| name | analyzing-tam |
| description | Calculates Total Addressable Market (TAM), Serviceable Addressable Market (SAM), and Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM) using multiple methodologies including top-down, bottom-up, and value theory approaches. Use when the user requests market sizing, TAM/SAM/SOM calculation, addressable market analysis, or wants to quantify market opportunity. |
Analyzing TAM
This skill performs comprehensive Total Addressable Market (TAM) analysis to quantify market opportunities using industry-standard methodologies.
When to Use This Skill
Invoke this skill when the user:
- Requests TAM, SAM, or SOM calculations
- Asks for market sizing or opportunity quantification
- Needs addressable market analysis for business planning
- Mentions total available market or market opportunity
- Wants to validate market size for investors or stakeholders
- Asks "how big is the market?" or "what's the opportunity size?"
Market Sizing Framework
TAM, SAM, SOM Definition
Total Addressable Market (TAM):
- The total market demand for a product or service
- Assumes 100% market share with no constraints
- Represents maximum revenue opportunity
Serviceable Addressable Market (SAM):
- The portion of TAM you can realistically target
- Constrained by your product capabilities, geography, or business model
- The segment of TAM within your reach
Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM):
- The portion of SAM you can realistically capture
- Accounts for competition, market penetration, and execution
- Your realistic short-to-medium term opportunity
Visualization:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ TAM ($100B) │ Total market for category
│ ┌───────────────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ SAM ($20B) │ │ Your addressable segment
│ │ ┌─────────────────────────────┐ │ │
│ │ │ SOM ($2B) │ │ │ Your realistic capture
│ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ └─────────────────────────────┘ │ │
│ └───────────────────────────────────┘ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘
TAM Calculation Methodologies
Method 1: Top-Down Analysis
Start with broad market data and narrow down:
Steps:
- Identify the total industry or category size from research
- Determine what percentage applies to your specific solution
- Apply geographic, demographic, or other filters
- Calculate TAM based on filtered addressable market
Formula:
TAM = Total Market Size × % Relevant to Your Solution
Example:
Industry: Cloud Infrastructure Market = $200B (2024)
Relevant Segment: Serverless Computing = 15% of cloud infrastructure
Geographic Focus: North America = 45% of global market
TAM = $200B × 15% × 45% = $13.5B
Best for:
- Established markets with available data
- Broad categories with analyst coverage
- Initial rough estimates
- Investor presentations
Limitations:
- Relies on accuracy of published data
- May be too broad or imprecise
- Can miss nuances of your specific offering
Method 2: Bottom-Up Analysis
Build from individual customer segments:
Steps:
- Define your target customer segments precisely
- Count the number of potential customers per segment
- Estimate average revenue per customer (ARPC)
- Calculate TAM by multiplying customers × ARPC
Formula:
TAM = (# of Potential Customers) × (Average Revenue per Customer)
Example:
Target: Mid-market SaaS companies (100-1000 employees) in North America
Segment 1: Series A-B SaaS companies
- Number: 5,000 companies
- ARPC: $50,000/year
- Subtotal: $250M
Segment 2: Series C+ SaaS companies
- Number: 2,000 companies
- ARPC: $150,000/year
- Subtotal: $300M
TAM = $250M + $300M = $550M
Best for:
- Well-defined customer segments
- Countable customer populations
- B2B markets
- Precise, defensible estimates
Limitations:
- Requires detailed customer data
- Time-intensive research
- May miss emerging segments
Method 3: Value Theory Analysis
Estimate based on value created:
Steps:
- Identify the problem your solution solves
- Quantify the cost of the problem or value of the solution
- Count affected customers/transactions
- Calculate total value you could capture
Formula:
TAM = (# of Value Instances) × (Value per Instance) × (% You Can Capture)
Example:
Solution: Fraud detection for e-commerce
Problem: Online payment fraud losses = $41B globally
Your Solution: Reduces fraud by 70%
Value Created: $41B × 70% = $28.7B in fraud prevented
Your Pricing: Capture 5% of value created as fees
TAM = $28.7B × 5% = $1.44B
Best for:
- Innovative or new markets
- Quantifiable value propositions
- Replacement or displacement plays
- Cost-saving solutions
Limitations:
- Requires assumptions about value capture
- Value may be hard to quantify
- Customer willingness to pay may differ
SAM Calculation
Narrow TAM to your serviceable market:
Steps:
- Start with your calculated TAM
- Apply constraints based on your business model:
- Geographic limitations (regions you serve)
- Product limitations (features you offer)
- Customer size limitations (enterprise vs. SMB)
- Channel limitations (direct sales vs. partners)
- Regulatory limitations (compliance requirements)
- Calculate filtered addressable market
Example:
TAM: $13.5B (serverless computing, North America)
Constraints:
- Only serving US (not Canada/Mexico): 80% of NA market
- Only targeting companies >50 employees: 60% of market
- Only AWS-compatible (not Azure/GCP): 40% market share
SAM = $13.5B × 80% × 60% × 40% = $2.59B
SOM Calculation
Determine realistic obtainable market:
Steps:
- Start with your calculated SAM
- Apply realistic market penetration assumptions:
- Expected market share in 3-5 years
- Competitive positioning
- Sales and marketing capacity
- Product-market fit and adoption rates
- Calculate based on realistic capture rate
Common Approaches:
Approach 1: Market Share Based
SOM = SAM × Expected Market Share %
Example:
SAM = $2.59B
Expected market share in Year 3 = 5%
SOM = $2.59B × 5% = $129.5M
Approach 2: Sales Capacity Based
SOM = (# of Sales Reps) × (Quota per Rep) × (Achievement Rate)
Example:
Sales team size: 20 reps
Quota per rep: $1M/year
Average achievement: 80%
SOM = 20 × $1M × 80% = $16M (Year 1)
Approach 3: Growth Projection Based
SOM = Current Revenue × (1 + Growth Rate)^Years
Example:
Current ARR: $5M
Target growth rate: 100% YoY
Year 3 projection: $5M × (1 + 1.0)^3 = $40M
SOM = $40M
Research and Data Sources
Top-Down Data Sources:
- Industry analyst firms (Gartner, Forrester, IDC)
- Market research companies (Statista, IBISWorld, Grand View Research)
- Industry association reports
- Government statistical agencies
- Public company filings and earnings
- Trade publications
Bottom-Up Data Sources:
- Business directories (LinkedIn Sales Navigator, ZoomInfo, Crunchbase)
- Census and labor statistics
- Industry databases
- Company registries
- Your CRM and customer data
- Survey data
Use WebSearch to find:
- Recent market sizing reports
- Competitive intelligence
- Industry growth rates
- Customer population data
TAM Analysis Template
Use this structure for comprehensive TAM analysis:
# TAM/SAM/SOM Analysis: [Product/Market]
## Executive Summary
- TAM: $XXB
- SAM: $XXB
- SOM (Year 3): $XXM
- Methodology: [Top-down, Bottom-up, Value theory]
- Confidence Level: [High/Medium/Low]
## Market Definition
- Product/Service: [Description]
- Target Customer: [Who you serve]
- Geography: [Where you operate]
- Time Horizon: [Analysis year]
## TAM Calculation
### Methodology: [Selected approach]
**Data Sources:**
- [Source 1 with link/citation]
- [Source 2 with link/citation]
**Calculation:**
[Step-by-step breakdown]
**Result: TAM = $XXB**
### Validation (Cross-check with alternative method)
[Alternative calculation to validate]
## SAM Calculation
**Starting Point:** TAM = $XXB
**Constraints Applied:**
1. [Constraint 1]: reduces by XX%
2. [Constraint 2]: reduces by XX%
3. [Constraint 3]: reduces by XX%
**Calculation:**
[Step-by-step]
**Result: SAM = $XXB**
## SOM Calculation
**Starting Point:** SAM = $XXB
**Assumptions:**
- Market share target (Year 3): X%
- Competitive position: [Rationale]
- GTM capacity: [Sales/marketing capability]
**Calculation:**
[Step-by-step]
**Result: SOM = $XXM**
## Market Segmentation
### Segment 1: [Name]
- Size: $XXM
- Growth: XX%
- Characteristics: [Description]
- Competition: [Intensity]
### Segment 2: [Name]
- Size: $XXM
- Growth: XX%
- Characteristics: [Description]
- Competition: [Intensity]
## Market Growth
- Historical CAGR (past 5 years): XX%
- Projected CAGR (next 5 years): XX%
- Growth drivers: [List key factors]
- Headwinds: [List challenges]
## Competitive Landscape Impact
- Market concentration: [Fragmented/Consolidated]
- Top 3 players' market share: XX%
- Your competitive advantage: [Differentiation]
- Barriers to entry: [High/Medium/Low]
## Validation and Assumptions
**Key Assumptions:**
1. [Assumption 1 with justification]
2. [Assumption 2 with justification]
3. [Assumption 3 with justification]
**Sensitivity Analysis:**
- Best case: TAM = $XXB, SOM = $XXM
- Base case: TAM = $XXB, SOM = $XXM
- Worst case: TAM = $XXB, SOM = $XXM
**Confidence Level:** [High/Medium/Low]
**Reasoning:** [Why you have this confidence level]
## Strategic Implications
- Market is [large/medium/small] enough to support our goals
- Priority segments: [Which to focus on]
- Market timing: [Now/wait/too early]
- Investment recommendation: [Go/no-go rationale]
Common Analysis Patterns
Pattern 1: New Market Creation
- No existing market data available
- Use value theory approach
- Estimate based on problem size
- Look at analogous markets
- Example: Estimating TAM for a novel AI application
Pattern 2: Market Substitution
- Replacing existing solution
- Size existing market being replaced
- Apply adoption curve assumptions
- Example: Cloud replacing on-premise software
Pattern 3: Multi-Segment Rollup
- Calculate TAM per segment separately
- Sum across segments
- Weight by priority/attractiveness
- Example: Horizontal SaaS serving multiple industries
Pattern 4: Geographic Expansion
- Start with proven market (SAM)
- Extrapolate to broader geography (TAM)
- Adjust for regional differences
- Example: US success expanding to Europe
Validation Checklist
Before finalizing TAM analysis:
- Market clearly defined (product, customer, geography)
- Methodology appropriate for market maturity
- Data sources credible and recent
- Calculations shown step-by-step
- Assumptions explicitly stated and justified
- Cross-validated with alternative method
- TAM > SAM > SOM relationship logical
- Growth rates and trends included
- Competitive landscape considered
- Sensitivity analysis performed
- Strategic implications drawn
- Confidence level assessed
- All sources cited
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
Pitfall 1: TAM Too Broad
- ❌ "The entire $500B software market"
- ✅ "The $5B project management software market for mid-market companies"
Pitfall 2: Unrealistic SOM
- ❌ Assuming 50% market share in Year 2
- ✅ Conservative 2-5% market share projection
Pitfall 3: Confusing TAM and SAM
- ❌ Presenting constrained market as TAM
- ✅ Clear distinction between total vs. addressable
Pitfall 4: Outdated Data
- ❌ Using 2018 market size for 2024 analysis
- ✅ Using recent data and applying growth rates
Pitfall 5: Circular Logic
- ❌ "TAM is large because VCs invested in competitors"
- ✅ Independent, data-driven calculation
Pitfall 6: Missing Constraints
- ❌ Ignoring product limitations in SAM
- ✅ Realistic filtering based on your capabilities
Examples
Example 1: B2B SaaS TAM (Bottom-Up)
Input: "Calculate TAM for an AI-powered code review tool targeting software companies"
Process:
- Define target: Companies with 10+ engineers
- Research company count:
- US companies with 10-50 engineers: 50,000
- US companies with 50-200 engineers: 15,000
- US companies with 200+ engineers: 5,000
- Estimate ARPC:
- Small teams (10-50): $5,000/year
- Medium teams (50-200): $25,000/year
- Large teams (200+): $100,000/year
- Calculate:
- Small: 50,000 × $5K = $250M
- Medium: 15,000 × $25K = $375M
- Large: 5,000 × $100K = $500M
- TAM = $1.125B
Output: TAM = $1.125B for US market, with segment breakdown and assumptions
Example 2: Consumer Market TAM (Top-Down)
Input: "What's the TAM for a meal planning app in the US?"
Process:
- Find total market size:
- US meal kit delivery market: $10B (2024)
- US cooking apps market: $500M (2024)
- Adjacent market total: $10.5B
- Determine relevant portion:
- Digital-only solution: 5% of meal kit market
- Your category: 100% of cooking apps
- TAM = ($10B × 5%) + $500M = $1B
- Validate bottom-up:
- US households: 130M
- Households who cook regularly: 70% = 91M
- Willing to pay for meal planning: 5% = 4.55M
- ARPC: $100/year
- TAM = 4.55M × $100 = $455M
- Average estimates: ~$700M TAM
Output: TAM = $700M (range: $455M-$1B) with methodology and validation
Additional Notes
- Always use multiple methods to validate TAM
- Be conservative in assumptions - investors prefer defensible numbers
- Update TAM analysis annually as markets evolve
- Document all assumptions for future reference
- Consider both current TAM and projected TAM in 3-5 years
- Smaller, well-researched TAM is better than inflated guesswork
- Link TAM to business strategy and funding requirements
- Use market-research skill for supporting data collection
- Combine with market-mapping skill to visualize segments