Market structure
How the market actually works. Beyond what's visible from public sources.
Before committing serious money to a new market, spend a few weeks finding out if you're even asking the right question.
Most companies don't need another market report. They need someone to tell them where the opportunity is, where the risk is, and whether the project is worth pursuing at all.
By the time most companies reach out, they've already read the reports, spoken with distributors, searched online, and collected plenty of data.
What they still don't have is confidence in the next decision.
The problem isn't a lack of information. It's that nobody is putting the pieces together.
When the sprint ends, you won't get a 120-page report. You'll know what to do next.
Not theory. Things you can actually use.
How the market actually works. Beyond what's visible from public sources.
Where competitors are strong, and where they're exposed. Who matters, who doesn't, and why.
Where the realistic openings sit, and where the money tends to disappear. Sized, not speculated.
One document your management team can actually read — and act on.
No retainers. No endless meetings.
One question. One project. One price. You know what you're paying before we start.
A small, scoped check. Useful when you need a structured second opinion on one specific question — before committing real money.
The full four-deliverable sprint. Market, competitors, opportunity, and a decision memo your management team can act on.
Every source tells a different story.
Global supply chains are changing faster than ever. Manufacturing is expanding across Southeast Asia. New suppliers appear every year. Governments introduce new policies. Infrastructure improves. Markets evolve.
On paper, everything looks promising. Reality is rarely that simple.
You can read reports. You can search online. You can speak with distributors, consultants, or government agencies. The problem is that every source tells a different story.
Someone has to decide which information can actually be trusted. That's where 48 Research comes in.
More than ten years in the region.
For more than ten years, I've lived and worked across Southeast Asia. Relationships built with government officials, industry experts, local operators, and business owners.
The value isn't access to information. It's knowing how the pieces fit together — and when they don't.
The real value is no longer the report.
Research has changed. AI has dramatically reduced the time required to collect and organize information. That's a good thing.
It means less time paying people to gather data — and more time challenging assumptions, verifying facts, and making better decisions.
The real value is judgment.
Not every question needs a six-figure engagement.
Large consulting firms will always have their place. If you're running a billion-dollar transformation project, you probably need one.
But not every business question requires a six-figure engagement. Sometimes what you need is an experienced researcher who understands the region, challenges the evidence, and gives a clear recommendation.
I don't claim to know everything about Southeast Asia. My job is to figure out which information you can actually trust — and turn it into a decision you can defend.
Anyone can collect information.The job is helping you decide what to believe.
A sample of recent inbound inquiries. Different industries, same underlying question: is this worth committing capital to, or not?
A 5-page brief that answers one question: is this problem worth solving? Quick market structure, the 3–5 players who actually matter, an initial read, and a recommendation for what to do next. It's a filter, not a sales document.
When the decision is real and the budget is moving, the full sprint delivers all four artifacts in 2–4 weeks. Fixed scope. Fixed price. Executive-ready memo at the end.
I don't sell reports. I solve business questions.
Over the last several years I've worked with companies trying to understand Southeast Asia — not from a textbook, but from the reality of how local markets actually operate.
Sometimes the answer is: "Go."
Sometimes it's: "Wait."
Or sometimes —
"Don't waste your money."
Some clients hire me expecting confirmation. Instead, they receive a different answer. All three of those are valuable — and that's the point.
Tell me what you're trying to decide. A short message is enough — I'll come back with whether a sprint makes sense, what scope would fit, and a clear price.
No automated funnels. No retainer pitches.
Reply within one business day with whether a sprint makes sense, and what it would look like.