Market Entry

How to Localise Your Product for New Markets: Beyond Translation

Nirji Ventures explains what true product localisation means — covering language, pricing, UX, payments, compliance, and cultural adaptation that drives adoption in new markets.

Nirji Ventures
7 min read2026-03-09

The Problem: Localisation Treated as Translation

Most companies equate localisation with translation. They translate their website, maybe adjust currency, and call it done. But true localisation goes far deeper — it means adapting the entire product experience to feel native in the target market.

Products that feel foreign fail. Products that feel local win.

The Dimensions of True Localisation

1. Language and Content

Professional translation, not automated. Nuance matters.
Local copywriting that reflects how people actually speak.
Support documentation in local language.
Marketing content adapted to local references and cultural context.

2. Pricing and Currency

Display prices in local currency.
Adjust pricing for local purchasing power.
Offer local payment methods (not just credit cards).
Consider local billing cycles and payment terms.

3. UX and Design

Right-to-left (RTL) support for Arabic, Hebrew, and Urdu markets.
Date, time, and number format localisation.
Colour and imagery that are culturally appropriate.
Mobile-first design for mobile-dominant markets.
Data privacy regulations (GDPR, PDPA, India's DPDP Act).
Local terms of service and privacy policies.
Industry-specific licensing requirements.
Tax compliance (GST, VAT, local equivalents).

5. Customer Support

Support in local language during local business hours.
Local phone numbers and communication channels (WhatsApp is dominant in many markets).
Culturally appropriate support tone and escalation processes.

Framework: Localisation Roadmap

1.Audit your productIdentify every touchpoint that needs localisation.
2.Prioritise by impactLanguage, pricing, and payments are highest priority.
3.Hire local expertiseTranslators, compliance advisors, and cultural consultants.
4.Build localisation infrastructurei18n framework, multi-currency support, and local hosting.
5.Test with local usersUsability testing with target market users reveals gaps.

Mistakes to Avoid

Using automated translation: — Machine translation misses nuance, tone, and cultural context.
Ignoring local payment methods: — Payment friction is the #1 conversion killer in new markets.
One-size-fits-all pricing: — Markets have different willingness to pay.
Launching without local testing: — What works in English may not work in Bahasa or Hindi.

The Nirji Perspective

Nirji Ventures helps companies localise for new markets — going beyond translation to adapt pricing, payments, UX, compliance, and customer experience for genuine local adoption.

Real-World Examples from Asia

Halodoc expanded across Indonesia — a market with 17,000+ islands and significant infrastructure variation — by adapting its telehealth model to local connectivity constraints and healthcare provider availability in each region.

Sqreem expanded from Singapore across 40+ countries by creating market-specific behavioral data models, demonstrating that AI product localization requires data-level adaptation, not just language translation.

Research shows that 70% of global companies that failed in Asian markets cited inadequate product localization as the primary cause. Successful localization goes beyond language: payment methods (UPI in India, GrabPay in SEA), customer support channels (WhatsApp in India, LINE in Thailand), and pricing denominations all require market-specific adaptation.

Why This Matters for Founders and Investors

Understanding this topic is not just theoretical — it directly impacts fundraising outcomes, operational efficiency, and market positioning. According to industry reports, startups that apply structured frameworks to their strategy see significantly higher success rates in competitive markets.

In Asia, where markets are diverse and regulatory environments vary widely, founders who invest in strategic clarity outperform those who rely on intuition alone. Recent data suggests that startups with clear frameworks and advisory support are 2-3x more likely to achieve sustainable growth.

Key implications:

For founders:: These insights translate directly into better decision-making, stronger investor conversations, and faster execution
For investors:: Understanding these dynamics helps identify startups with genuine strategic depth versus surface-level positioning
For the ecosystem:: Raising the quality of strategic thinking across the startup ecosystem benefits all participants

Navigate Market Entry with Nirji

Expanding into new markets requires deep local knowledge and strategic advisory. Nirji Ventures provides startup consulting with expertise across 30+ countries, helping founders navigate regulatory frameworks, build local partnerships, and execute cross-border growth.

Our team has helped startups scale cross-border payments in the UAE, launch fashion-tech brands into the US, and build healthtech MVPs in Singapore. Explore our fundraising advisory for capital strategies tailored to your target market.

Recommended Reading:

Related insight: Cross Border Startup Strategy
Cross-topic perspective: Best Marketing Channels Startups

Key Takeaways

Structured frameworks and real-world validation consistently outperform intuition-based approaches in startup strategy
Data-driven decision-making is essential — track the metrics that matter and act on evidence, not assumptions
Cross-border expansion in Asia requires local knowledge, regulatory awareness, and cultural adaptation
Building with an experienced advisory partner accelerates timelines and reduces costly mistakes
The most successful founders combine vision with disciplined execution and strategic capital deployment

How Nirji Can Help

Entering new markets is complex. Nirji's market entry team provides on-the-ground intelligence, regulatory guidance, and go-to-market localisation across Asia.

Nirji Ventures is a Singapore-based investment banking and strategic advisory firm with 35+ years of experience across 30+ countries.

Ready to take the next step? Contact Nirji Ventures to discuss how we can support your growth journey.

Related Reading:

Explore more insights: Expand Startup Southeast Asia
Our market entry practice: Market Entry Consulting

Written by

Nirji Ventures

Investment Banking & Advisory

Nirji Ventures is a Singapore-based investment banking and strategic advisory firm with 35+ years of experience across 30+ countries. We specialise in M&A advisory, capital raising, startup consulting, and business transformation.

Put These Insights Into Action

This article is part of Nirji Ventures' commitment to helping founders, executives, and investors make better decisions. Our advisory practice turns frameworks like these into execution — whether you need startup consulting to refine your strategy, fundraising advisory to raise your next round, or go-to-market strategy consulting to drive traction.

Companies at different stages benefit from different capabilities. Growth-stage businesses often engage our investment banking practice for M&A and capital raising, while enterprises leverage our business transformation and financial advisory services. For international opportunities, explore our global expansion advisory.

See real-world results in our case studies, or continue reading in our insights library for more research and frameworks.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does product localisation mean?

Localisation means adapting your entire product experience for a new market — including language, pricing, payments, UX, legal compliance, and customer support — not just translating text.

How much does product localisation cost?

Basic localisation (translation, currency) costs $5-15K per market. Deep localisation (payments, compliance, UX adaptation) costs $20-50K+. The investment pays off in significantly higher conversion rates.

Should I localise before or after entering a market?

Before. Launching a non-localised product creates poor first impressions that are difficult to overcome. At minimum, localise language, pricing, and payments before launch.

What is the most important localisation element?

Payment methods. If customers cannot pay in their preferred way, nothing else matters. Payment friction is the #1 conversion killer when entering new markets.

Ready to Accelerate Your Growth?

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