30th Dec 2011
5 Steps for Finding New Customers
Ronald Brown is a successful startup CEO with an extensive background in technology and consumer marketing. His new book, Anticipate. The Architecture of Small Team Innovation and Product Success is available via iTunes, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Kobo.
The subject of finding customers is one of the most mysterious in business development. I’m often asked how the most successful companies do it, maybe in the hope that there’s a secret or shortcut to success. Sorry to say, no silver bullet exists.
Even with large budgets, customer discovery is more art than science. Below are the five basic steps. The most important aspect of this process is to be very methodical in your approach. Knowing where you’ve been is the only way to improve and repeat successes. Pay close attention to the details and record everything in a consistent format.
1. Classification Structure
The first step is to decide on a classification structure, better known as segmentation. You might have a product in mind, or a general concept, but sometimes, you might just be fishing — looking for a problem to solve in a market that seems attractive. That’s OK. Market segmenters are detectives.
What makes a market attractive? Maybe you see alignment with your idea or product. Or, maybe something about a segment strikes a chord and gets your creative juices flowing, knowing what you know about your company’s capabilities. Also, segment size is important: Why waste time if long-term financial gains aren’t possible?
The segment selection process can be intuitive, based on personal experience, or it can be driven by highly sophisticated segmentation tools that carve up the total market into standardized groups. (Lots of companies start with Standard Industrial Classification codes (SIC codes), a system for tracking the entire economy, managed by the U.S. Census Bureau.) Either way, at this point, you are simply making educated guesses about which ones might be a fit. You have no idea if the fit will materialize.
In emerging industries, segmentation can evolve quickly. When the iPad was first introduced, tablets were tablets. Then ereaders became a distinct category vs. general purpose. Then pricing tiers emerged. Now, industry analysts are breaking the market up into broad stroke vertical applications — education, health care, etc. — which will get subdivided further very soon.
2. Hypothesis Testing
With your evaluation structure in place, you now need to determine, one segment at a time, if there is really an opportunity you can address. You dig deeper from a research standpoint, paying particular attention to competitive offerings. Again, there’s a range of tools you can use. A consumer products company might do a formal, quantitative study, and a company selling to enterprises might set up personal meetings with senior executives. Major consulting firms, like McKinsey & Co. or the Boston Consulting Group, rely heavily on in-depth, one-on-one interviews in all of their projects. I’m working on a project in the tablet business right now, and you’d be amazed at how much you can learn from resellers.
What are you looking for? You’re identifying customer problems. They should be big ones — “pain points.” If a problem isn’t urgent and important, it’ll be difficult to create a meaningful competitive advantage. At the same time, you’re looking to see how your solution solves the problem. Is it dramatically better? Is it “demonstrable” (a very helpful ingredient when it comes to being socialized)?
If you’ve found a pain point in a large market you can address and there are no competitors (yes, it happens), you’ve stumbled upon an “unmet need,” one of the holy grails of new product development.
Segment by segment, you are testing a hypothesis related to fit or alignment: that you have something of value to offer a customer group. You are not just collecting information.
You’ll discover all kinds of things at this point, from a particular segment being a complete miss, to essential product features that must be added. Hypothesis testing never stops, even after you introduce your product. In fact, the best is yet to come. Once a product is in the market, learning based on actual usage will flow in. That’s why many in the new products field go to market with a “minimally viable product.”
3. Nuance Testing
Here’s the step that’s easy to overlook. All problems have context. In other words, when customers solve problems, they are affected by circumstances associated with timing and physical surroundings, and by the nature of the task itself. As a marketer, you won’t understand context by doing a survey, conducting a focus group, or talking to senior executives.
You understand context by experiencing customer problem solving yourself. To do that, you turn to customer immersion techniques. Did you know dairy farmers use tablets? To elegantly solve their problems, you better be willing to get up at 3 a.m. on a freezing morning. Some consumer goods companies even live with customers in their homes for a short period of time. Procter & Gamble, considered one of the best marketers in the world, uses such an immersion program called “Living It.”
4. Customer Stories
Hypothesis and nuance testing findings get captured as stories. They’re much more descriptive than use cases in that they focus heavily on problem/solution decision making.
5. Solution Iteration
Tight product alignment with a customer is a matter of iteration. You put something out there (an idea, a prototype, an actual product), and you get feedback, and you go away and improve and refine. Your customer stories get more refined as well.
It’s highly unlikely that you’ll identify a pain point and address it perfectly in one fell swoop. In fact, to even try is highly risky, especially if you’re building hardware.
Most of the time and money wasted in new product development is related to late-stage rework, but you can avoid it by developing in small steps, ever tightening the alignment. This is what agile development is all about, and why it’s gaining so much in popularity in and outside Silicon Valley.
Image courtesy of iStockphoto, pixdeluxe
More About: Business, contributor, customers, features, Small Business
For more Business coverage:
- Follow Mashable Business on Twitter
- Become a Fan on Facebook
- Subscribe to the Business channel
- Download our free apps for Android, Mac, iPhone and iPad
Posted by Yogi Liman under
Did You Know...
No Comments »











You’ll want data, and in many cases that best data you can have will come straight from a local (or locals). Find connections with the right demographic in the right area, and ask them questions, have them conduct research, and then enjoy the advantage you have over your online-data-only competitors!
Drive cost-efficiencies and improve ROI for your next search engine marketing pay-per-click campaign by running targeted IP address beta tests with Google Adwords. Offer compelling localized deals and incentives to test your effectiveness.
Buy the domain extensions for countries that you’re marketing to (.co.uk for the UK, .ca for Canada, .com.au for Australia) and set up localized sites that transact in local currencies. Prospective customers will feel much more comfortable purchasing in their local currency, from a website that they feel is specifically intended for them.
When you begin to market to geo-targeted customers, don’t send everyone to the same page on your website. Make people feel at home by creating a section of your site for each area you’re targeting. Small things like an image of a city skyline of the target area can go a long way and make people comfortable by seeing things they already relate to.
When it comes to geo-targeting, it is all about mobile.
From a search standpoint: Facebook. Twitter. YouTube. All of these things come up page-one of Google search results if you use them correctly. Instead of spending a bajillion dollars on a paid text ad program, focus on doing really well on the free tools with a lot of Google juice. How many sponsored ads have you clicked on lately when you’re on Google? Exactly. Organic search results are king.
Facebook advertising can be a very cost-effective and efficient way to geo-target and market to your customers. It is also a great tool for customer research. You don’t even have to launch a full campaign to make the most of the tools. Within the FB Ad setup mode, you can determine your actual reach based on demographics, interests and more.
Geo-targeting works particularly well for local businesses that sell low-cost, impulse items. You can now let prospects know about your offer when they’re in the vicinity, but no one is going to pop in for last-minute car or legal services. Think about what you can offer prospects on the spot — like a cup of coffee, an ice cream cone or a 15-minute sample massage.
Using geo-targeting gives you a deeper insight to your customer base and engages them in something a bit more personable than the traditional flyer or print ad. Coupling geo-trends with social media allows a personal conversation with customers that you wouldn’t be able to have with traditional media. With the recent acquisition of Geotoko by HootSuite, we bring together the best of both worlds.
In the bar and restaurant industry, we’ve been teaming up companies like
When you create location-specific offers, you’ll likely get a better conversion rate. But why stop there when you can test different ways of presenting these local offers? Track the number of calls to your number, and see if changing the headline to include the city/state improves conversions.










