Marketing agency Marketex developed a digital product for a public speaker to reach audiences who couldn't attend live events. When COVID-19 canceled all in-person speaking, this pre-existing digital offering became an immediate, seamless pivot, demonstrating that expanding market reach can double as a powerful contingency plan.

Related Insights

Founders can waste time trying to force an initial idea. The key is to remain open-minded and identify where the market is surprisingly easy to sell into. Mercor found hypergrowth by pivoting from general hiring to serving the intense, specific needs of AI labs.

During the COVID crisis, with revenue at zero, Accel Events pivoted to virtual events by selling a product that didn't exist yet. They created mockups, sold with the confidence they could build it, and then developed features only after customers signed up. This rapid, customer-funded development saved the company.

Accel Events thrived by pivoting to a virtual events platform during COVID. However, this new reputation hurt them when the market returned to in-person events. They were no longer seen as a viable in-person solution, forcing another costly product and brand rebuild to recapture their original market.

A perceived product flaw can be a primary value proposition for a different type of customer. For example, a diffuse global audience, useless to local venues, becomes a powerful asset for organizations aiming for international reach, unlocking a new market.

When COVID-19 halted travel, Unbound Merino's core "pack less" benefit became irrelevant. They survived by pivoting their messaging to focus on the product's intrinsic features, like comfort and breathability, which appealed to customers stuck at home.

When fundamental market changes make your business model obsolete, incremental changes aren't enough. You must consider how your underlying talent and expertise can be repackaged into a completely different business, like turning a tech platform into a consulting service.

When COVID-19 invalidated its revenue plan, Nextdoor's GM used a pre-existing worst-case scenario to pivot the product strategy. The focus shifted from subscriptions to features that provided immediate cash flow to local businesses (e.g., gift cards), enabling a quick, board-aligned response to the crisis.

Initially a hardware company, SkillVari's supply chain collapsed during the pandemic, sending revenue to zero. This crisis forced a pivot to a software-first model, allowing customers to buy off-the-shelf Meta or Pico headsets and load the software, creating a more scalable and resilient business.

Rather than making an abrupt turn, Sure managed its pivot from a B2C app to a B2B platform gradually. They kept the original mobile app running while they built and validated the new B2B distribution model, only sunsetting the app once the new strategy proved viable and began to ramp up.

While scaling a proven system is usually the right move, there's an exception. If a new customer segment offers exponentially higher order values for the same fulfillment effort, the potential leverage justifies risking a new acquisition channel.

Proactively Targeting Untapped Markets Creates a Built-In Business Pivot | RiffOn