Feasibility · Bahrain
Find out if it works, before you fund it.
SRR produces feasibility studies for new businesses, projects, and market entry in Bahrain and the GCC: the market, the model, the capital required, and a straight answer about whether the numbers actually support the plan.
What We Handle
The evidence behind the decision.
A feasibility study is only useful if it is capable of saying no. Ours are built to test the plan, not to flatter it.
- Market assessment: demand, competition, and pricing
- Financial model with revenue, cost, and cash flow projections
- Capital requirement and funding needs
- Break-even analysis and sensitivity testing
- Regulatory, licensing, and operational considerations
- A written study with a clear, evidenced conclusion
Who It Is For
When the decision is expensive to get wrong.
You are launching something new
A new business, product, or location. The question is not whether it could work, but whether the numbers say it will.
You need it for funding or licensing
Banks, investors, and some authorities want a feasibility study. It has to be credible, not a document produced to tick a box.
You are entering a new market
Expanding into Bahrain or the wider GCC. The commercial logic that worked at home does not automatically transfer.
You want an honest answer
Sometimes the most valuable outcome is finding out that a project does not work, before you have spent the money finding out the hard way.
How It Works
From the question to an evidenced answer.
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Define the question
We establish exactly what is being tested and what a yes or a no would actually mean, so the study answers a decision rather than describing a market.
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Assess the market
We look at demand, competition, and pricing, and test whether the revenue assumption is grounded in evidence or in optimism.
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Build the model
We build the financial model: revenue, costs, capital requirement, and cash flow, then stress it with sensitivities to see where it breaks.
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Give a straight answer
You receive a written study with the assumptions, the numbers, and a clear conclusion, including the case against, if there is one.
Common Questions
Feasibility studies, answered.
What is a feasibility study?
It is a structured assessment of whether a proposed business, project, or expansion is commercially viable. It tests the market, builds the financial model, works out the capital required, and reaches an evidenced conclusion about whether the numbers actually work.
What does the study actually contain?
A market assessment covering demand, competition, and pricing. A financial model with revenue, cost, and cash flow projections. The capital requirement and funding need. Break-even and sensitivity analysis. The regulatory and operational considerations. And a conclusion that says, plainly, whether it stacks up.
We need one for a bank or an investor. Is that different?
The rigour is the same, but the audience matters. A study prepared for a lender or an investor has to withstand their scrutiny, so the assumptions have to be evidenced and the sensitivities have to be honest. A study that only shows the upside is one a credible reader will discount immediately.
What if the study says the project does not work?
Then it has done its job. The purpose is to find that out on paper rather than in the market. We will tell you plainly if the numbers do not support the plan, and where relevant, what would have to change for them to.
How long does a feasibility study take?
It depends on the complexity of the project and how much market evidence has to be gathered. We scope it against the decision you are making and the deadline you are working to, and agree that with you before we start.
Part of our wider services for businesses in Bahrain and the GCC. Ready to proceed? See company formation in Bahrain.
Test the plan before you commit to it.
A short call is the quickest way to scope a feasibility study around the decision you actually need to make.