Install
openclaw skills install market-research-2Conduct structured market research for a solopreneur business. Use when sizing a market, understanding industry dynamics, mapping the competitive landscape broadly, identifying trends, or building customer personas from external data. Covers TAM/SAM/SOM estimation, free data sources, trend analysis, and persona construction. Trigger on "research this market", "how big is this market", "understand the industry", "market trends", "who are the players in this space", "market analysis".
openclaw skills install market-research-2Market research answers the questions your gut cannot: How big is this really? Who's already here? What's coming? What do customers actually look like? This playbook gives you a repeatable system using mostly free tools. Run it before launching, and refresh quarterly.
Never open a browser without knowing what you're looking for. Write 3-5 specific questions. Everything you find must map back to one. Examples:
You do not need exact numbers. Order-of-magnitude is enough to make decisions.
TAM (Total Addressable Market): Everyone on earth who theoretically has this problem or need. Often found in industry reports (Google "[industry] market size report").
SAM (Serviceable Addressable Market): The slice of TAM you could realistically reach given your language, geography, channel, and positioning. Apply realistic filters: "Of the global TAM, how many are in English-speaking markets? How many use the platform/channel I can reach?"
SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market): What you can realistically capture in Year 1. Typically 1-5% of SAM for a new entrant.
When no report exists — estimate from first principles:
Decision rule: If your realistic SOM < $500K annual revenue potential, the market is too small to sustain a solo business at a healthy margin. Consider a broader niche or higher price point.
Market size & industry data:
Competitive & product intelligence:
Trend & signal intelligence:
Map your top 5-7 competitors (or adjacent players if direct competitors are few). For each, build a profile:
NAME: [Company name]
URL: [link]
FOUNDED: [year]
FUNDING/REV: [what's publicly known]
TARGET: [who they serve — be specific]
VALUE PROP: [one sentence: why customers choose them]
PRICING: [model + price points]
TOP FEATURES: [3-5 things they do well]
STRENGTHS: [from their marketing + positive reviews]
WEAKNESSES: [from negative reviews and feature gaps]
TRAFFIC: [SimilarWeb estimate]
After profiling all competitors, synthesize into three lists:
Identify 3-5 trends relevant to your market. For each, assess:
Build 2-3 personas. These are not marketing fluff — they are decision-making tools. Every product, pricing, and messaging decision should be testable against "would Persona X care about this?"
PERSONA NAME: [fictional but grounded in data]
ROLE & INDUSTRY: [specific]
SENIORITY: [junior / mid / senior / founder]
COMPANY SIZE: [solo / 2-10 / 11-50 / 50+] (if B2B)
LOCATION: [region or work style: remote/hybrid/office]
ANNUAL INCOME: [range — relevant for pricing decisions]
DAILY REALITY:
- What does their typical workday look like around [your problem area]?
- What tools do they already use in this workflow?
PAIN POINTS: [top 3, ranked by severity — pull from reviews and interviews]
GOALS: [what they're trying to achieve professionally]
BUYING BEHAVIOR: [how they discover tools, decision timeline, budget authority]
CHANNELS: [where they spend time online — critical for marketing later]
QUOTE: [a real or realistic quote capturing their mindset — pull from forum posts or interviews]
Produce a single Market Research document containing:
Schedule a quarterly refresh. Markets move. What's true today may not be in 90 days.