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Independent Research

Finding the Market They Couldn't See

A research framework for identifying overlooked enterprise markets through operating-model analysis rather than industry labels.

Traditional segmentation assumes industry defines opportunity. This research tested whether operating model can be a stronger predictor of commercial fit than industry classification.

Hypothesis

Industry labels describe what a company sells. Operating models reveal how it works.

The initial question was whether public company-level signals could identify enterprise markets where workforce development could create measurable business value.

The first hypothesis centered on demand and attainability. That was useful, but incomplete.

The stronger insight was that opportunity clustered around repeatable operating environments, not conventional industry categories.

The strongest recurring pattern was large frontline workforce, measurable performance environment, manager bottleneck, and visible advancement ladder.

Framework

The model shifted from market labels to operating conditions.

01

Frontline workforce scale

02

Distributed operating model

03

Manager leverage

04

Operational performance accountability

05

Internal mobility pathways

06

Education funding infrastructure

07

Business-unit buyer clarity

Scoring Logic

Weighted Fit Model

Operating Model Fit
40%
Enterprise Scale
15%
Frontline Intensity
20%
Distributed Operations
10%
Operational Pain
10%
Buyer Clarity
5%

Iterations

The research improved by finding where the model was wrong.

01

Industry-based scoring

The first model used Fortune 1000 industry labels as a proxy for fit. It surfaced plausible large employers, but assumed industry and operating model were the same thing.

02

Signal enrichment

Public signals such as tuition assistance, career pathways, leadership development, and workforce transformation were collected. The language was noisy because large enterprises all describe themselves this way.

03

Workforce complexity

The model began weighting environments where frontline work connects to measurable performance, including claims, member services, contact centers, field service, logistics, and warehouse operations.

04

Operating-model classification

The final model stopped asking what industry a company was in and started asking how the company actually operates.

Case Study

Amazon exposed the flaw in industry-based segmentation.

Under a conventional label, Amazon appeared as Internet Services and Retailing. That label obscured the workforce environment that mattered for the model.

Reclassified by operating model, Amazon became a fulfillment, logistics, warehouse operations, frontline leadership, and distributed operations environment.

Industry Label

Internet Services and Retailing

Operating Model

Warehouse / Distribution / Logistics / Frontline Operations / Leadership Pathways

Result

Tier 1 fit, score 93.0

Rankings

The strongest segments were defined by operating environments.

SegmentRepresentative CompaniesTop Score
BankingJPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, Wells Fargo97.2
Healthcare PayersUnitedHealth Group, Elevance Health, Humana, Centene95.8
InsuranceBerkshire Hathaway, Progressive, State Farm Insurance95.8
Healthcare DistributionCardinal Health, Cencora, McKesson94.4
Logistics / FulfillmentAmazon, FedEx, UPS93.0
TelecomComcast, AT&T, Charter Communications91.2
Retail / DistributionCVS Health, IQVIA Holdings, Cigna Group91.2

Top Ranked Accounts

CompanyPublic CategoryEmployeesScore
JPMorgan ChaseCommercial Banks318,51097.2
CitigroupCommercial Banks226,00097.2
Bank of AmericaCommercial Banks213,21097.2
Wells FargoCommercial Banks205,20097.2
UnitedHealth GroupHealth Care: Insurance390,00095.8
Berkshire HathawayInsurance387,80095.8
Morgan StanleyCommercial Banks82,99095.1
Capital One FinancialCommercial Banks76,30095.1
Cardinal HealthHealth Care Distribution55,39094.4
AmazonInternet Services and Retailing1,580,00093.0

Method

The edge cases became the methodology.

Amazon

The industry-label trap

Amazon was classified as Internet Services and Retailing. That label implied a technology and commerce company. Its operating reality included fulfillment centers, warehouse operations, logistics, frontline leadership pathways, and distributed operations.

Berkshire Hathaway

The conglomerate problem

A single industry label could not describe a holding company with insurance, utilities, manufacturing, retail, and services. The model pointed to the need for subsidiary-level operating-model analysis.

Healthcare Distribution

The hidden segment

Healthcare distribution looked like wholesale on paper, but the operating model showed warehouse networks, measurable performance environments, clear advancement ladders, and manager leverage.

Validation

Next Checks

  • Qualitative review with HR and operations leaders
  • Attrition benchmarking against operating-model peers
  • Internal mobility analysis by pathway density
  • Buyer persona validation by business-unit ownership
  • Competitive landscape and market saturation review
  • Annual re-scoring to monitor model drift