
欧州連合は依然として世界最大の経済圏であり、経済圏でもあります。
この地域のほとんどの国は、世界の他の地域に比べて比較的高い生活水準を誇っています。ヨーロッパでは富裕国と貧困国の間にはまだ格差がありますが、国際貧困基準を下回る国はありません。
欧州連合の創設により、貿易障壁や関税が撤廃され、27 か国からなる最大の単一貿易圏が構築されました。その結果、経済は密接に結びつき、互いに利益を得ています。共通通貨としてのユーロの導入により、24 か国間の為替レートが解消されました。これにより、ユーロ圏での国境を越えた取引が簡素化されました。
Market Research in Europe: How Leading Firms Capture B2B Industrial Growth
Market research in Europe rewards firms that treat the region as 27 distinct buying cultures, not one bloc. The winners build country-level intelligence into procurement, product, and channel decisions before committing capital.
The opportunity is structural. European industrial buyers are modernizing fleets, retooling factories, and replacing legacy machinery under pressure from the Machinery Regulation, the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, and the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism. Each shift creates a window for OEMs and suppliers willing to read the market with precision.
Why Market Research in Europe Demands Country-Level Granularity
Pan-European averages mislead. German Mittelstand buyers prioritize total cost of ownership and supplier qualification audits stretching three to five years. Italian industrial buyers weight relationship continuity and after-sales response time. Polish manufacturers evaluate capex on payback periods under 36 months. French procurement teams negotiate framework agreements with embedded service-level commitments.
A single regression line across these markets produces a forecast no operator trusts. SIS International Research has consistently found across packaging machinery, commercial vehicle, and industrial chemical engagements that purchase criteria rankings invert between Northern and Southern European buyers, even when product specifications are identical. Treating Europe as one market hides the segments where margin actually lives.
The leading firms run parallel research streams: one for regulatory and macro signals at the EU level, another for buyer behavior at the country level. The two feed different decisions. Brussels shapes the rulebook. Munich, Milan, Warsaw, and Lyon decide the order.
The Regulatory Layer Shaping Industrial Demand
Three regulatory pillars now drive B2B industrial purchase cycles across Europe. The Machinery Regulation replaces the Machinery Directive and tightens conformity assessment for AI-enabled safety components, digital instructions, and cybersecurity. The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation forces converters and FMCG brands to redesign formats, pulling new capex into filling, sealing, and inspection equipment. The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive obligates buyers to source Scope 3 emissions data from suppliers, which reshapes RFQs across automotive, chemicals, and capital equipment.
Vendors who map these regulations to bill of materials decisions win share. Vendors who treat compliance as a legal footnote lose qualification rounds. The intelligence question is not “what does the regulation say.” It is “which line items in the buyer’s BOM shift, and on what timeline.”
What Sophisticated Buyers Tell Researchers That Public Data Does Not
Trade statistics, customs data, and association reports describe what already happened. They do not reveal which specifications are being rewritten for the next tender, which incumbent suppliers are losing internal advocates, or which regional plants are accelerating reshoring decisions. That intelligence comes from structured B2B expert interviews with engineering, procurement, and operations leaders inside the buying organization.
In SIS International expert interview programs across German, UK, Finnish, and Swiss industrial buyers, the most actionable signal has consistently been the gap between stated purchase criteria and revealed shortlist behavior, a gap that quantitative panels almost never surface. A buyer rates price as the top criterion, then awards the contract to the third-cheapest bidder with the strongest local service network. The shortlist behavior is the truth.
This is why competitive intelligence in Europe runs on primary qualitative work supported by quantitative validation, not the reverse. Volkswagen Group, Siemens, Schneider Electric, ABB, and Bosch all run procurement processes where the decision logic sits inside conversations, not spreadsheets.
The Four-Lens Framework for European Industrial Market Entry
SIS uses a four-lens approach when sizing B2B industrial opportunity in Europe. Each lens answers a different question that capital allocators ask before approving entry.
| Lens | Question Answered | Primary Method |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory | Which directives reshape demand and on what timeline? | Desk research, regulatory expert IDIs |
| Buyer | What drives shortlist inclusion and final award? | B2B expert interviews, win/loss analysis |
| 競争力 | Where are incumbents structurally vulnerable? | Competitive intelligence, channel interviews |
| Channel | Which distribution and service models scale? | Distributor IDIs, ethnographic site visits |
Source: SIS International Research
Skipping any lens produces a forecast that survives the boardroom but fails the launch. The regulatory lens without the buyer lens produces compliant products no one prefers. The competitive lens without the channel lens produces share assumptions that ignore who actually controls the customer.
Where the Growth Sits in the Next Cycle
Three categories show the strongest pull for B2B industrial entrants. Fleet management systems and connected vehicle services are accelerating as European logistics operators electrify mixed fleets and require xEV-specific telematics. Packaging machinery is in a replacement cycle driven by recyclability mandates and lightweighting. Industrial chemicals and specialty materials are being requalified across automotive and aerospace supply chains as Scope 3 reporting forces substitution decisions.
SIS International’s proprietary research across European commercial vehicle operators indicates that aftermarket FMS adoption is outpacing OEM-embedded connected car systems among mid-size fleets, a pattern that creates a distinct entry path for independent telematics vendors and specialty integrators. The OEM channel is not the only channel. In several segments, it is no longer the leading channel.
What Separates the Firms That Win
The firms that compound share in European industrial markets share three habits. They commission country-level primary research before pricing decisions, not after. They treat regulatory intelligence as a commercial input, not a legal cost. They validate channel economics with distributor and end-user interviews before signing master agreements.
The firms that struggle rely on syndicated reports, extrapolate from one or two flagship countries, and discover the German service expectation or the Italian payment term only after the first quarter of underperformance. The information was available. The research design did not capture it.
Market research in Europe is not a procurement line item. It is the difference between a launch that hits plan and a launch that explains why it did not.
SISインターナショナルについて
SISインターナショナル 定量的、定性的、戦略的な調査を提供します。意思決定のためのデータ、ツール、戦略、レポート、洞察を提供します。また、インタビュー、アンケート、フォーカス グループ、その他の市場調査方法やアプローチも実施します。 お問い合わせ 次の市場調査プロジェクトにご利用ください。



