Article

Building a hardware business case.

A credible hardware business case connects market reach, conversion, unit economics, development spend, and payback timing. It should make the opportunity easier to challenge, not easier to oversell.

Early business cases go wrong when they confuse the total market with the reachable market. Hardware businesses do not monetise market size directly. They monetise the portion they can actually reach, convert, and serve.

Decision test: if the business case only works when market share, conversion, and pricing all lean optimistic at the same time, the opportunity is not yet robust enough.

What belongs in the first-pass model

  • addressable market and the smaller reachable segment
  • conversion from reachable audience into actual unit sales
  • unit price and unit gross-profit quality
  • development and tooling spend that must be recovered
  • annual operating cost that the opportunity must carry

Why payback matters

A large market story can still hide a poor payback profile. If it takes too long for the product to recover development and operating spend, the risk profile remains weak even if the eventual upside looks attractive.

Suppose the reachable market is only a small fraction of the headline total. That is not automatically a problem. The real question is whether the reachable slice converts efficiently enough to support the spend required to launch and serve the product.

The Hardware Business Case Builder helps structure that first-pass model so the discussion becomes about evidence and assumptions rather than enthusiasm.