Market Expansion
A company’s quest to grow by tapping into new customer bases, locations, or sectors. Market expansion is about pushing boundaries and making a business go from niche to known.
Market Entry
The (hopefully) strategic move of a company into a new market or geography. Market entry is about finding the right timing, tactics, and swagger to make a splash in unfamiliar territory.
Market Disruption
When a new product, tech, or service flips the entire industry script, leaving established players scrambling to catch up. Think blockbuster vs. Netflix—market disruption is change that nobody saw coming, but everyone has to deal with.
Market Differentiation
What makes your product or service stand out from competitors in the eyes of customers. Market differentiation is your “special sauce”—that unique feature or quality that makes people choose you over the others.
Market Development
A growth strategy aimed at selling existing products into new markets. Market development is about finding fresh ground to cover, like a brand expansion but with a sharper focus.
Market
A group of people who might be interested in your product or service. The market is everyone you want to sell to, or a space where supply, demand, and competition collide.
Margin Analysis
The financial breakdown of profit margins to see where you’re really making money. Margin analysis lets businesses drill down on costs versus revenue and figure out how to keep more of what they earn.
Management Buyout
When a company’s managers band together to purchase the business from its owners, becoming the new bosses. MBOs can bring fresh energy and personal investment to a company, as the managers suddenly have real skin in the game.
Management
The art (and science) of coordinating people, processes, and resources to achieve business goals. Management is the backbone of any organized team, keeping things on track while making sure people still want to show up.
Mail merge
A feature that lets you personalize bulk communications by inserting unique info (like names or addresses) from a database into templates. Mail merge makes “mass emails” seem a little more personal—like you actually know all 500 recipients.