From product vision to market success
Strong businesses are built on strong products. Not strong ideas, strong products. The distinction matters.
An idea becomes a product only when it is designed for a specific customer, positioned in a specific market, and validated against a specific set of commercial requirements. That process is what this module teaches.
Most founders move from idea to execution without the intermediate step of structured validation. They build the product they imagined rather than the product the market will pay for, and they discover the misalignment only after investing six months of development and a year’s runway.
This module eliminates that failure pattern.
You will learn to identify customer segments and unmet needs with analytical rigour, develop business model prototypes to test commercial logic before full commitment, translate product strategy into structured roadmaps with measurable milestones, forecast financial performance across different market scenarios, and design go-to-market strategies grounded in validated positioning rather than optimistic assumptions.
The focus is not on ideation; founders typically generate more ideas than they can execute. The focus is on structured commercialisation.
The discipline of moving from a validated product concept to a market-ready launch with a plan that accounts for real market conditions, real resource constraints, and real competitive dynamics.
This course is designed for founders and professionals responsible for defining, developing, and commercialising products, particularly those at the stage of moving from a validated concept to market launch.
Basic business strategy understanding is helpful. Module 1 or equivalent business analysis experience is recommended.
This module builds on the execution discipline established in Module 1.
Product management at a professional level requires both the strategic thinking to define what to build and the commercial discipline to validate that it is worth building. This module develops both.

By the end of this course, you will be able to:
This module develops the product strategy and commercial validation capabilities that separate founders who build what the market needs from those who build what they imagine the market needs.
Customer segmentation
Identify specific segments and document unmet needs before building
Market opportunity analysis
Read trends, gaps, and competitive dynamics as commercial signals
Business model prototyping
Build and evaluate multiple commercial logic models before committing
Product positioning
Define competitive context rather than just product features
Roadmap development
Translate strategy into milestone-based execution plans
Financial forecasting
Build unit economics and scenario models that stress-test assumptions
Feasibility planning
Design staged validation gates that control capital commitment
Go-to-market execution
Build launch plans grounded in specific channels, segments, and metrics
Performance optimisation
Diagnose and recommend adjustments to enhance product outcomes
This module translates the strategic foundation of Module 1 into the product development and commercial validation discipline that underpins every subsequent revenue and growth module.
The full certification pathway:
Module 1: Business Strategy and Business Development Essentials
Module 2: Product Management and Go-to-Market Strategy
Module 3: WSQ Digital Branding and Brand Strategy
Module 4: Sales and Marketing Strategy
Module 5: Management, Leadership, and Organisational Design
Module 6: Finance for Non-Finance Managers
Module 7: Venture Capital and Strategic Fundraising Decisions
Without a product that is validated against real market demand, the marketing strategy of Module 4 and the fundraising discipline of Module 7 have nothing worth selling or funding.

A Certification of Completion by Equinet Academy will be awarded to candidates who have demonstrated competency in the Product Management and Go-to-Market Strategy Course assessment and achieved at least 75% attendance.
This course progresses from market opportunity identification and customer analysis through business model prototyping and product roadmapping to financial forecasting, feasibility planning, and go-to-market execution. The validation logic from the initial analysis phase drives model selection, which in turn informs financial and execution planning.

Meet Your Educators
Kenneth Li Jun Hui is an entrepreneur, crowdfunding trainer, and Chief Executive Officer of Scube Gift Pte Ltd and Swanz Pte Ltd, with over a decade of hands-on experience launching, scaling, and commercialising consumer products through crowdfunding and international markets. He is a dedicated lecturer at Tetr Business School and a business trainer for crowdfunding…
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S$499.00 S$999.00
2 Days | 16 Hours
Day 1: Market analysis and opportunity identification, customer segment validation, business model prototyping and positioning, and GTM roadmap design.
Day 2: Financial modelling, feasibility planning, performance forecasting, product requirements, performance optimisation, integration session, and assessments (Case Study Written Assessment + Individual Project Presentation).
| Learning Mode | Course Dates | Duration | Trainer |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-Person | 06, 07 Jul 2026 (Mon, Tue) | 9.00am - 6.00pm | |
| In-Person | 08, 09 Oct 2026 (Thu, Fri) | 9.00am - 6.00pm |
Click on the course dates above to register online.
Everything you need to know about the course. Can’t find the answer you’re looking for? Please contact our friendly team.
No. The focus is on strategic product management, defining what to build and why, not how to build it technically.
Yes. You will translate your product strategy into a milestone-based roadmap with validated positioning and measurable success criteria.
Yes. Unit economics, scenario analysis, and sensitivity testing are central to Feasibility Planning, Forecasting, and Go-to-Market Execution, specifically the financial disciplines that most founders avoid until they run out of runway.
That is fine and probably a good sign that the validation exercises are working. The frameworks apply to any product at any stage.
Module 4 assumes a validated product with defined positioning. If you have not done that work in Module 2, the marketing strategy will have nothing solid to execute against.
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