Finding Your Ebusiness Niche
One of the biggest mistakes I see beginning internet
entrepreneur's make is trying to reach too broad an audience
and/or market. Yes, that's right. Just think about it.
The internet is a huge place with millions and millions of bits
of information competing for users' attention. Some of those
tidbits are straight-forward information but a large percentage
is marketing messages. Unless you are a huge multi-billion
corporation with a huge multi-million dollar advertising budget
then you do not have the resources to rise above the rest. You
simply cannot afford to market to the masses and you will waste
a great deal of money, time, and energy in the process of your
failure.
But there is a way that the small business can rise to the top
of the marketplace and beat the big monoliths at the game --
niche marketing. That is why you need a niche. You can't simply
decide to push cooking as your niche, for example, and hope to
rise to the top of the search engine results any time soon and
forget even attempting for something as competitive as diet. But
you can carve out a profitable niche if you focus.
For example, I did a bit of research on cooking at one search
engine. They reported 224,772 requests for the keyword cooking
in one month. At first glance that sounds encouraging because
now you know there is a big market out there for your market but
before you get too carried away with the idea I should point out
what else I learned. This one search engine also reported
advertisers are paying between $1.91-.33 just for placement in
the top 10. They had 64 total bidders for that single keyword.
Are you ready to compete in that market? If I can locate 64
paying advertisers with one pay-per-click resource then how many
other entrepreneurs are out there with their web pages and their
products competing for you for search engine ranking and web
browser attention. It is depressing to even think about how far
down you'll be in a key word search -- no matter which search
engine your would-be audience uses.
However if you begin working on narrowing your niche just a bit
you can find some openings for you to make your own mark, and
your own profit, on the internet. For example, I found three
hopeful niches during my investigation:
~ cooking country healthy had 2295 requests in one month but
has no bids by advertsers at this time ~ cooking with child had
1825 requests in one month and bids ranged from $0.25-.08 with
only 10 advertisers bidding ~ cooking for two had 1781 requests
in one month and bids ranged from $0.32-.1 with only four
advertisers bidding All three look like healthy markets to me
but the competition level looks a lot easier to break into.
So how do you find your niche?
Hopefully you have already arrived at a general idea for your
ebusiness (such as my cooking example) but if not then you
should make a quick review of your own interests, knowledge and
skills. Sure you can start from scratch but since you are
already going to be learning a lot of new things while starting
your business I would recommend you choose a niche where you
already have a strong interest and a good knowledge base to draw
from so you don't have to learn about your subject as well as
about ecommerce.
Some questions to ask yourself:
~ What do you do in your spare time? ~ What is your favorite
hobby? ~ What areas of expertise do you have? ~ What
jobs/careers have you held? ~ What areas do your friends and
family members go to you for advice and help?
Answering these questions can help you identify your general
subject but to find your niche then you must start thinking
about what others are interested in within this area. ~ Follow
my example above and do a keyword search for your general term
then study the other related searches ~ What topics interest
potential customers in this area? Check out the web sites of the
top companies in this field. Look at their FAQ and customer
service areas. Check out their product reviews (either on their
site or on various review sites). Do you see an opening? ~ Check
out some forums where people interested in your topic visit and
post questions: What are some common questions and topics that
are addressed. Look at novice users and expert users alike. Can
you see a potential market?
You really can create an ebusiness centered around any
conceivable idea and you can create an ebusiness dedicated to
selling a hodge podge of unrelated items, but in order to craft
a workable marketing plan and to create an effective business
plan then you should focus, focus, focus.