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Market Friction

Episode 11 of the Smith Sense podcast, hosted by Matt Smith, titled "Market Friction" was published on June 9, 2020 and runs 45 minutes.

June 9, 2020 ·45m · Smith Sense

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Market friction is at the heart of all entrepreneurial opportunity.

When you're looking for a business idea, consider the things that keep people from doing what they want to do. The current product or service might be too time consuming, too expensive, or too confusing to use. Often, there's a technology solution.

You can find friction in markets with lots of uncertainty and ones that require specific knowledge. Internal deadlines — like an upcoming wedding — can be a strong motivational currents that lead to market friction.

Be-do-have

To identify market friction, examine consumer motivation.

I use the "be, do, have" framework: People are motivated to be something, do something, or have something.

Apply this framework to your customers to figure out what motivates them and what keeps them from achieving their goals.

Strong vs weak currents

The best entrepreneurial opportunities have strong motivational currents.

Something that a customer needs — not just wants — by a certain time is the recipe for a strong current. 

It could be a customer's need to get taxes filed by Tax Day, or fit into a dress in time for a wedding. When you identify the internal deadline, you can now focus your marketing on it.

Why me?

Once you've found market friction with a strong motivational current, ask yourself: "Why me?" 

Why are you the person to solve this particular problem? Do you have any expertise? Do you understand the complexities of the market?

Will it grow your identity capital?

Next, consider whether the opportunity will grow your "identity capital," a concept coined by Dr. Meg Jay in The Defining Decade. This is the accumulation of knowledge and skills you need to be successful over the long-term.

Your calculation depends on where you are on your entrepreneurial journey. When you're early in your career, gaining identity capital matters more than anything else you can do. Under a big mountain of hard work is the only place where you'll find your passion.

Is it worth it?

The next question to ask: "Is it worth it?"

Is this worth devoting the next decade of your life to? Because that's how long many businesses take to become successful. 

With Royalty Exchange, we saw that, in the U.S. alone, artists were collecting $3 billion a year. If you put a 5x multiple on it, that's a $15 billion market, large enough to spend many years pursuing.

Do you understand the constraints?

Just as importantly, you must understand the natural constraints in the market: What are the limiting factors to success?

The market opportunity may be gigantic, but if there are major hurdles to being successful — government regulation, for example — then it may not be worth it.

Do you have a plan to attack it?

Next, do you have a plan to attack the opportunity?

When I get most excited about a business opportunity, it's usually because I can see how I'd attack the market in a new way. Often, it's a unique approach to distribution. It could be a sales or marketing advantage.

What's the first step?

For many people, this next step is the hardest: What's the first thing you'll do to drive customers to your door?

A lot of entrepreneurs get excited about solving problems — especially when the market is significant — but fail to see their vision through. You have to be able to define your plan of attack. Be specific. Write down the first thing you'll do.

Ideally, start small and grow.

DCOM and Drink Gloria Smith and Austin Helmers Hello Friends! Welcome to DCOM and Drink! Here we take a deep dive into every single Disney Channel Original Movie (and have a few drinks along the way)! We are childhood friends, Gloria and Austin, who both have a love for all things Disney! Join us as we take a look at your favorite DCOMs such as "High School Musical" and "Halloweentown"! We will also be covering some of the lesser known DCOMs like "You Lucky Dog" and "Horse Sense". Let's celebrate (or cringe!) as we take on this fun, erratic journey! Who knows, you might even find a new DCOM you will fall in love with! The Westphoto Podcast University of Westminster The Westphoto Podcast's aim is to highlight a sense of community between the University of Westminster and industry professionals. It is hosted by the Westphoto interns Luke Hurlock, Anna-Sophia John and Livia Smith who interview professionals working in the visual arts, discussing their career and relationship with photography.To get in touch email: [email protected] Across the Reef: The Marine Assault of Tarawa by Joseph H. Alexander (1938 - 2014) LibriVox "Tarawa Atoll is 2085 miles southwest of Pearl Harbor and 540 miles southeast of Kwajalein in the Marshalls. Betio is the principal island in the atoll. The Japanese seized Tarawa from the British within the first three days after Pearl Harbor. In August 1943, to meet in secret with Major General Julian C. Smith and his principal staff officers, Vice Admiral Raymond A. Spruance flew to New Zealand from Pearl Harbor. Spruance told the Marines to prepare for an amphibious assault against Japanese positions in the Gilbert Islands in November. General Smith’s operations officer, Lieutenant Colonel David M. Shoup, studied the primitive chart of Betio and saw that the tiny island was surrounded by a barrier reef. Shoup asked Spruance if any of the Navy’s experimental, shallow-draft, plastic boats could be provided. 'Not available,' replied the admiral, 'expect only the usual wooden landing craft.' Shoup frowned. General Smith could sense that Shoup’s gifted mind was already formulating a pla Meditate With Me: Conversations About New Spiritual Paths, Peace, Harmony and Compassion Gerald E Smith I am unlocking the doors by having the courage to ask why.Every question is a step.Having recently crossed 70, I find myself looking back—not with regret, but with curiosity. Time, as it turns out, was never something to be hoarded or stretched thin. I spent years chasing ideas, proving myself, and running at a relentless pace. What I missed in the process was the simplest and most elusive thing of all—the moment I was already in.I am learning now, not to control time, but to live it. To let each moment be what it is, free from yesterday’s weight and tomorrow’s pull. To pause. To breathe. To ask questions not for the sake of answers, but for the clarity they bring.This podcast is my space to explore those questions, to strip away the unnecessary, and to share what remains—sometimes as reflections, sometimes in raw, unpolished thoughts, sometimes in poetry that may or may not make sense to anyone but me. But that is part of the
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