In AP Business, a market-related goal is an objective a company sets about its position in the market, such as growing market share, beating rivals, or building competitive advantage, all of which depend on how sellers and buyers interact to set price.
A market-related goal is any objective a business sets that ties directly to how it competes in its market. Think growing market share, out-selling rivals, or carving out a competitive advantage. These goals live inside the world of buyers and sellers from topic 1.2, where a market is any physical or virtual space where sellers meet their customers (EK 1.2.A.1).
The whole reason these goals matter comes from how markets work. Sellers push for higher prices to earn profit, buyers push for lower prices to save, and that tug-of-war sets the market price (EK 1.2.A.3). A market-related goal is basically the business saying "here's how we want to come out on top of that tug-of-war." Usually that means competitive advantage, the ability to outperform rivals in the same market and grab more market share (EK 1.2.B.1).
This idea sits in Unit 1: Businesses, Competition, and New Ideas, specifically topic 1.2. It connects to two learning objectives. AP Business 1.2.A asks you to explain how buyers and sellers interact to set a market price, and AP Business 1.2.B asks you to develop or evaluate a business's plan to achieve competitive advantage. A market-related goal is the thing that plan is aiming at. Once you understand that competitiveness depends on the number of rivals, how differentiated the products are, and whether competitors can undercut on price (EK 1.2.B.2), you can judge whether a company's market goal is realistic and which strategy fits.
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view galleryCompetitive Advantage (Unit 1)
Competitive advantage is the most common market-related goal there is. When a business says it wants to outperform rivals and grab more market share, competitive advantage is the exact thing it's chasing.
Differentiated Product (Unit 1)
Making a product with features rivals don't have is one of the main ways to actually hit a market-related goal. Differentiation lets you win customers without just dropping your price.
Competitive Pricing (Unit 1)
If your product looks a lot like everyone else's, your market goal often comes down to price. Competitive pricing is the lever you pull when differentiation isn't an option.
Barriers to Entry (Unit 1)
A market goal isn't just about beating today's rivals. High barriers to entry protect your market share by keeping new competitors out, which makes a goal like "hold our lead" actually achievable.
Expect this idea to show up inside topic 1.2 questions about competition and strategy rather than as a standalone vocab term. On MCQs, you might read a short scenario about a company trying to grow market share or beat a rival, then pick the strategy that fits the market's competitiveness. On free-response prompts tied to AP Business 1.2.B, you'd develop or evaluate a business plan, so you need to name a clear market-related goal and then justify a strategy (differentiation versus competitive pricing) using how competitive the market is. The move the exam wants: link the goal to market conditions, don't just state it.
Competitive advantage is one specific market-related goal, not the whole category. A market-related goal is any objective about your position in the market (more market share, more sales, beating a rival), and gaining competitive advantage is the most common one of those. So all competitive advantage goals are market-related, but not every market-related goal is phrased as "competitive advantage."
A market-related goal is any objective tied to a business's standing in its market, like winning market share or beating rivals.
These goals only make sense inside the buyer-seller price tug-of-war from EK 1.2.A.3, where sellers want high prices and buyers want low ones.
Competitive advantage (EK 1.2.B.1) is the most common market-related goal, since it directly drives more market share.
How you reach the goal depends on the market: differentiate your product or compete on price, based on how crowded and similar the competition is (EK 1.2.B.2).
On AP Business 1.2.B questions, name the goal first, then justify the strategy using the market's competitiveness.
It's any business objective tied to its position in the market, such as growing market share, out-selling rivals, or building competitive advantage. It lives in topic 1.2 and connects to how buyers and sellers interact to set price.
No. Competitive advantage is one specific market-related goal, the ability to outperform rivals (EK 1.2.B.1). Market-related goal is the broader category that also includes things like raising sales or holding onto market share.
Two main ways: differentiate your product so it stands out (EK 1.2.B.2), or use competitive pricing to undercut rivals. Which one you choose depends on how competitive the market is and whether your product can really stand apart.
The concept shows up inside Unit 1 topic 1.2 questions about competition and strategy. You'd typically use it on AP Business 1.2.B free-response prompts where you develop or evaluate a business's plan to gain competitive advantage.
Because a market is where sellers and buyers meet and price gets set through their push and pull (EK 1.2.A.1 and 1.2.A.3). A realistic market goal has to account for that competition, the number of rivals, and how easily others can copy you.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.