Written By: Jeb Blount, Jr.
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Most salespeople waste their careers fighting over the same crowded prospects. Meanwhile, untapped markets are sitting in plain sight. These are the industries, segments, and territories your competitors don’t take seriously—or don’t even notice. They’re wide open, and they reward the salespeople willing to do the work.
On the Sales Gravy Podcast, I spoke with Nicholas Lalla, an economic development expert who helped bring more than $200 million of investment into a market everyone else had written off. His blueprint for revitalizing a forgotten city is the same framework you can use to uncover and dominate untapped markets in sales.
The best markets are often the ones no one is talking about. When the crowd decides a territory is “too small,” “too tough,” or “not worth the time,” they leave the door wide open. That’s where the opportunity lives.
And let’s be clear: An untapped market doesn’t have to mean a new zip code. It could be a niche industry your competitors dismiss, a customer population they ignore, or a vertical nobody’s paying attention to yet.
If you don’t know much about a market, chances are your competitors don’t either. That ignorance is your advantage—if you’re willing to dig in.
Most salespeople gamble on gut instinct when picking new markets. That’s why they waste time chasing “big name” logos that never buy, or avoiding prospects who look difficult but actually have massive potential.
Top performers take a different path. They go where the data points. Before committing to a market, study the numbers your competition ignores:
Data doesn’t close deals. But it stacks the odds in your favor and ensures you’re hunting where opportunity actually exists.
Numbers tell you where to look. Conversations tell you what’s real. Don’t just study demographics—talk to 100 people tied to the market. Customers. Ex-customers. Prospects who should buy from you but don’t. Even suppliers and partners.
Ask them about their challenges, their frustrations, and the gaps they see. Don’t pitch—listen. By the time you’ve had 100 conversations, you’ll know more about that market than your competitors ever will. And you’ll have built a network of early relationships that pay off down the line.
The breakthrough comes when you stop looking for completely new industries and start examining adjacencies. Instead of jumping into foreign markets, identify prospects that connect to your existing expertise.
If you sell to manufacturing, explore adjacent industries like logistics or supply chain management. If you work in healthcare, consider medical device companies or pharmaceutical services.
Adjacent markets let you leverage existing knowledge while expanding into less competitive territory.
Most market expansion strategies fall apart because of a lack of focus. Salespeople chase every shiny opportunity and end up spread too thin. The result? Lots of motion, zero momentum.
Domination beats diversification. Pick three or four high-potential segments and go all-in. Pour your time, energy, and relationship capital into saturating those markets. That density builds brand recognition, referrals, and trust.
Scattershot prospecting creates exhaustion. Focused prospecting creates dominance.
Don’t ignore what already exists—leverage it. The most counterintuitive insight about untapped markets is that the best ones build on foundations you already have.
Your “legacy assets” might include:
Stop looking for completely greenfield opportunities. Start asking: “What do I already know that could apply somewhere else?”
The fastest path to market penetration often builds on existing strengths rather than starting from scratch.
Most reps make the mistake of focusing only on decision-makers. But ecosystems drive markets, not individuals.
The service tech fixing machines knows which plants are expanding. The HR manager sees where budgets are growing. The facilities lead knows who’s signing leases.
When you build relationships beyond decision-makers, entire communities can support your expansion.
This is the part most salespeople hate: Building market presence takes patience. It’s a long-term play, not a quick win.
But here’s the paradox: when you stop expecting overnight wins, the wins come faster. That’s because you start making the right investments—building relationships, educating buyers, and sticking with markets that others abandon too soon.
Compounding effort always beats chasing quick hits.
Untapped markets aren’t about chasing “new.” They’re about being first. Getting in early. Building relationships before anyone else does.
Start with your own blank slate analysis. What markets do you dismiss without investigation? What adjacencies exist around your current success? Where could you concentrate effort instead of spreading it thin?
Your untapped territory is waiting for someone smart enough to find it. Stop fighting for scraps in oversaturated markets and start building your own $200 million opportunity.
Want to turn your new market insights into a prospecting machine? Download our Seven Steps to Building Effective Prospecting Sequences guide and learn how to build outreach that cuts through the noise in fresh territory.
Jeb Blount, Jr.
Jeb Blount, Jr. is a graduate of Berry College with a degree in Political…
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