What decision should U.S. Market Entry Guides resolve first?+
Start with the narrow business decision that must be made now. On this page, that means deciding how to organize primary-source guidance around concrete company decisions, required evidence, state or product variation, professional review points, and next actions. Record the evidence, owner, acceptance test, dependencies, and exclusions before starting execution.
What is included in a U.S. Market Entry Guides engagement?+
Only the workstreams, deliverables, evidence requests, review points, acceptance criteria, and handoffs in the signed scope are included. This page is an educational description—not a proposal, fixed price, guaranteed timeline, or promise of approval or commercial results.
Which parts of U.S. Market Entry Guides require independent professionals?+
Legal, tax, immigration, banking, customs, insurance, securities, employment, FDA, and other regulated determinations are made or reviewed by appropriately qualified independent professionals. B2B Sales Pilot coordinates the facts and handoffs but does not substitute for those roles.
How is readiness for U.S. Market Entry Guides evaluated?+
Readiness means the facts needed to pursue a source-aware decision guide, evidence checklist, and qualified questions for the next step are current enough to support the next decision. The owner, product and state context, dependencies, resources, assumptions, exclusions, and any required qualified review must be explicit; checklist completion alone is not approval.