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Market Research: The Key to Demand in Online Business
Market Research: One of the most critical aspects of building a successful business is a deep understanding of market demand. Without identifying what the market needs, even the most innovative and well-designed products will fail to secure traction among potential buyers.
Market research provides a systematic approach to understanding what people want, when they want it, and how much they are willing to pay for it. It must be conducted as one of the first steps before launching any product or service online. Doing this also helps aspiring entrepreneurs answer an important early question: What should I sell?
Previously, we discussed how to start a business based on our personal passion. Passion is a powerful driver of motivation and long-term perseverance. In essence, passion is formed from a combination of our interests, skills, strengths, knowledge, and lived experiences.
However, passion alone is not enough if there is no genuine market demand for the product or service built around it. A passion-driven idea that lacks buyers will ultimately become a costly hobby rather than a viable business.
In entrepreneurship, market demand is the foundational element for both short-term traction and long-term sustainability. It defines where opportunity lies and what problems need solving.
Economics 101: Why Demand Matters
Before diving deeper into practical market research, it’s helpful to explore a few basic economic principles related to consumer demand. These fundamentals give structure to how we interpret behaviors in the marketplace.
Understanding them allows us to make informed business decisions that are based on actual market signals instead of assumptions or instincts.
(a) Price and Demand
Economics teaches us that price and demand are closely linked. Basic theory states:
- When demand for a product increases, prices tend to decrease because economies of scale allow suppliers to reduce costs.
- Conversely, when demand decreases, prices may rise as fixed costs must be covered despite fewer buyers.
As savvy entrepreneurs, we need to strike a balance between setting competitive prices and maintaining profitability, all while ensuring the price aligns with customer expectations and volume potential.
(b) Substitute and Complementary Products
Another key concept in market research is understanding whether your offering functions as a substitute or a complementary product in the market.
- Substitute products are items that serve a similar function. If coffee becomes too expensive, for example, some consumers might switch to tea. Likewise, if Uber raises its fares, customers may opt for alternatives like Grab.
- Complementary products are items that are used together. For example, when the price of burger meat goes up, the demand for burger buns may decline, because both are typically consumed together.
Understanding these relationships allows entrepreneurs to anticipate how changes in one product category can affect another, and adapt pricing or promotions accordingly.
(c) Consumer Taste and Emotional Drivers
Consumer preferences are constantly evolving. These changes are often shaped by emotional triggers, current events, viral trends, or shifting social values.
If a product becomes viral—such as a TikTok-famous skincare cream—its demand can surge almost overnight. Social media has amplified how quickly tastes can change.
However, businesses based solely on fleeting trends tend to struggle to maintain momentum. Unless those trends are reinforced by lasting value or product evolution, the initial buzz will fade.
Example: Fidget spinners experienced explosive demand but disappeared just as quickly due to their lack of long-term utility.
To build sustainable businesses, we must balance emotional trends with underlying, persistent consumer needs.
(d) Income Levels and Consumer Purchasing Power
Consumer behavior is also heavily influenced by their income level and overall economic conditions. People buy differently during periods of economic growth versus economic uncertainty.
During strong economic periods, consumers are more open to buying luxury products, premium services, and items that enhance lifestyle.
In times of economic downturn or inflation, demand shifts toward basic needs, discounts, and cost-saving solutions. This can even lead to the rise of budget brands or second-hand marketplaces.
Additionally, seasonal patterns also influence demand cycles. For example:
- Rainy seasons → increase in umbrella, raincoat, and waterproof gear sales
- Holiday seasons → spike in clothing, cookies, toys, and gift-related purchases
Monitoring income patterns and seasonal demand helps you forecast when to launch, promote, or scale back your offerings.
(e) Population Density and Demographics
Understanding where your target market lives and who they are demographically is essential. Market size alone isn’t sufficient. You also need to understand their age, gender, education, lifestyle, values, and digital behaviors.
For example:
- In college towns, demand may center around affordable meals, printing services, fast fashion, and tech accessories.
- In suburban areas with young families, demand might shift to educational toys, childcare services, and parenting tools.
Targeting the right segment with precision improves conversion rates and lowers customer acquisition costs.
Use tools like government census data, Facebook Audience Insights, or Google Demographics to refine your understanding of the audience within a specific geographic or psychographic niche.
Step-by-Step Guide to Conducting Market Research
Now that we’ve explored the economics, let’s turn to hands-on methods you can apply to perform market research before launching any online business.
(1) Ask Questions Directly to Your Audience
Sometimes the best insights come from asking people directly. Use platforms where your audience already exists—WhatsApp, Instagram Stories, LinkedIn, or email lists—to run polls, open-ended Q&As, or short surveys.
Sample questions you might ask:
- “What is your biggest frustration with [category] products?”
- “How do you currently solve [specific problem]?”
- “If we launched , would you buy it—why or why not?”
These responses are early demand indicators, helping you shape your offer before spending time or money on development. Treat each response as a data point to validate or refine your business direction.
(2) Explore Community Forums, Niche Blogs, and Social Media Channels
Explore platforms where people talk candidly about their problems, needs, and preferences. You’ll often find goldmines of insight in these spaces:
- Reddit (specific subreddits like r/Entrepreneur or r/Parenting)
- Facebook Groups based on interests like cooking, travel, or home business
- Quora discussions, Amazon review sections, or YouTube comment threads
Track popular topics, repeat complaints, and highly engaged posts. These serve as real-world validation of demand, especially when consistent over time.
This organic market research is often more authentic than paid surveys because it reflects what people say when they’re not being prompted by marketers.
(3) Analyze Bestsellers on E-Commerce Platforms
Platforms like Amazon, eBay, Shopee, and Lazada list top-performing products by category. Use these rankings to uncover what’s trending and what consistently sells.
Look for:
- Product titles with thousands of reviews
- Listings with high reorder rates
- Niche categories with growing popularity (e.g., eco-friendly packaging, wellness tech)
Use this information to evaluate if your product idea fits into an existing trend or fills a visible gap. This is one of the fastest ways to check real-time demand patterns.
(4) Leverage Digital Market Research Tools
To go beyond anecdotal insights, use data-driven tools designed for professional market research. These platforms let you analyze demand based on search behavior, keyword trends, and competitive landscape.
Tools include:
- Google Keyword Planner: Discover how many people search for your keywords and explore related queries.
- Google Trends: See if interest is increasing or declining in your product category.
- SEMrush / Ubersuggest / Ahrefs: Analyze search volume, SEO difficulty, competitor domains, and keyword suggestions.
Example: A search for “vegan protein powder” may show increasing search volume, high competition, but new long-tail keywords like “vegan protein powder for women over 40.”
This data allows you to make strategic choices on product positioning, messaging, and SEO-friendly branding.
Final Thoughts: Market Research as Your First Business Strategy
A great product without buyers is not a business—it’s a project.
Market research transforms ideas into viable ventures by revealing what people actually want, not what we assume they want.
Here’s what solid market research enables you to do:
- Craft offerings that address urgent, validated problems
- Identify willing buyers and tailor messaging accordingly
- Launch at the right time to meet seasonal or trending demand
- Reduce risk by avoiding low-interest or saturated categories
In short, market research is the map that guides your business strategy.
Whether you’re launching a side hustle or scaling a venture-backed startup, let demand data lead the way.
In Part 2, we’ll break down how to run keyword validation with Google Keyword Planner and assess online market size in any niche.
The smartest entrepreneurs start here: Know the market before building the product. Let demand be your compass.