My strategy is to treat personal pain points as market research. When my miniature schnauzer Hector was diagnosed with severe arthritis, I couldn't find a pet supplement that met basic human-grade manufacturing standards. That gap became NutriFlex(r). The opportunity wasn't just "make a better product." It was recognising that South African pet owners were being sold supplements loaded with 30-40% fillers and synthetic additives, with no regulatory transparency, while simultaneously becoming more educated about nutrition for themselves. The demand for something cleaner already existed -- nobody was meeting it. What accelerated our traction was pursuing Act 36 registration and FSA-accredited, GMP-certified manufacturing from day one. Most competitors skipped that. That credibility unlocked placement in major pet retailers and veterinary practices, and later got us covered by pet insurers like MediPet and Dotsure -- a distribution channel most supplement brands never access. The pattern I'd share: look for industries where consumer expectations have evolved faster than the products being sold to them. Pet owners now read ingredient labels. They question fillers. If your market is still selling yesterday's standard to tomorrow's customer, that's your opening.
One strategy I rely on heavily: **follow the industries with the most regulatory pressure**. When food safety regulations tightened in Wisconsin a few years back, facility managers were suddenly scrambling to replace their old, seamed flooring that couldn't pass sanitation inspections. I positioned Duraguard directly in front of that problem before most contractors even realized it was happening. That pivot landed us several food processing contracts where we installed seamless, non-porous epoxy systems specifically engineered for chemical washdowns and temperature swings. Those jobs weren't just profitable -- they became our best referral source because plant managers talk to each other. The real unlock was understanding that **their floor problem was actually a compliance problem**. Once I framed our solution that way -- not "we install nice floors" but "we help you pass inspections and avoid shutdowns" -- the conversation changed completely and closing became much easier.
My strategy is simple: look for the gap between what families desperately want and what actually exists in the market. When I couldn't get my own kids into a Spanish immersion program in Woodbury, I sat on a waitlist for years. That personal frustration became my clearest signal that demand was real and supply was nonexistent. I didn't just build a school -- I built around a specific underserved geography. Woodbury and Lake Elmo families wanted authentic immersion, not a weekend language class. By anchoring AFA there intentionally, I wasn't competing with metro programs. I was the only option within reach for those communities. The factors that made it work: 25 years of credibility in bilingual education meant families trusted us immediately, and native Spanish-speaking educators meant we could deliver authentically from day one -- not approximate it. Parents can feel the difference between performance and the real thing. The lesson I'd share is this -- your biggest personal frustration as a customer is often your best business intelligence. If you've lived the problem deeply, you already understand what the solution needs to feel like.
My core strategy is to uncover content and technical gaps through a comprehensive SEO audit and competitor keyword analysis, then seize the opportunity by restructuring the site to target specific search intent. I applied this approach for a long-standing festival and events platform that had been dependent on paid traffic during COVID. I led a deep audit, mapped keyword and competitor gaps, reorganized site architecture to prioritize city-specific queries, and optimized user-generated content while improving on-site user experience. Within one month this drove a 43.96 percent increase in traffic, added 61,739 ranking keywords over a year, and secured 796 top-three rankings; the key factors were fixing technical barriers, focusing on geo-targeted content, and optimizing on-site signals like click-through and bounce rates.
One of the strategies I use is the observation of the change in behavior, rather than the change in market trends. Trends indicate the direction that the market is moving; behavior indicates the direction that the market has moved. A few years ago, we observed something quite interesting. Instead of parents searching for an "online school," parents were searching for something like part-time, flexible, and hybrid options. The market was not searching for another digital school; the market was searching for an opportunity to control the way that their children's education was going to integrate into their families. Rather than developing another form of an online school, we developed an online school that offered multiple forms of learning, such as self-paced, live group, and individual learning. The results were quite spectacular. Families from over 30 countries started enrolling in the Legacy Online School because of the flexibility that was offered. The lesson for founders is quite simple: opportunities do not exist in the form of new markets; opportunities exist in the form of the difference between what the market is offered and what the market wants.
One strategy I rely on is staying very close to real user problems. I try to pay attention to friction that people have simply accepted as "part of the job," because those moments often signal the biggest opportunities. When something consistently slows people down, creates extra work, or forces them to juggle multiple tools, it usually means there is room to build something better. A good example of this came while building Carepatron. We noticed that many health and wellness professionals were using several disconnected systems to run their practices. They might have one tool for scheduling, another for clinical notes, another for billing, and something else entirely for client communication. That fragmentation created constant friction in their day-to-day work. The opportunity was not just to build another tool, but to rethink how those workflows could live in one place. That insight led us to focus on creating an all-in-one platform designed specifically for modern health and wellness teams. By consolidating key functions like scheduling, documentation, billing, and client engagement into a single system, we could remove a lot of the operational friction practitioners were dealing with. The factors that helped make it successful were staying close to users, validating that the problem was widespread rather than isolated, and building something that aligned with how practitioners actually run their practices. When you combine a clear, repeated need with a product that genuinely simplifies people's work, the opportunity tends to take care of itself.
Running a full-service HVAC and electrical firm in Northern Nevada for over a decade has taught me to identify opportunities by spotting gaps where regional climate demands meet aging infrastructure. I look for common homeowner misconceptions, like the belief that R22 refrigerant is illegal, to provide honest education that builds long-term trust and recurring service leads. We successfully capitalized on this by expanding into residential standby generator systems, moving beyond simple repairs to offer comprehensive backup power solutions for extreme weather. By performing detailed electrical load assessments--calculating both running and surge watts for equipment like AC compressors--we ensured systems could actually handle a home's peak demand during an outage. The key to our success was combining technical precision with a "people-first" culture that prioritizes hands-on employee training on the latest technology. This approach turned a technical service into a dependable lifeline for our community, proving that specialized local expertise is the most effective tool for business growth.
One strategy I lean on is watching "demand spikes" in my own backyard--event calendars, hotel sell-outs, and what guests complain they can't find--then buying or repositioning a property to fill that gap fast. That's how I picked up a dated home near Augusta National and renovated it specifically for tournament-week guests (better beds, a smart layout for groups, and a few thoughtful welcome touches from my restaurant days); it booked out immediately at a higher nightly rate because I matched the product to what the market was actively asking for. The win came from moving quickly with a lean team, keeping the rehab focused on what guests actually value, and delivering a top-tier experience that earns repeat bookings and referrals.
My strategy is to build partnerships across my industry ecosystem--I've found that business opportunities often exist in the gaps between mortgage, title, and investing. For example, in 2023, we capitalized on a unique moment when rising interest rates stalled a major local lender's retail pipeline. I used my contacts there to start a joint-venture where we acquire and rehab their non-performing notes and troubled properties, which gave them a new revenue stream while we secured inventory without competing on the open market. Our deep, long-term trust across these disciplines made this fast pivot possible.
I stay top-of-mind with past sellers through genuine follow-up, because I've found that my best opportunities come from people who already trust me. A homeowner I helped two years ago recently referred her elderly neighbor to me--she remembered that I'd treated her fairly, explained everything clearly, and closed on her timeline when she needed to relocate for work. That one referral turned into a great property, and it cost me nothing because I'd simply stayed in touch with a quick check-in call every few months. In this business, your reputation is your best lead source, and a five-minute conversation can unlock doors that marketing dollars never will.
One strategy I rely on is treating repeat customer complaints as early "pings" for new opportunities. Any time I hear the same annoying little problem three or four times from different customers, I stop calling it a one-off and start digging. I'll pull a few of those customers into short, honest conversations, ask how they're hacking around the issue today, and then test a very small, paid version of a fix. One of our better wins started exactly that way: a "minor" reporting headache a few clients kept grumbling about turned into a focused product line once we proved they'd happily pay for a clean, reliable solution.
I lean on my engineering background to spot opportunities early by tracking data trends and being willing to test new channels before they become crowded. Back in 2018, I jumped into SMS marketing for real estate when most investors were still relying solely on direct mail--I ran the numbers, saw the response rates were drastically higher, and scaled quickly. That early adoption gave me a massive first-mover advantage, and the combination of data analysis and speed to market has been the foundation of how I've closed over 700 deals since.
As a systems thinker running a legacy HVAC business since 1980, I identify opportunities by tracking legislative shifts that lower the barrier for high-efficiency technology. My background in corporate finance helps me translate complex government incentives into clear financial wins for homeowners. We successfully capitalized on the Inflation Reduction Act by pivoting our service model toward ENERGY STAR-qualified heat pumps. This allowed our customers to claim a federal tax credit of 30% of the project cost, capped at $2,000 per year. Our success relied on providing concrete data, such as how these systems can reduce electricity use for heating by up to 75%. We maximized this by layering the tax credits with local utility rebates like Rocky Mountain Power's Wattsmart program to create an undeniable financial return.
Founder & MD at Tenacious Sales (Operating internationally as Tenacious AI Marketing Global)
Answered a month ago
One strategy I use to identify and seize new business opportunities is paying close attention to shifts in the market before they become obvious to everyone else. I look for changes in behaviour, technology, or demand that are creating a new gap, then ask how our business can solve that problem early rather than reacting late. In simple terms, I try to spot where attention, money, or need is about to move. A good example was seeing how AI was starting to change search, visibility, and marketing. While many businesses were still focused only on traditional marketing channels, I recognised that brands were going to need help becoming more visible in AI-driven search and discovery. We moved early by shaping services around that shift, educating clients on what was changing, and positioning ourselves around the opportunity before it became crowded. What contributed to that success was a mix of timing, conviction, and action. Timing mattered because we got in early. Conviction mattered because not everyone could see the opportunity yet, so it required backing the trend before it felt fully proven. Action mattered because spotting an opportunity means nothing if you do not build offers, content, messaging, and delivery around it quickly.
I identify opportunities by looking for community 'bottlenecks' where a lack of local resources halts progress, such as my work securing land for a $14 million shelter in Green Bay. By leveraging my deep local network to acquire and consolidate multiple properties in under 90 days, I solved a logistics crisis that traditional developers couldn't touch. My success in these cases comes from prioritizing the community's urgent need over a simple transaction, which builds the high-level trust necessary to unlock complex, off-market land deals.
I make it a point to look for patterns in homeowner challenges that repeat across the market--those moments when several people start struggling with the same issue. For example, a few years ago, I noticed a rise in seniors needing to sell before moving into care communities, but traditional buyers made that nearly impossible. We created a 'sell-and-stay' program that let them access their equity while remaining in their homes for a few months, and it quickly became one of our most successful offers. The key was really listening and designing a business solution around a human need others overlooked.
I pinpoint opportunities by focusing on underserved niches that align with both community need and investment potential, much like how I identified the manufactured housing sector. During the 2022 housing crunch, we noticed that traditional affordable homes were vanishing, but manufactured homes were abundant yet neglected. We seized this by purchasing a distressed mobile home park, renovating the homes, and selling them to first-time buyers at a price point others ignored. The success came from combining my market-trend foresight with a hands-on renovation process, creating a win-win for buyers seeking affordability and for our portfolio's growth.
I spot opportunities the same way I learned to scout for the Lions--build a simple "watch list" of signals and follow up fast: missed payments, inherited properties, or homeowners who keep asking about options but don't want a traditional listing. One time at Rocket Mortgage, a borrower mentioned they were relocating and couldn't afford two payments, so I walked them through the real numbers, connected them with us for an as-is offer, and we closed quickly enough to stop the bleed. The win came from speed, clear communication, and treating it like coaching--give people a straightforward game plan when they're overwhelmed.
I analyze opportunities by combining my contractor's eye for structural potential with a focus on resolving probate complexities. I recently worked with a family whose inherited property was in such severe disrepair that traditional buyers wouldn't touch it, but because I could immediately see past the neglect to the 'good bones' of the construction, I offered a fair price and managed the entire clean-out process myself. My success stemmed from my ability to accurately estimate repair costs on the spot while relieving the heirs of the emotional and physical burden of a 'hoarder' house.
I look for opportunities in the 'hard nos' that other investors give--specifically properties with complex zoning or boundary issues that stall a sale. I recently encountered a homeowner in northern Alabama whose sale fell through because of a minor encroachment issue; while others walked away, I sat down with them, clarified the legal path forward, and closed the deal by providing the clarity they weren't getting elsewhere. My success came from leaning into our core value of honesty and taking the extra time to educate the seller rather than just looking at the property as a quick flip.