develop-a-business-strategy

Develop A Business Strategy

  • Identify a Microniche: Start by thoroughly researching and identifying a specific microniche within your industry. Look for areas with less competition, high conversion rates, engaged communities, high margins, strong demand, and potential for brand recognition.
  • Niche Down Market Targeting: Rather than targeting mass markets from the beginning, focus on niching down your target market as much as possible. This approach allows you to showcase your product or technology effectively without risking bankruptcy.
  • Start Small, Scale Down: Begin with a small market segment, just like Tesla did with its Roadster, targeting innovators who support your mission. This strategy enables cheaper and faster iterations and failure, creating options for future scaling.
  • Iterative Approach to Product Development: Adopt an iterative approach to product development and market entry. Understand that successful scaling takes time and multiple iterations. Focus on continuous improvement and adaptation based on feedback and market dynamics.
  • Shift to Strategy Mindset: Shift your mindset from a product launch perspective to a strategic perspective. Understand that building a new market requires a long-term strategy that involves rolling out products through various stages of iterations and scales over months or years.
  • Cost of Failing: Recognize the high cost of failure for incumbents compared to new entrants. Incumbents often struggle to recover from unsuccessful product launches, while startups can fail fast and cheaply by niching down and iterating quickly.
  • Options to Scale: Focus on creating options to scale by initially targeting small market opportunities. Avoid committing to large-scale initiatives from the start, as this can lead to expensive failures. Instead, build up economies of scale gradually over time.
  • Research and Data-Driven Decisions: Base your decisions on thorough research and data analysis. Utilize platforms like Amazon to identify microniche opportunities and conduct keyword analysis to understand audience size and preferences.
  • Build Brand Loyalty: Develop targeted strategies to engage with your microniche audience and build brand loyalty. Offer personalized experiences, content, and events to create a community around your brand.
  • Continuous Adaptation and Growth: Stay agile and adaptable in response to market changes and feedback. Continuously evaluate and refine your strategy based on evolving market dynamics and customer needs.

Identify a Microniche:

  • Thorough research is essential to identify a microniche within your industry.
  • Look for areas with less competition but high potential profitability.
  • Tailor your products or services to meet the unique needs of the targeted audience.
  • This approach helps differentiate your brand and position it as a specialized solution provider.

Niche Down Market Targeting:

  • Instead of targeting broad markets, focus on niche audiences.
  • Allocate resources effectively and establish credibility within a specific community.
  • Build a loyal customer base and generate early traction before expanding into larger markets.

Start Small, Scale Down:

  • Minimize risk by launching your product or service in a limited capacity initially.
  • Gather feedback from early adopters and iterate quickly based on insights.
  • Refine your offering, address challenges, and position your business for sustainable growth.

Iterative Approach to Product Development:

  • Release a minimum viable product (MVP) and gather feedback from customers.
  • Identify areas for improvement and prioritize features based on needs.
  • Iterate rapidly to deliver value and stay ahead of the competition.

Shift to Strategy Mindset:

  • Develop a comprehensive strategy aligned with long-term goals.
  • Anticipate market trends, understand customer behavior, and navigate challenges.
  • Make informed decisions and allocate resources effectively.

Cost of Failing:

  • Understand the higher costs of failure for incumbents due to large-scale initiatives.
  • Embrace failure as a part of the innovation process and learn from mistakes.
  • Pivot quickly and capitalize on opportunities to increase chances of success.

Options to Scale:

  • Focus on building a solid foundation within a niche market before expanding.
  • Leverage economies of scale and capitalize on emerging opportunities strategically.
  • Prioritize scalability to future-proof your operations and maintain competitiveness.

Research and Data-Driven Decisions:

  • Utilize tools and platforms for market research and data analysis.
  • Gather insights into customer preferences and behaviors to inform decisions.
  • Make informed decisions to identify trends and capitalize on opportunities.

Build Brand Loyalty:

  • Create personalized experiences and engage with your audience.
  • Foster a sense of community and connection around your brand.
  • Generate repeat business and establish a competitive advantage.

Continuous Adaptation and Growth:

  • Stay agile and responsive to evolving market dynamics and customer needs.
  • Continuously evaluate and refine your strategy based on feedback and trends.
  • Embrace change and innovation to position your business for sustained growth and success.

Read Next: Business Model Innovation, Business Models.

Related Innovation Frameworks

Business Engineering

business-engineering-manifesto

Business Model Innovation

business-model-innovation
Business model innovation is about increasing the success of an organization with existing products and technologies by crafting a compelling value proposition able to propel a new business model to scale up customers and create a lasting competitive advantage. And it all starts by mastering the key customers.

Innovation Theory

innovation-theory
The innovation loop is a methodology/framework derived from the Bell Labs, which produced innovation at scale throughout the 20th century. They learned how to leverage a hybrid innovation management model based on science, invention, engineering, and manufacturing at scale. By leveraging individual genius, creativity, and small/large groups.

Types of Innovation

types-of-innovation
According to how well defined is the problem and how well defined the domain, we have four main types of innovations: basic research (problem and domain or not well defined); breakthrough innovation (domain is not well defined, the problem is well defined); sustaining innovation (both problem and domain are well defined); and disruptive innovation (domain is well defined, the problem is not well defined).

Continuous Innovation

continuous-innovation
That is a process that requires a continuous feedback loop to develop a valuable product and build a viable business model. Continuous innovation is a mindset where products and services are designed and delivered to tune them around the customers’ problem and not the technical solution of its founders.

Disruptive Innovation

disruptive-innovation
Disruptive innovation as a term was first described by Clayton M. Christensen, an American academic and business consultant whom The Economist called “the most influential management thinker of his time.” Disruptive innovation describes the process by which a product or service takes hold at the bottom of a market and eventually displaces established competitors, products, firms, or alliances.

Business Competition

business-competition
In a business world driven by technology and digitalization, competition is much more fluid, as innovation becomes a bottom-up approach that can come from anywhere. Thus, making it much harder to define the boundaries of existing markets. Therefore, a proper business competition analysis looks at customer, technology, distribution, and financial model overlaps. While at the same time looking at future potential intersections among industries that in the short-term seem unrelated.

Technological Modeling

technological-modeling
Technological modeling is a discipline to provide the basis for companies to sustain innovation, thus developing incremental products. While also looking at breakthrough innovative products that can pave the way for long-term success. In a sort of Barbell Strategy, technological modeling suggests having a two-sided approach, on the one hand, to keep sustaining continuous innovation as a core part of the business model. On the other hand, it places bets on future developments that have the potential to break through and take a leap forward.

Diffusion of Innovation

diffusion-of-innovation
Sociologist E.M Rogers developed the Diffusion of Innovation Theory in 1962 with the premise that with enough time, tech products are adopted by wider society as a whole. People adopting those technologies are divided according to their psychologic profiles in five groups: innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards.

Frugal Innovation

frugal-innovation
In the TED talk entitled “creative problem-solving in the face of extreme limits” Navi Radjou defined frugal innovation as “the ability to create more economic and social value using fewer resources. Frugal innovation is not about making do; it’s about making things better.” Indian people call it Jugaad, a Hindi word that means finding inexpensive solutions based on existing scarce resources to solve problems smartly.

Constructive Disruption

constructive-disruption
A consumer brand company like Procter & Gamble (P&G) defines “Constructive Disruption” as: a willingness to change, adapt, and create new trends and technologies that will shape our industry for the future. According to P&G, it moves around four pillars: lean innovation, brand building, supply chain, and digitalization & data analytics.

Growth Matrix

growth-strategies
In the FourWeekMBA growth matrix, you can apply growth for existing customers by tackling the same problems (gain mode). Or by tackling existing problems, for new customers (expand mode). Or by tackling new problems for existing customers (extend mode). Or perhaps by tackling whole new problems for new customers (reinvent mode).

Innovation Funnel

innovation-funnel
An innovation funnel is a tool or process ensuring only the best ideas are executed. In a metaphorical sense, the funnel screens innovative ideas for viability so that only the best products, processes, or business models are launched to the market. An innovation funnel provides a framework for the screening and testing of innovative ideas for viability.

Idea Generation

idea-generation

Design Thinking

design-thinking
Tim Brown, Executive Chair of IDEO, defined design thinking as “a human-centered approach to innovation that draws from the designer’s toolkit to integrate the needs of people, the possibilities of technology, and the requirements for business success.” Therefore, desirability, feasibility, and viability are balanced to solve critical problems.

Connected Strategy Frameworks

Porter’s Five Forces

porter-five-forces
Porter’s Five Forces is a model that helps organizations to gain a better understanding of their industries and competition. Published for the first time by Professor Michael Porter in his book “Competitive Strategy” in the 1980s. The model breaks down industries and markets by analyzing them through five forces

Porter’s Generic Strategies

porters-generic-strategies
In his book, “Competitive Advantage,” in 1985, Porter conceptualized the concept of competitive advantage, by looking at two key aspects. Industry attractiveness, and the company’s strategic positioning. The latter, according to Porter, can be achieved either via cost leadership, differentiation, or focus.

Porter’s Diamond Model

porters-diamond-model
Porter’s Diamond Model is a diamond-shaped framework that explains why specific industries in a nation become internationally competitive while those in other nations do not. The model was first published in Michael Porter’s 1990 book The Competitive Advantage of Nations. This framework looks at the firm strategy, structure/rivalry, factor conditions, demand conditions, related and supporting industries.

Porter’s Four Corners Analysis 

four-corners-analysis
Developed by American academic Michael Porter, the Four Corners Analysis helps a business understand its particular competitive landscape. The analysis is a form of competitive intelligence where a business determines its future strategy by assessing its competitors’ strategy, looking at four elements: drivers, current strategy, management assumptions, and capabilities.

Ansoff Matrix

ansoff-matrix
You can use the Ansoff Matrix as a strategic framework to understand what growth strategy is more suited based on the market context. Developed by mathematician and business manager Igor Ansoff, it assumes a growth strategy can be derived by whether the market is new or existing, and the product is new or existing.

Blitzscaling Canvas

blitzscaling-business-model-innovation-canvas
The Blitzscaling business model canvas is a model based on the concept of Blitzscaling, which is a particular process of massive growth under uncertainty, and that prioritizes speed over efficiency and focuses on market domination to create a first-scaler advantage in a scenario of uncertainty.

Blue Ocean Strategy

blue-ocean-strategy
A blue ocean is a strategy where the boundaries of existing markets are redefined, and new uncontested markets are created. At its core, there is value innovation, for which uncontested markets are created, where competition is made irrelevant. And the cost-value trade-off is broken. Thus, companies following a blue ocean strategy offer much more value at a lower cost for the end customers.

Business Analysis Framework

business-analysis
Business analysis is a research discipline that helps driving change within an organization by identifying the key elements and processes that drive value. Business analysis can also be used in Identifying new business opportunities or how to take advantage of existing business opportunities to grow your business in the marketplace.

Gap Analysis

gap-analysis
A gap analysis helps an organization assess its alignment with strategic objectives to determine whether the current execution is in line with the company’s mission and long-term vision. Gap analyses then help reach a target performance by assisting organizations to use their resources better. A good gap analysis is a powerful tool to improve execution.

Digital Marketing Circle

digital-marketing-channels
digital channel is a marketing channel, part of a distribution strategy, helping an organization to reach its potential customers via electronic means. There are several digital marketing channels, usually divided into organic and paid channels. Some organic channels are SEO, SMO, email marketing. And some paid channels comprise SEM, SMM, and display advertising.

Other strategy frameworks:

Additional resources:

Scroll to Top

Discover more from FourWeekMBA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

FourWeekMBA