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MenuWhat are some tools we can use to do market research ?
We want to find out our Total addressable market (TAM): How big is the market we are currently in? How quickly is it growing?
2. Served addressable market (SAM)
We are trying to build a product for sushi style restaurants in Canada.
Answers
Lots of ways to do this, including many that I'm sure I don't know about.
One place to start would be to research local search volume for "Sushi", "Sushi restaurant(s)", and related phrases -- both in Canada and within comparable regions outside of Canada (especially the USA). You'd want to pay attention to multiple search engines, especially Google and Bing.
That's only a subset of the data you'll need, but it's an important component in the overall picture.
Please clarify if your product is for sushi restaurants to use or to resell to their customers. If for use, you can prepare a brief list of open end questions along with a product description and visit 25 typical restaurant owners for their reactions; technique known as Probing.
Because I am a consultant for startups and new businesses, I pay for subscription to variety of market research databases where I can get information about market size, growth, barriers to entry, trends, competition, regulation, etc. http://www.anagard.com/market-research.html One market research report on single industry or market segment can cost few thousand dollars.
If you are lucky, you could find a ready made secondary market research report for your specific market segment that will give you TAM (total addressable market). With this information, you can then focus on your initial market entry, for example a metro area, then figure out how many sales you can make in first few year and that will give your SAM.
Most likely, you will not be able to find a ready made answer. Still, figuring TAM in your case should not be difficult because you are working with already established parameters: number of sushi restaurants in Canada. I am sure it's really easy to find the number of restaurants in Canada (start with trade journals) then find a number of sushi restaurants. Hey, even Yellow Pages would give you a good estimate.
$PPP == price for your product.
TAM = $PPP * number of sushi restaurants in Canada
SAM = number of sushi restaurant that are your customers * $PPP
Investors (angles and VCs) prefer to see TAM larger than $1B. Most inexperienced startup founders will simply claim that SAM is 1% of TAM, and viola, you make millions of dollars. It's not that simple... Anyway, your business probably can grow organically.
Good luck!
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