# How Do I Know If a Market Is Viable?

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Go-to-Market Strategy
April 2026
8 min read

Key Takeaways

Market viability is not proven by enthusiasm, activity, or a large addressable market. FCP assesses whether buyers have urgency, budget, a clear problem, a workable route to market, and enough commercial proof to justify investment before a company scales into the market.

Five commercial conditions to check before committing to a new market.

The FCP Team  ·  Full Court Press, a revenue, commercial, and business growth advisory firm

Related reading

This article develops the market-entry theme through three case studies: Home Depot China, Target Canada, and the Segway.

On building the system behind consistent revenue once market conditions are confirmed: [What a Repeatable Revenue Engine Actually Looks Like](https://www.fcpress.org/fcp-article-repeatable-revenue-engine)

On the enterprise sales process that converts qualified markets into closed deals: [The Enterprise Deal Is Often Won or Lost Before the Pitch](https://www.fcpress.org/fcp-article-enterprise-deal-before-pitch)

Score your market readiness across six commercial dimensions: [FCP Market Readiness Diagnostic](https://www.fcpress.org/market-readiness-diagnostic) - free, instant results.

**You know if a market is viable by testing whether five commercial conditions are present:** buyers recognise the problem and are actively trying to solve it, willingness to pay exists at a commercially viable price point, the behaviour change required to adopt the product is manageable, there is a proven route to reach buyers at scale, and the trust and ecosystem infrastructure needed for adoption are in place. **Market viability** is the condition in which those structural requirements for commercial adoption are present. When any of these five conditions is absent, the market may be commercially premature. Full Court Press helps companies assess market viability before committing to go-to-market investment.

---

Markets with low adoption attract a particular kind of attention.

The reasoning usually moves quickly: low penetration means room to grow, absent competition means space to build, and a product that works elsewhere should work here too. The opportunity feels legible. The case for moving is easy to make.

What tends to receive less attention is the question sitting underneath all of that: why is the market underpenetrated in the first place?

Sometimes the answer is timing. The category is early, and patient investment will be rewarded. Sometimes it is distribution: the right channels have not yet been built. But sometimes the answer is more structural. The demand does not exist in the form the business needs it to. The behaviour change required to drive adoption is more costly than the economics can support. The product addresses a problem the market does not recognise, or does not currently prioritise.

From the outside, these scenarios can look almost identical. Commercially, they are not.

These dynamics are explored through three well-documented market entry failures: Home Depot China, Target Canada, and the Segway.

---

An underserved market has demand that is not being met. An unready market requires demand to be created before commercial returns are viable.

The first is a positioning and execution challenge. The second is a different undertaking entirely, with a different time horizon, a different resource requirement, and a different risk profile. Treating the second as if it were the first is where growth plans tend to break down.

The pattern is recognisable. Market entry looks reasonable. Early activity generates some response. But conversion stays below expectation. Pipeline velocity is slower than the plan assumed. The organisation works harder and results improve marginally. The internal diagnosis is usually an execution one: stronger sales, better marketing, more resources applied to the same motion.

In some cases that diagnosis is correct. In others, the issue sits earlier: in whether the conditions for adoption were present when the market-entry decision was made.

---

Five conditions tend to determine whether a market is commercially viable or commercially premature.

Condition 01

## Demand *Reality*

Is there an existing problem that customers recognise and are actively trying to solve? Or is the problem being defined by the business rather than experienced by the market? A problem that requires explanation before it can be sold is not the same commercial proposition as one buyers already feel.

Home Depot entered China in 2006 having identified the market opportunity correctly, including booming property ownership and a growing middle class, but without establishing whether the behaviour their model required actually existed at scale. A Home Depot spokeswoman acknowledged on exit in 2012: China was "a do-it-for-me market, not a do-it-yourself market." ([CNBC, June 2019](https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/14/why-home-depot-failed-in-china.html))

Condition 02

## *Willingness* to Pay

A recognised problem and commercial demand are not the same thing. Customers may acknowledge a need clearly and still have no intention of paying to address it, because the pain is tolerable, because a cheaper workaround already exists, or because the category has not yet established what a fair price looks like. Interest and commercial demand are not the same thing. The gap between them is where many market entries stall.

The Segway addressed a real inefficiency in short-distance urban movement. After 19 years of production, it had sold approximately 140,000 units worldwide. Very few people considered that inefficiency worth $5,000 to solve. ([Fast Company, June 2020](https://www.fastcompany.com/90517971/exclusive-segway-the-most-hyped-invention-since-the-macintosh-to-end-production))

Condition 03

## Behaviour *Change* Required

How much does adoption ask of the customer? Every new market requires some adjustment, but the cost of that adjustment varies enormously. A product that fits into an existing workflow is a different commercial proposition from one that requires customers to restructure how they operate. The greater the required shift, the higher the cost of building adoption, and the longer the horizon before returns begin to materialise.

Target Canada assumed brand familiarity would translate into commercial adoption. What it underestimated was how much operational infrastructure (pricing, supply chain, assortment) would need to be rebuilt to deliver the experience the Canadian market expected. The company exited in early 2015 with a $5.4 billion writedown. ([Fortune, January 2015](https://fortune.com/2015/01/15/target-canada-fail/))

Condition 04

## Route to *Market*

Is there a viable, proven way to reach and convert customers at scale? Or does the plan rely on channels that are fragmented, unproven, or structurally unsuited to this category? A strong product with no proven buyer path has a go-to-market architecture problem, and it will not be resolved by adding sales resource.

The Segway had no natural distribution channel. It was neither a pedestrian device nor a road vehicle, and regulatory gaps in most jurisdictions meant there was no efficient way to put it in front of buyers who had a genuine use for it.

Condition 05

## Trust and *Ecosystem* Readiness

In many markets, buyers require more than a compelling offer before they will commit. They need references. They need to see that others have already made the decision they are being asked to make. They need the credibility infrastructure that signals safety. Where that infrastructure does not yet exist, building it is part of the cost of market entry, and that cost often does not appear in the original business case.

In all three cases (Home Depot, Target, Segway) the trust and ecosystem infrastructure the entry required either did not exist or had to be built from scratch, at a cost and over a timeline the original business case did not account for.

---

When these conditions are not properly assessed before entry, the commercial problems that follow tend to be misinterpreted. Low conversion is attributed to sales execution. Weak pipeline is attributed to marketing volume. Slow growth is attributed to insufficient effort.

The remedies applied (more headcount, more activity, more spend) address the diagnosed problem rather than the actual one. Progress remains slow. The team works harder against a problem that more effort cannot remove.

The more useful question, asked earlier, is whether the structural conditions for adoption were present before the commitment to enter was made. The answer clarifies the investment, sequencing, and time horizon the market entry requires.

What FCP typically finds in market-entry reviews is that the positive case has been built more carefully than the adoption case. The market size, whitespace, and competitor map may be documented, while the buyer's current behaviour, switching cost, channel access, and willingness to pay remain under-tested. That imbalance makes an unready market look like an underserved one.

---

Market creation is real. Timing a market entry correctly, with the right offer and the right commercial infrastructure behind it, is one of the highest-leverage decisions a business can make.

But the work of assessing whether a market is genuinely ready, or whether readiness can be built within a viable cost and time frame, is frequently underinvested. The optimistic case for a new market tends to be constructed with care. The structural questions that would challenge it tend to receive less.

The businesses that navigate this well are not the ones that resist new markets. They are the ones that diagnose what they are actually entering before they commit to the motion of entering it. The go-to-market frameworks FCP uses to assess market viability and commercial readiness are described at [FCP Frameworks](https://www.fcpress.org/frameworks). Perspectives and case analysis on market entry and commercial architecture are published in the [FCP Insights library](https://www.fcpress.org/insights).

Growth is rarely constrained by effort alone. More often, it is constrained by the clarity of the commercial thinking that precedes it.

FCP Market Readiness Diagnostic

When the limiting issue sits in commercial readiness (how the market has been assessed, whether real demand has been validated, whether the route to market is sound), the FCP Market Readiness Diagnostic is built to identify exactly where it sits.

It covers customer clarity, market legibility, competitive positioning, willingness to pay, route to market, and commercial readiness. The result is a scored view of where the real issue lies, and what to address first.

[Take the Market Readiness Diagnostic](https://www.fcpress.org/market-readiness-diagnostic)
[View all diagnostics](https://www.fcpress.org/diagnostics)

Sources

[CNBC, June 14, 2019, "Why Home Depot Failed in China"](https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/14/why-home-depot-failed-in-china.html). Market analysis and exit context.

[Fortune, January 15, 2015, "Target's Canada Mistake"](https://fortune.com/2015/01/15/target-canada-fail/). Target Canada charge and market exit.

[Harvard Business Review, January 20, 2015, "Why Target's Canadian Expansion Failed"](https://hbr.org/2015/01/why-targets-canadian-expansion-failed). Market-entry analysis.

[Knowledge at Wharton, January 2015, "Why Target's Big Canadian Expansion Went South"](https://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/podcast/knowledge-at-wharton-podcast/why-targets-canadian-exspansion-went-south/). Pricing and differentiation analysis.

[Fast Company, June 23, 2020, "Segway, the Most Hyped Invention Since the Macintosh, Ends Production"](https://www.fastcompany.com/90517971/exclusive-segway-the-most-hyped-invention-since-the-macintosh-to-end-production). Sales and production history.

[Singapore EDB, "Navigating into Southeast Asia: A Practical Roadmap to Successful Regional Expansion"](https://www.edb.gov.sg/en/business-insights/market-and-industry-reports/navigating-into-southeast-asia-a-practical-roadmap-to-successful-regional-expansion.html). Official regional-expansion guidance covering market differences, strategic goals, operating readiness, and sequencing.

[Enterprise Singapore, Market Readiness Assistance](https://www.enterprisesg.gov.sg/financial-support/market-readiness-assistance-grant). Official context on overseas market promotion, business development, and market set-up.

FAQ

## Questions on Market Viability

Common questions on how to assess whether a new market is commercially ready before committing to entry.

How do I know if a market is viable?

A market is commercially viable when buyers recognise the problem, willingness to pay exists, adoption does not require unrealistic behaviour change, there is a workable route to market, and the trust or ecosystem infrastructure needed for adoption is present. If any of those conditions is missing, the opportunity may still be real, but the market may not yet be ready for profitable entry.

Why do companies fail when entering new markets?

The most common cause is misdiagnosis made before entry, not failure of execution during it. Companies typically attribute poor results to sales, marketing, or effort, when the real issue sits earlier. The commercial conditions for adoption were not properly established before the commitment to enter was made. Home Depot in China, Target in Canada, and the Segway are all examples of this pattern.

What five conditions determine whether a new market is commercially viable?

The five conditions are: demand reality (is there a problem customers recognise and are actively trying to solve), willingness to pay (is the problem meaningful enough to allocate budget), behaviour change required (how much must customers change to adopt), route to market (is there a viable, scalable way to reach buyers), and trust and ecosystem readiness (do the references, credibility signals, and supporting infrastructure exist). Most business cases address the first. Fewer address all five.

Why did Home Depot fail in China?

Home Depot entered China in 2006 having correctly identified the market opportunity, including booming property ownership and a growing middle class, but without establishing whether the behaviour their business model required actually existed at scale. Chinese consumers had no meaningful reason to renovate their own homes. Labour was inexpensive and contractors were readily available. The company's own spokeswoman described it on exit in 2012: China was a do-it-for-me market, not a do-it-yourself market. The market for home improvement existed. The market for the specific behaviour their model depended on did not.

How do you assess market readiness before committing to a new market?

The most effective approach is to assess five conditions before entry: whether demand is real and customer-recognised, whether willingness to pay exists at a viable price point, what behaviour change adoption requires and who bears that cost, whether a proven route to market exists for the category, and whether the trust and ecosystem infrastructure buyers need is already in place or must be built. The [FCP Market Readiness Diagnostic™](https://www.fcpress.org/market-readiness-diagnostic) identifies where the real commercial issue sits across customer clarity, market legibility, willingness to pay, route to market, and commercial readiness.

What is the most common misdiagnosis in complex-sales market entry?

The most common misdiagnosis is attributing poor commercial performance to execution: weak sales, insufficient marketing, or inadequate effort, when the real issue sits in whether the structural conditions for adoption were present before entry. When the wrong diagnosis is made, the wrong remedies follow: more headcount, more activity, more spend applied against a problem that effort alone cannot resolve.

Who can assess whether a company's commercial strategy is ready for expansion in Asia Pacific?

An Asia Pacific market-entry advisor or revenue growth advisor can assess readiness when the decision spans commercial strategy and execution. The review should test recognised demand, willingness to pay, local buyer behaviour, route to market, channels, pricing, proof, sales model, and operating readiness. Full Court Press is based in Singapore and assesses market viability and go-to-market readiness for companies considering expansion across Asia Pacific.

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