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Why Create Market Demand? Serve it Instead

How to Identify Business Opportunities

Warren Buffet said, “I don’t look to jump over seven-foot bars; I look around for one-foot bars that I can step over.”

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Put Yourself in the Path of Demand

It is much more difficult to create demand than serve it. Trying to create demand is by far the riskiest, time-consuming, and expensive route you can take to build a business or invest in Real Estate.  

Companies like Microsoft and Apple spend decades trying to create and perfect demand, and operating like this is always difficult.  

Can you create the next Facebook, Apple, or Microsoft? Maybe, but why not create something that is smaller that has a much higher probability to succeed.

This is like looking for the one-foot bar that you can easily step over.

The below examples are real estate based, but it is the concept that is important to grasp, as it applies to everything including e-commerce. 

Go big or go home! An example of success in creating demand – let’s go to Lake Havasu

How to Create Market Demand | Small Business Tips

Robert P. McCulloch was the visionary who founded Lake Havasu City, now a very popular spring break destination and home to over fifty-thousand residents.  

He purchased a 26-square-mile parcel of land on Lake Havasu and then spent much of the 1960s and 70s creating demand for the development of this location.  

In a bold move, McCulloch purchased the famous and historic London Bridge, which was then dismantled and moved from London to Havasu for over three years.  

It is reported that he purchased the bridge for over $2M. He then had a grand opening for the attraction in 1971 which kicked off an aggressive development campaign to get buyers interested in the city.  

As part of his campaign, he reportedly offered free flights from 1971-1978, totaling approximately 2,702 flights which brought in 37,000 perspective buyers. He spent many years and millions of dollars creating this community.

Although he was ultimately successful in creating the demand, he had the time and resources to make it happen. For the rest of us, there are much easier ways to make a profit by serving demand.  

Instead of getting people to come to a remote location and purchase property, it may have been easier to go to a growing city and do the exact same thing on the outskirts of that city.

Go smart! Why not serve demand?

If anyone were to ask, “What is the hot real estate product right now?” My response is that any real estate product can be lucrative. The most important part of having a “hot” product is to place yourself in the path of demand.

Take a novice real estate developer that finds a piece of land to purchase and develop. The excitement clouds their judgment, and they don’t take the very simple step to see if that particular product type is in demand or if it is over-supplied.  

What good is a piece of property that you can buy and build a 60 unit apartment complex on if 12,000 apartment units are hitting the market?  

With so much market oversupply, this isn’t a solid move.  

So, focus on what is in demand and then try to produce something to serve that demand.  

It is much easier than figuring out how you will get customers or buyers to like what you want them to like. Remember, it is not about what YOU want. It is about serving demand which boils down to what THEY want. 

Go big or go smart?

You can go big and that can often be a huge payoff.  

Just know why you are going big and understand that it is much harder, more time consuming, and much more expensive.  

You can also choose to go smart and still make millions by serving what you already know is in demand. This route is shorter, safer, and less expensive.  

It is your job to determine for yourself if you want to look for a seven-foot bar to jump over or a one-foot bar to step over.

Paul Martinez

Paul Martinez is the founder of BendingDestiny.com. He is an expert in the areas of finance, real estate, and eCommerce.  Join him on BendingDestiny.com to learn how to improve your financial life and excel in these areas. Before starting this blog, Paul built from scratch and managed two multi-million dollar companies. One in the real estate sector and one in the eCommerce sector.

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