I am curious as to what the best approach would be if you were given a market sizing question in a case interview related to a product / service whose primary consumer is businesses.
I know that for most market sizing problems it is typically ideal to start with either A) Population or B) Households and to go from there. If the ideal base is businesses, what is the best way to reach this number? How could you estimate the total number of businesses in a country? A thought I had was take an average business size of 20-25 people and divide the population by this amount - would that be a reasonable approach?
For example, how would you approach the problem of the market size for advanced / mega printers (the type only a business would have) in Canada? Would it make sense to start with Canada population (40M), assume 20 people per business = 2M businesses, segment these into estimated # of printers (maybe 3 groups of low, medium, and high # of printers), estimate purchase frequency / replacement rate, then multiply by an average price? Maybe then add on 10% for other organizations not considered by “businesses” (such as government, airports, etc.)? This is just a thought - by no means am I saying this is the way I believe to be correct.
Am very curious to see the various thoughts on this. Thanks! :)