Market trend analysis is a process that executives, investors, entrepreneurs, and other business professionals use to identify and assess market patterns based to make informed strategic decisions.
For business leaders, market trend analysis provides insights they need to make sound strategic decisions about new features, product lines, and marketing campaigns to launch (or pivot).
For investors and entrepreneurs, market trend analysis provides insights that guide them toward the most profitable markets and businesses to invest in.
For example, if you’re in the health food market, market trend analysis would help you realize that investing in prebiotic soda is an emerging category.
Here are the four main ways market trend analysis helps business executives, entrepreneurs, and investors make better strategic decisions.
An effective market trend analysis process helps you identify emerging trends before they mature.
Spotting trends early is useful for investors as early investments often yield a higher ROI. This data is also useful for business leaders and entrepreneurs as it allows them to create new products and services to meet future demand before their competitors.
Market trend analysis provides insight into market volatility and lets you gauge whether demand increases, decreases, or remains consistent.
This can help you identify the lowest risk opportunities or at least be aware of the risk associated with each investment decision.
Launching a new product, service, or marketing campaign requires an accurate estimate of future demand.
Market trend analysis assists your demand calculation by providing an overview of historical consumer interest, which you can use to forecast future demand.
Market trend analysis helps businesses maintain a competitive advantage by:
For example, Meta has been losing significant market share to TikTok over the last few years. This is mainly because Meta failed to keep up with consumer demand trends.
If Facebook had identified these market trends earlier and pivoted to implement the aspects of TikTok that users love (short, funny videos), it might have retained this market share.
Whether you’re researching market trends to launch a new business or invest in a startup, here’s a step-by-step process to analyze market trends and inform your business strategy.
Identifying which trends to analyze is arguably the most important task in this process.
That’s because a great analysis of a mediocre market trend can still lead to a dead end.
Most people approach the trend discovery process by reading industry publications, following industry influencers on social media, and browsing free market trend reports.
While this process can work, it's time-consuming. Plus, there's always a chance that you'll overlook the next emerging trend.
To help you predictably identify under-the-radar trends in seconds, we built Exploding Topics.
The flagship feature is the Trends Database, a curated selection of 1 million data-backed trends our team manually vetted.
To identify emerging competitors, industry terms, and products, simply sort the Trends Database by one of the 35+ categories (fashion, pets, finance, marketing, CPG etc.) and then trend status ("exploding," "regular," and "peaked").
After discovering an interesting trend, click "Track Topic" and save it to a custom Project for more in-depth analysis.
So how do you know that the trends in Exploding Topics are reliable?
We have a thorough trend identification and qualification process to ensure:
You can use the free Exploding Topics database now to complete this step, or try Exploding Topics Pro to access our premium trends and other market analysis features.
It's easy to scan market reports and get lost in endless data without learning anything meaningful about that trend.
So instead of collecting random data, here are the most important quantitative metrics to assess market trends:
Below, we'll show you how to collect and use this data to gauge a market's potential.
Market Size
If you Google the trend's keyword combined with the words "market report," you can usually find a market report from Globe Newswire or Grand View Research that shows its market size and growth trend data. This data can help you analyze a market's maturity and estimate its future growth trend.
If a market has a strong compounding annual growth rate (CAGR), it will likely continue to grow.
Traffic Trends
If you used Exploding Topics to identify market trends, you already have search volume trend data. Otherwise, search the trend in Google Trends or Trends Analysis (an Exploding Topics Pro feature) and view its search volume trend.
If you see steady growth, there's a good chance it's a sustainable, long-term trend, whereas spikes and dips indicate that it's either a fad that will die out or a seasonal trend with volatile revenue.
Funding Trends
Another good sign that a market is promising is if venture capitalists are pouring money into that market. While venture capitalists aren't always correct in their predictions, they dedicate all their resources to identifying industry trends, so it's still a good benchmark.
A quick Google search of the industry will usually pull up data on VC investment history for that particular trend. For example, a quick search for "VC funding in sustainable beauty" pulled up this data from a Pitchbook blog post:
Databases like Pitchbook and CB Insights are excellent resources for providing funding data.
Hiring Trends
Hiring trends also help you gauge the market's general health. If most of the top players in a market are all hiring, there's a good chance that the market is growing.
You can find hiring data by looking at the LinkedIn profiles of the top competitors in the space:
You can also check the specific jobs they’re hiring for by looking at their LinkedIn Jobs and Indeed profiles.
Quantitative data provides a good general overview of trend potential. However, qualitative data can help you understand why a trend is becoming popular and the pain points it's solving.
This information helps you understand how to find gaps in the market and provide a solution to unmet consumer demand.
Here are three ways you can collect qualitative data for various trends.
Reading Customer Reviews
Customer reviews help you understand more about the specific pain points that a particular trend solves and general customer enthusiasm for the new product or service.
The trend will likely continue to thrive if it is highly effective at solving a pain point and customers are enthusiastic about it.
You'll also learn more about your target demographic and the ideal customer persona by reading reviews.
To find reviews, you can use Amazon to research D2C products or Capterra or G2 to read B2B reviews.
Once you have a few hundred reviews to analyze, here are a few key things to look for:
For example, if you're researching "bamboo baby clothes," you'll see that customers like the product because the fabric is much softer and more flexible.
Other reviewers claimed they purchased bamboo baby clothes to help with their eczema symptoms.
These reviews help you understand why bamboo baby clothes are popular, which is another positive sign that this trend has long-term growth potential.
You can also extract valuable customer demographic insights from reviews like:
All of this information will be useful in informing future marketing efforts, like how to position products and where to advertise online.
Read Industry Forums
Similar to reviews, industry forums and platforms like Quora and Reddit can provide more detailed discussions on customer pain points around niche trends.
For example, there are several subreddits dedicated to new parents.
Many of which have active discussions about baby clothes:
This subreddit alone is everything you need to track the current market for baby clothes (including clothes made from bamboo fabric), as it discusses what people like and dislike about the major brands in the space.
You can also join these discussions and get members' feedback on new product ideas.
If you're struggling to find industry forums, you can use a tool like SparkToro to help you. Just type in the trend keyword, and it will show you the websites people searching that keyword frequently visit:
Social Listening
You can also gather plenty of qualitative data and competitive insights by simply listening to what customers say on social media.
For example, you can use a social listening tool like Brand24 or Awario to track competitor brand mentions on social media. Most social listening tools also offer sentiment analysis, which can help you understand how potential customers feel about a particular trend.
Here’s the sentiment analysis trend from Awario of Starbucks:
If you notice that most people have a negative outlook on most of the top brands in the space, that's a negative sign that the trend you're tracking might not be short-term and on its way out.
However, it could also mean that there is unmet demand that you can capitalize on.
The secondary market research we did above is great for narrowing down the market trends you're considering, but it's important to also do primary research and talk to your customers before launching a product or service to understand where the gaps in the market exist.
There are two popular methods to execute primary research:
Surveying Potential Customers
If you already have an audience, you can survey your existing email list to gauge their feelings about a particular trend.
However, if you don't have an audience in the market you're analyzing, there are plenty of survey tools like SurveyMonkey and Pollfish that allow you to run a survey to a specific audience.
For example, if you're analyzing the bamboo baby clothing market, you could use one of those survey tools to run a survey to an audience of parents with children under four years old. To get even more specific, you could add a screening question like "Have you ever bought bamboo baby clothing?"
Pricing is usually about $1 per response, making it relatively cost-effective.
Interviewing Customers
Perhaps the best way to assess market demand and learn what customers want is to talk to them one-on-one. Live conversations usually reveal golden insights often missed with other market research methods, as you can ask follow-up questions to get to the root of any pain point.
For example, if you're marketing bamboo baby clothing, you might discover on customer research calls that most users received it as a gift from friends or parents.
That insight means that you should probably adjust your marketing messaging from targeting just new parents to also targeting friends and grandparents who provide more detailed insights.
To conduct customer interviews, you can use a tool like Discuss.io, which records the customer research calls, creates auto-generated clips based on keywords (like "gifts"), and even provides sentiment analysis.
If you're doing B2B customer research, you can find people to interview through a service like Respondent.
By now, you've thoroughly analyzed the market trend from a data perspective. Still, the only way to assess whether or not this trend is worth investing in is to see if customers will buy it.
So create a beta offer and see if people buy it.
Most companies make the mistake of developing a product or service before selling it, only to discover that it's not quite the solution their target demographic actually wants.
To prevent you from making this costly error, create a landing page advertising the offer and see if you can get people to pay real money for the product.
For example, Carry is a platform designed to help freelancers create solo 401ks. Before launching, they created a landing page to see if enough business owners would sign up for it:
The founder only started building the product after enough people joined.
Even if you're planning to launch an ecommerce product, you can still create a landing page and offer pre-orders before building the product.
If people purchase the product, you can create it and send it to that initial beta group.
If your target audience doesn't buy, you just saved yourself from spending thousands, if not millions, on a market trend that doesn't resonate with your audie
A key difference between unicorn companies and legacy companies overtaken by unicorns is their ability to accurately identify, analyze, and swiftly take action on the right market trends.
However, many companies fail to identify the right trends early enough.
So to help you solve this problem, we built Exploding Topics.
It executes the trend discovery process for you by analyzing billions of webpages and extracting the most promising trends. Then, a human analyst manually vets each topic for relevancy before adding it to the Trends Database.
By using the Trends Database, you can find relevant emerging trends in a matter of seconds rather than spending hours reading industry publications, scrolling X, and combing other data sources for potential trends. Which can really help with the trend analysis process.