A clear definition
Adjacent market opportunities are growth opportunities that exist in markets closely related to a company’s existing customers, products, or capabilities.
They are not entirely new markets.
They are not incremental improvements to what a company already sells.
They are expansion opportunities already connected to current demand—often visible through customer behavior, purchasing patterns, or unmet needs just outside the company’s current offering.
The simplest way to understand it
If your customers are already buying something related to what you offer—but from someone else—that is an adjacent market opportunity.
It is not hypothetical demand.
It is proven demand that your business is not currently capturing.
Why adjacent market opportunities matter
Most companies try to grow in one of two ways:
- They try to sell more of what they already offer
- They try to enter completely new markets
Both approaches have limitations.
Selling more of the same eventually reaches a ceiling.
Entering entirely new markets introduces risk, uncertainty, and high cost.
Adjacent market opportunities sit in between.
They offer:
- Lower risk than new market entry
- Greater upside than incremental optimization
- Faster execution due to existing customer alignment
This is why they are one of the most overlooked—but most effective—growth strategies.
Why most companies miss them
Despite their value, adjacent market opportunities are consistently overlooked.
There are three primary reasons.
1. Companies focus inward instead of outward
Most businesses analyze:
- Their products
- Their services
- Their internal performance
Very few analyze:
- What their customers are buying elsewhere
- Where demand is leaking out of their business
- What needs are being fulfilled by competitors or adjacent providers
This inward focus creates blind spots.
2. Growth is often treated as a marketing problem
When growth slows, the default response is:
- Increase advertising
- Improve conversion rates
- Optimize messaging
These actions improve performance—but only within existing boundaries.
They do not identify new areas of revenue already connected to the business.
3. Adjacent opportunities are not obvious at first glance
They don’t show up clearly in:
- standard analytics dashboards
- traditional market reports
- surface-level customer data
They require:
- pattern recognition
- behavioral analysis
- strategic interpretation
Without a structured approach, they remain hidden.
What adjacent market opportunities actually look like
They typically fall into a few categories.
1. Customer-driven expansion
Your existing customers are already purchasing related products or services elsewhere.
Opportunity:
- Capture that existing spend
2. Capability-based expansion
Your business has the ability to offer something new using existing resources.
Opportunity:
- Extend your offering into a related space
3. Experience-based expansion
Customers need complementary solutions before, during, or after using your product.
Opportunity:
- Own more of the overall customer journey
A practical example
A company sells high-end home gym equipment.
Traditional growth approach:
- Run more ads
- Improve website conversion
- Launch new variations of existing products
Adjacent market opportunity approach:
- Customers buying equipment also purchase:
- training programs
- recovery tools
- nutritional support
Opportunity:
- Expand into those adjacent areas
- Capture additional revenue from the same customer base
The core principle
The most important idea to understand is this:
The greatest growth opportunities are often not new markets—they are adjacent ones already connected to your customers.
This is what makes adjacent market opportunities so powerful.
They are not based on assumptions.
They are based on existing behavior and real demand.
How to start identifying adjacent market opportunities
You do not need complex systems to begin.
Start with three questions:
- What are our customers buying in addition to what we offer?
- Where are we losing potential revenue to other providers?
- What needs exist just outside our current offering?
These questions reveal patterns.
Patterns reveal opportunities.
Why this concept matters going forward
As markets become more competitive, traditional growth methods become less effective.
Companies that rely solely on:
- marketing optimization
- incremental product changes
will eventually stall.
Companies that identify and act on adjacent market opportunities will:
- expand faster
- reduce reliance on acquisition
- increase customer value
- build more resilient business models
Final perspective
Adjacent market opportunities are not a tactic.
They are a shift in how growth is understood.
Instead of asking:
“How do we sell more?”
The better question becomes:
“Where does relevant demand already exist—and how do we capture it?”
That shift changes everything.

