits
occupation or industry
marital status
family status
geographic location
ethnic group
political affiliations
hobbies and interests
Common business characteristics
Target customers
industry
number of employees
amount of annual sales
geographic location
age of business
job role
How many people will buy it?
• In simplest terms market potential can be expressed as a function
of:
– the number of customers purchasing
– amount purchased
– frequency of purchase
• In other words, market potential = (how many * how much * how
often)
What is
the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much
will you
charge?
Will they
buy it?
Who are
your
competitor
s?
A cautionary note!
• Creating a realistic estimate of your addressable market can
seem daunting
• However, the math behind these calculations should usually be
relatively simple
• Remember that stakeholders/VCs want to see that you used an
easy to understand and logical methodology to generate the
estimate that you're giving them
– the easier it is to understand the quicker they can get comfortable
with it and focus on other questions that they might have
– building in unnecessary levels of assumptions can generate an
unrealistic result – garbage in garbage out!
Bottom Up or Top Down
• A top down approach starts with market and industry data.
Based on a geographic market area, customer profile and their
propensity to buy your products and services
– Start with the whole pie, the whole market. Narrow it down by various
means to get to the number that you’ll sell
• A bottom up starts with your customers. How much and often do
they buy? What is their profile? How many potential customers do
you have in the market based on your customer profiles? How
can you reach them?
– Instead of subtracting things from a hypothetical pie, you
multiply these assumptions to determine the market potential
Top down example – new entrant mobile operator
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
90,000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Population of UK
Target market
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
90,000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Population of UK
Addressable market
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
90,000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Population of UK Mobile subscribers in UK
Market share
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
3UK
Everything Everywhere (inc. Virgin)
T-Mobile (inc. Virgin)
Orange
O2 (inc. Tesco)
Vodafone
Total customers
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
90,000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Population of UK Mobile subscribers in UK New entrant subscribers
Price
-
50
100
150
200
250
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Average revenue per subscriber
Revenue
-
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
1,400,000
1,600,000
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Bottom up
New prepay
subscribers
Existing prepay
subscribers
Churned prepay
subscribers
Prepay subscribers
New contract
subscribers
Existing contract
subscribers
Churned contract
subscribers
Contract subscribers
Bottom up
Prepay subscribers
Contract subscribers
Average minutes per
month
Average SMS per
month
Average data usage
per month
Average minutes per
month
Average SMS per
month
Average data usage
per month
Annual prepay
minutes
Annual prepay SMS
Annual prepay data
usage
Annual contract
minutes
Annual contract
SMS
Annual contract data
usage
Bottom up
Annual prepay
minutes
Annual prepay SMS
Annual prepay data
usage
Annual contract
minutes
Annual contract
SMS
Annual contract data
usage
Price per prepay
minute
Price per prepay
SMS
Price per prepay
data usage
Price per contract
minute
Price per contract
SMS
Price per contract
data usage
Revenue from
prepay voice
Revenue from
prepay SMS
Revenue from
prepay data usage
Revenue from
contract voice
Revenue from
contract SMS
Revenue from
contract data usage
Bottom up
Revenue from
prepay voice
Revenue from
prepay SMS
Revenue from
prepay data usage
Revenue from
contract voice
Revenue from
contract SMS
Revenue from
contract data usage
Revenue from
prepay
Revenue from
contract
Total Revenue
Which to use?
• The bottom-up method is generally considered more robust
– less likely to include non-addressable revenue
– starting point for financial projections and operational planning
– identifies key drivers, such as the number of customers, essential for
determine costs, profitability and cash flow
• Top-down financial projections often don’t consider the right
market
– available figures may not be for the right region, target customer or
part of the value chain you are addressing
– it doesn’t include the operational assumptions or metrics describing
how those sales will be accomplished – can be risky when building a
full business plan
Advice
• Remember it is a forecast – it will never be correct. However
make sure you have identified the key profit/loss parameters
• Where you have assumptions that are less reliable use scenarios
(low and a high version of the estimate) to provide a range for the
size of the addressable market
• Consider estimating the market size in more than one way
– bottom-up estimate and top down to make sure that the two
approaches yield a somewhat similar number
How much will you charge?
• What is the business model
• How will you charge?
• How is it calculated?
• Does it stack up?
What is
the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much
will you
charge?
Will they
buy it?
Who are
your
competitor
s?
Business model examples
Business models
The Add-On model.
The Advertising
model
The Affiliate model
The Auction model
The Bait and Hook model
The Direct Sales model The Franchise
model
The Freemium model
The Internet Bubble model
The Low-Cost model
The Pay as You Go model
The Subscription
model
Pricing principles
• No matter what type of
product you sell, the price you
charge your customers or
clients will have a direct
influence on whether your
business succeeds
• Some key principles
– all prices must cover costs
and profits.
– the most effective way to
lower prices is to lower costs
• Do not set prices once and "hope for the best.“ It’s time to review your costs when:
– you introduce a new product
– Your costs change;
– you decide to enter a new market;
– your competitors change their prices;
– the economy experiences either inflation or recession;
– your sales strategy changes;
– your customers are making more money because of your product or service
Types of pricing methodologies
• Cost-Plus Pricing
– mostly used by manufacturers
– based on all overhead costs + percentage of profit
– essential overhead figure is accurate
• Demand Price
– optimum combination of volume and profit
– products usually sold through different sources at different prices
• E.g. wholesaler might buy greater quantities than a retailer, which results
in purchasing at a lower unit price
– difficult for new products as need to be able to correctly calculate
beforehand what price will generate the optimum relation of profit to
volume
Classic price elasticity questions
• Best done on a large scale survey
• Present the overall concept – where possible making
comparisons to existing or similar products to give a benchmark,
bringing out the core USPs of the product
– At what price would you consider the product to be so expensive that
you would not consider buying it? (Too expensive)
– At what price would you consider the product to be priced so low that
you would feel the quality couldn’t be very good? (Too cheap)
– At what price would you consider the product starting to get
expensive, so that it is not out of the question, but you would have to
give some thought to buying it? (Expensive/High Side)
– At what price would you consider the product to be a bargain—a
great buy for the money? (Cheap/Good Value)
Pricing based on Van Westendorp principles
• Optimum Pricing Point is the price at which the number of customers who see the product as too cheap is equal to the number who see the product as too expensive
– typically the recommended price
• The range of prices between the Point of Marginal Cheapness and the Point of Marginal Expensiveness is the range of acceptable prices for a product
– in established markets, few competitive products are priced outside this range
Types of pricing methodologies
• Competitive Pricing
– used when an established market price for a particular product or
service
– often in markets where there is a major market player that will set the
price that other, smaller companies will be compelled to follow
– benchmark prices of each competitor then figure out your optimum
price and decide, based on direct comparison, whether you can
defend the prices you've set
• If higher than competitors you must offer something extra like superior
customer service or added features
– difficult for service businesses as services vary widely from one firm
to another
• you can charge a higher fee for a superior service and still be considered
competitive within your market
Might want to consider trade off techniques
• Product is described in terms of attributes and levels in order to see what is being traded off
• An attribute is a general feature of a product– say size, colour, speed, delivery time.
– Each attribute is then made up of specific levels. So for the attribute colour, levels might be red, green, blue and so on
• Conjoint analysis takes these attribute and level descriptions of products and uses them ask people to make a number of choices between different products
• For instance would you choose product A or product B
A B
Analysers 3 5
Languages C C+ Java
… … …
Price £500 £1000
Attributes could be based on different
commercial options or competitor
products
Again it should emphasis the USP of
the product
Will they buy it?
• What do the potential users think?
• This should be done before you have a product to sell!! Arguably
should be the first step
What is
the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much
will you
charge?
Will they
buy it?
Who are
your
competitor
s?
Use the right techniques
Brainstorming Secondary research
Focus Group
Survey Workshop Interview
Use cases Observation Prototyping
Where do you customers hang out online?
Ask the right questions
• I’m developing a new oven
– Do you want it be gas or
electric?
– Does it need a separate grill?
– Etc …
• Answer
– A slightly improved oven
• What issues do you have
cooking food?
– “It takes too long – I want to
cook food in 5 mins rather
than an hour”
• Answer
– Microwave
Issues: What are the end user’s unmet needs when doing a
task?
Demand: How important are they?
Differentiator: How close do your/competitor’s products get
to meeting the unmet needs?
Continue to listen to your customers
• They can help you to innovate and focus your next developments
• Find out your customers concerns and try and work out ways to
address these concerns without any significant increase cost
• Sometimes providing additional features that are not essential but
attractive can just give you the edge
Who are your competitors?
• How does your product compare to your competitors?
• What is your competitive advantage or USP?
• How long can you sustain this?
What is
the
product/
service?
Who is the
customer?
How many
people will
buy it?
How much
will you
charge?
Will they
buy it?
Who are
your
competitor
s?
Competitive advantage
• Anything that helps your business attract more customers than
your competitors is a competitive advantage
– most are only temporary
• Start by thinking about the features of the product or service that
you want to promote
– then how the customer will use the product or service
– how is what you offer better than your customers product or service
– translate features into a benefit to the customer
• If you think there is a number of benefits you may want to
prioritise for specific customer groups in terms of importance for
your marketing messages
Potential areas of competitive advantage
• Cost (short term solution)
• Quality value for money is a longer term strategy that works.
Building a reputation for quality in your field is very important,
because people won’t mind paying a bit more for something that
they’re sure will be a good buy
• Service – people appreciate and will pay for excellent customer
service
• Innovation - by adding improved and unique features will you be
able to create a separate identity for your business
Your USP can be anywhere across the value chain
10 types of innovation (Source http://www.doblin.com/)
Why they are the success they are
• Facebook – interface very simple one and
the design is plain and easy to use. Clean and uncluttered
– Facebook promotes interaction between its users through many features including the Like feature, the Comments feature and the Sharing features (all of which were innovative at time of release)
– broad target market - something for everyone (critical mass)
– people have full control over their profile and what they choose to display
– continual revamp and development
• Apple
– the engineers at Apple
understand what people want -
designs of Apple products are
simple, clean and elegant
– dynamic Product Line that
keeps customers coming back
for more
– marketing campaigns that
focus on the benefits - show
how the gadget can make your
life easier
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