The pursuit of commercial viability: Seven questions new business owners must answer

Anyone can have an idea. Ideas are cheap and they are plenty.
The challenge is turning that ‘amazing’ idea or invention into a commercially viable business entity.
Many people throw their hearts, souls, energy and wallets into developing their idea. Designing, crafting and forming it. Then thinking about how they are going to market their idea to customers using marketing strategies and tactics. They are looking from the inside out.
But there are key questions most new business owners fail to explore first.
These questions (and others) need to be answered before anyone officially starts any business.
If you cannot find markets of sufficient size (yet) and you don’t have something that meets clients’ current or emerging needs and priorities, then don’t start.
Because if your business idea is not commercially viable, then it’s a hobby.
A word of caution: don’t get confused or distracted by programmes or books telling you that having an idea and will to make it work is all it takes. It isn’t.
So, before you invest all that time, money and effort, do your homework by checking there is a viable market wanting what you have to offer, that is willing to pay for it, and that you have a distinct competitive advantage.
Remember everybody lives by selling something.
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