Purpose
Guide product managers through calculating Total Addressable Market (TAM), Serviceable Available Market (SAM), and Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM) for a product idea by asking adaptive, contextually relevant questions. Use this to build defensible market size estimates backed by real-world citations, economic projections, and population data—essential for pitching to investors, securing budget, or validating product-market fit.
This is not a back-of-napkin guess—it's a structured, citation-backed analysis that withstands scrutiny.
Key Concepts
TAM/SAM/SOM Framework
The three-tier market sizing model:
Total Addressable Market (TAM):
- The total market demand for a product or service
- "If we captured 100% of the market, what's the revenue?"
- Broadest possible market (no constraints)
Serviceable Available Market (SAM):
- The segment of TAM your company can realistically target
- Narrowed by geography, firmographics, demographics, or product constraints
- "Who can we actually reach with our product?"
Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM):
- The portion of SAM you can realistically capture
- Accounts for competition, market constraints, go-to-market capacity
- "What can we capture in the next 1-3 years?"
Why This Works
- Top-down validation: TAM → SAM → SOM ensures estimates are grounded in reality
- Investor-friendly: Standard framework VCs and execs understand
- Citation-backed: Real data sources (Census, Statista, World Bank) add credibility
- Adaptive: Questions adjust based on context (B2B vs. B2C, US vs. global, etc.)
Anti-Patterns (What This Is NOT)
- Not a single-number guess: "The market is $10B" without supporting data
- Not static: Markets evolve—reassess annually
- Not a substitute for customer validation: Market size ≠ product-market fit
When to Use This
- Pitching to investors or execs (need market size in deck)
- Validating product ideas (is the market big enough?)
- Prioritizing product lines (which has bigger opportunity?)
- Setting growth targets (what's realistic to capture?)
When NOT to Use This
- For internal tools with captive users (no external market)
- Before defining the problem (market sizing requires clear problem space)
- As the only validation (pair with customer research)
Facilitation Source of Truth
Use workshop-facilitation as the default interaction protocol for this skill.
It defines:
- session heads-up + entry mode (Guided, Context dump, Best guess)
- one-question turns with plain-language prompts
- progress labels (for example, Context Qx/8 and Scoring Qx/5)
- interruption handling and pause/resume behavior
- numbered recommendations at decision points
- quick-select numbered response options for regular questions (include
Other (specify)when useful)
This file defines the domain-specific assessment content. If there is a conflict, follow this file's domain logic.
Application
Use template.md for the full fill-in structure.
This interactive skill asks up to 4 adaptive questions, offering enumerated context-aware options at each step. The agent adapts questions based on previous responses.
Step 0: Gather Context (Before Questions)
Agent suggests:
Before we begin, it's helpful to have product context. If available, please share:
For Your Own Product:
- Website copy (homepage, product pages, value prop statements)
- Marketing emails or landing pages
- Product descriptions or positioning statements
- Case studies or customer testimonials
- Sales deck or pitch materials
If You Don't Have a Product Yet:
- Find a similar or adjacent product (competitor or analog)
- Copy their website homepage, product description, or landing page
- We'll use this as a reference point for market sizing
You can paste this content directly, or we can proceed with a brief description.
Why this helps:
- Marketing materials already contain target audience, pain points, and value props
- Analyzing real content (yours or competitors') grounds the analysis in reality
- You can benchmark against similar products' market positioning
Optional Helper Script (Deterministic Math)
If you already have population and ARPU numbers (or a TAM estimate), you can run a deterministic helper to compute TAM/SAM/SOM and generate a Markdown table. This script does not fetch data or write files.
python3 scripts/market-sizing.py --population 5400000 --arpu 1000 --sam-share 30% --som-share 10%
Question 1: Problem Space
Agent asks: "Based on the context you've provided (or will describe), what problem space are you exploring for market sizing?"
Offer 4 enumerated examples (user can select by number or write custom):
- B2B SaaS productivity — E.g., "Workflow automation for small business operations" (like Zapier, Integromat)
- Consumer fintech — E.g., "Personal budgeting app for Gen Z users" (like Mint, YNAB)
- Healthcare/telehealth — E.g., "Mental health support for remote workers" (like BetterHelp, Talkspace)
- E-commerce enablement — E.g., "Payment processing for online sellers" (like Stripe, Square)
Or write your own problem space description based on the marketing materials you shared.
Tip: If you provided website copy or marketing materials, the agent can extract the problem space from phrases like:
- "We help [target] solve [problem]"
- "The #1 solution for [use case]"
- Customer pain points in testimonials or case studies
User response: [Selection or custom description]
Question 2: Geographic Region
Agent asks: "What geographic region are you targeting?"
Offer 4 enumerated options (adapted based on problem space):
- United States — Best for detailed Census Bureau data, BLS stats, robust industry reports
- European Union — Use Eurostat, local statistical agencies; note GDPR/compliance considerations
- Global — World Bank, IMF data; broader but less granular
- Specific country/region — E.g., "Canada," "Southeast Asia," "Latin America"
Or specify your own region.
User response: [Selection or custom]
Adaptation logic:
- If user selected B2B SaaS (Question 1, Option 1) → Emphasize US/EU markets (mature SaaS adoption)
- If user selected Consumer fintech (Question 1, Option 2) → Mention emerging markets (higher mobile adoption)
Question 3: Industry/Market Segments
Agent asks: "What specific industry or market segments does this problem space relate to?"
Offer 4 enumerated options (adapted based on problem space + geography):
Example (if Question 1 = B2B SaaS, Question 2 = US):
- SMB services sector — 5.4M businesses, $1.2T revenue (US Census, 2023)
- Professional services (legal, accounting) — 1.1M firms, $850B revenue (IBISWorld, 2023)
- Healthcare providers — 900K practices, $4T industry (BLS, 2023)
- Tech/software companies — 500K firms, $1.8T revenue (Statista, 2023)
Or describe your own industry segment.
User response: [Selection or custom]
Adaptation logic:
- If Question 1 = Consumer fintech, offer consumer segments (e.g., "Gen Z 18-25," "Millennials 25-40")
- If Question 1 = Healthcare, offer segments (e.g., "Primary care physicians," "Therapists/counselors")
Question 4: Potential Customers (Demographics/Firmographics)
Agent asks: "Who are the potential customers affected by this problem?"
Offer 4 enumerated options (adapted based on previous answers):
Example (if Question 1 = B2B SaaS, Question 3 = SMB services sector):
- SMBs with 10-50 employees — 1.2M businesses, $400B revenue (Census Bureau, 2023)
- SMBs with 50-250 employees — 600K businesses, $800B revenue (Census Bureau, 2023)
- Solo entrepreneurs/freelancers — 3.5M self-employed, $200B revenue (BLS, 2023)
- Service businesses with online presence — 2M businesses, $600B e-comme