|
Carve Out Your Niche By Dominating
One
by Success
Doctor
I was recently interviewed by a print magazine about
niche marketing. In it, I offered several tips and ideas
on how to carve a niche in the marketplace. Here are
a few of them:
1) Michel, what do you do? How do you do it?
If you know my personal story, you know how niche
marketing played an important role in my career. (See
another interview in which I discuss this, along with
the strategies I used to propel my career, at http://SuccessDoctor.com/transcript.htm.)
Long story short, I feared rejection immensely, which
led to a reclusive childhood. I wanted to overcome my
fears and decided to dive into the world of sales in
order to fight them. Years passed and many failures
ensued until I finally became the top producing salesperson
in Canada for a Fortune 500 company.
How did I accomplish that? Since I hated prospecting,
I found and developed more effective marketing strategies
that caused high quality prospects to come to me instead
of the other way around. I no longer had to prospect.
I no longer had to be rejected. In short, I went from
prospecting to positioning.
In other words, I decided to specialize in a specific
niche -- even though my employer did not require it
of me. I positioned myself as an expert in a specific
area (for a specific target market). Essentially, even
though I could sell everything to everyone from this
employer, I decided to specialize in only one product
line for one particular category of prospect.
As a result, I attracted pre-qualified prospects to
my door.
People today are bombarded with information, commercials
and competition. Prospecting online is not only difficult
but also impossible, nowadays. Thus, you have to market
in such a way that causes those kinds of people to come
to your business or website, and not the other way around
-- like a magnet.
Therefore, rather than prospect for clients you must
position your business as unique in a particular category
or industry, or for a specific audience or market. And
by being unique, you will naturally become the leader.
With all the competition out there, it is no longer
possible to be better than the others. The goal, therefore,
is to be different -- and not better.
2) What is niche marketing? Why is it important?
Today's world has become overcommunicated and hypercompetitive
-- one huge blur of sameness, in my estimation. If you
attempt to be too general or too wide in your approach,
you will only dissipate among the blur. And people will
not see any greater value in buying from you than in
buying from the competition.
One of the greatest errors committed by most new businesses
is that they fall into a trap: they try to be "all things
to all people." And they do so because they are mislead
by the notion that, by offering more (or by serving
more people), they will generate more sales. That's
understandable for the survival of any new business
depends on the number of sales it makes.
Based on the law of averages, you will have to advertise
quite heavily so to be in front of as many eyeballs
as possible, all with the hope of attracting an adequate
amount of prospects that will in turn translate into
a certain number of sales.
Undeniably, this requires a gigantic advertising budget.
For most new and especially smaller businesses, this
is quite a challenge if not impossible. Admittedly,
it is true that, the greater your reach is, the greater
the potential quantity of responses will be. But what
about quality?
Would it matter if your business or website generates
a large quantity of uninterested visitors that will
simply never buy from you? Let's look at the Internet.
If your online business targets everyone, then your
marketing message (and that includes your website) must
therefore be painted with broad brushstrokes as to appeal
to everyone. And the challenge with such an approach
is the fact that you will lose a large percentage of
visitors.
They may fall into your target market, but visitors
that leave your website do so because they likely feel
left out or become uninterested fast. Others simply
choose competitors that might provide them with greater
perceived value. In other words, the broader you are
in your appeal, the less relevant you will be to any
and every individual visiting your site.
If your site sells everything, chances are that your
audience will not perceive any greater value in shopping
from you any greater than from anyone else. In fact,
the only common denominator, with which they have to
work, is price. If there are no other points of comparison,
naturally the cheapest alternative wins.
Sales will increase dramatically if your site is centered
on a specific theme, product, industry, people or outcome.
A niche, in other words. Put in a different way, the
more focused you are, the less you will need to produce
a sufficient quantity of website visitors to produce
similar results. (For more, visit http://SuccessDoctor.com/articles/article42.htm
)
3) How can someone find a good niche?
A good niche is one that: exists is easily identifiable
is easily targetable. The most commonly asked question
I receive from aspiring entrepreneurs is this: "What
product should I sell?" (Or "what sells well on the
Internet?") Quite frankly, everything sells (and can
sell well) -- from pet food to travel packages -- in
some way, especially online.
In fact, everything is being or can be sold, somehow,
in some form or another. But that's not the problem.
It's not what you sell -- it's to whom.
In other words, don't look first for a product to sell.
Look for an easily targetable market with an easily
identifiable need -- a need for a specific product,
be it a good or service -- and provide them with that
product. In order to achieve this, you need to be observant
and listen to the needs of the marketplace. If people
seem to be asking for a specific solution to a problem,
obviously it is because a niche exists that has yet
to be filled. Once you have found a niche, everything
will flow from that point. In fact, if you follow this
tactic you will constantly find products to sell.
Simply put, don't carve a niche. Rather, find one
and fill it.
4) What are ways to become an expert in a particular
niche?
If you offer a customary service or if your competition
offers the same thing you do, catering to a niche helps
to project an aura of uniqueness and superiority instantaneously
by virtue of the fact that it doesn't appear as customary.
Rather than copying your competition, you isolate yourself
from them.
For instance, if you required brain surgery, would
you choose a dentist? Would you choose a general, medical
practitioner, even a general surgeon? Not really. You
would probably choose a neurosurgeon. It's the same
thing for other products. If you owned an imported car
that needed new brakes, would you choose any general
mechanic? Or would you choose one that not only specializes
in brakes but also specializes in imported cars?
Expertise is in the eyes of the niche. Specialization
is in itself a marketing process that, as a byproduct,
generates the perception of expertise. It's amazingly
effective in creating "top-of-mind" awareness among
a specific target market.
For instance, an accountant specializing in car dealerships
will acquire more clients than a general accountant
will. An advertising salesperson specializing in home
furnishing stores will sell more advertisements than
a typical advertising agent will. A photographer specializing
in weddings will get more bookings than a regular photographer
will. Ad infinitum.
As more businesses get started, and the more inundated
with marketing messages our society becomes, the less
time, energy and money people will have to spend in
choosing the companies with which they will do business.
Thus, specialization helps to solve that problem by
projecting an aura of expertise.
Take the mechanic, mentioned earlier. Rarely would
you call a general mechanic an "expert mechanic," unless
she has invested a considerable amount of resources
in branding herself that way, or in educating herself
deeply in the world of mechanics, backed by many, many
years of experience. On the other hand, it would be
easy to dub a mechanic -- even a new one -- that specializes
in imported car brakes as an "expert mechanic."
Similarly, by finding and dominating a niche, you can
become an expert by design -- not by default.
About the Author
Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter and consultant
dedicated to turning sales messages into powerful magnets.
Get a free copy of his book, "The 10 Commandments of
Power Positioning," when you subscribe to his free monthly
ezine, "The Profit Pill." See http://SuccessDoctor.com/
now!
other
marketing related articles
RSS
Marketing Feed
|