Niche Marketing Resources For Free
This article on niche marketing is not like the other
articles you've read. Why?
Because all the hype about niche marketing is nothing new. The
only half-way new part of it is that some people tagged the word
'niche' onto it. Cute term.
Before someone tagged the word 'niche' onto this aspect of
marketing (trying to sell you something you don't even need,)
people in the real (non-Internet) world called it 'segment
marketing.'
You'll do much better in segment (niche) marketing than you'll
do trying a broad - market approach. Take that to the bank.
Same Thing, Different Day
Segments (niches) are simply groups of people and businesses who
have similar interests, wants, and needs you can find and
identify. Segments require precision and produce profits.
One immediate segment is your current customers. Selling this
segment more or more often will always be easier than finding
new customers. But if you want new clients, that's doable, too.
Finding Your Segment (Niche) Keywords
Online, all you need to do is find the specific keywords that
match what your target market is looking for. Many (most?)
times, these terms are not what you'd expect.
Then you simply optimize your site and marketing for those
keywords. Frankly, there's nothing hard about it if you know
what to do.
Point: optimize your site for more specific (segmented) keyword
phrases, not general catch-all phrases.
You can find everything you need at Overture.com - and it's all
free. You can look for 'left-handed Florida golfers' as opposed
to 'golf.' Be specific.
More targeted keywords in your keyword phrase equals more
specific segment (niche) traffic.
Targeting your proper keywords will generate a lot more
qualified traffic. Simply go after the people who are looking
for your keywords. Now you have the right audience looking for
you.
You'll Spend Less and Make More
On purpose, you'll get less traffic overall, but the traffic you
get will be MUCH more likely to buy from you. The most important
thing you'll do offline or online is to identify your hot target
market before you do anything else.
The opposite of this is 'shotgun' marketing' or 'shoot-and-pray'
marketing where you're convinced your product is so good people
will beat a path to it ... or that it will sell because YOU
think it's great. These marketers spend fortunes on branding as
opposed to direct response ...
Nope. Don't do it.
Nothing is More Wrong
Segment (niche) marketing is very cost-efficient and usually has
high ROI. All you have to do is give people what they're looking
for. Give them what they think they want. Give them what they
think they need.
(People who try to sell you some expensive something to teach
you this are wrong in doing that - unless you're too lazy to do
it yourself.)
Next, tell people what they want to hear (but be sure it's the
truth.) If you did your research, this is also easy. Use words
they identify with to solve problems they have now.
Don't tell them how great you are. Don't plaster your logo all
over the place. Most people just don't care. Tell them how
fulfilled their life will be when they use your product. People
buy benefits ... and could care less about you or your product's
features.
If you're not sure what to do, invest some time and go spy on
your competitors. This is also very easy to do if you know how.
See what they are doing, and copy it. View the source code on
their websites. Make test offers. Try test copy. Create tests
and measure the results.
And - if you can't find any competition, more times than not
that's a bad sign. The likelihood that you'll come up with
something that's never been tried before is pretty small. So if
no one is doing what you want to do, there might not be any
money in it for a variety of reasons.
To close - remember that you'll do much better in segment
(niche) marketing than you'll do trying a broad - market
approach. Since you aren't Crest, Nike, Listerine, Kleenex, or
Tide - and you don't have a billion dollar PR budget - this
might make sense for you to go after specific segments (niches.)
And one more thing - finding what people want and need is very
simple. But if for some reason you can't manage that - just ask
them.
Or just go to your local Barnes & Noble bookstore. Check out the
magazine rack and bestsellers list. Or go to Overture.com. Or
buy a list. Or do targeted ezine solo ads. You can find
everything you need to get started in these places - without
lining the guru's pockets and increasing your credit card bills.
One last promise I'll make you is that this will cost you
something. You'll invest your time, your dollars, or both.
You'll also have to learn how to build long-term, profitable
relationships. So don't fall for the crap that says you can do
it all really fast and free while hanging around in your
underwear.
For more articles, see www.firstcontactsecrets.com