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Target Marketing
Strategy
-- Find Your Own
Niche Market
by Bob Leduc
What is your
target market? When I ask business owners that
question I usually hear something like...
* Small Business Owners
* Opportunity Seekers
* Doctors
* Homeowners
Do you define the targeted market for your business
similar
to one of these? If you do, you're working harder
and
spending more money than necessary to promote your
business.
And you're enjoying only a fraction of the sales you
should
be getting.
Most business owners recognize the value of
targeting a
market. But when you target a broad audience like
those
listed above, you're only targeting prospects who
CAN use
your product or service. You have to narrow your
focus if
you want to target prospects who are LIKELY to use
your
product or service. One of the best ways to do this
is to
find a niche market.
WHAT IS A NICHE MARKET?
A niche market is a narrowly defined group that
includes all
of the following:
1. Individuals in the group have the same
specialized
interests and needs.
2. They have a strong desire for what you offer.
3. You have (or you can create) a compelling reason
for
prospects in the group to do business with you
instead of
with someone else.
4. You can easily reach individual prospects within
the
group.
5. The group is large enough to produce the volume
of
business you need.
6. The group is small enough that your competition
is likely
to overlook it.
WHY YOU MUST NARROW YOUR FOCUS
A niche market enables you to target your sales
messages
with great precision. The more narrowly you define
your
niche market the easier it is to cater to the
specifically
defined interests of people in that market.
For example, some businesses describe their target
market as
"opportunity seekers". But this is a broad
audience. You
cannot cater to specifically defined personal
interests of
individuals in this group because it may include all
of the
following:
* Executives who want to get out of the corporate
environment and start their own business
* New mothers who want to start a home based
business
* Students who want to generate some extra income
Any promotional message to this group would have to
be very
general. But people don't respond to general talk.
They
respond only when they feel you are talking directly
to them
about their individual needs.
SPECIAL ADVANTAGE: A highly defined, small niche
market can
insulate you from competition. Other small
businesses are
likely to overlook it. Large businesses will find
the market
segment too small to bother with.
HOW TO FIND YOUR OWN NICHE MARKET
One way to find a good niche market is to evaluate
your
existing customers. Can you uncover a segment of
customers
with similar characteristics?
For example, I recently talked with an MLM
distributor for a
health products company. About a year ago she
noticed that
many distributors in her downline were health or
physical
education teachers. She now has a lot of success
targeting a
niche market of female physical education teachers
who are
married, have children and are members of the same
professional association.
Another way to find a niche market is to work
backward from
the benefits you offer. Start by listing all the
benefits
provided by your product or service. Then list some
of the
characteristics of prospects whose current situation
can be
dramatically improved by those benefits. You should
begin to
see a narrowly defined group emerge as a niche
market.
IT'S YOUR BOTTOM LINE
How specific is your target market? Can you develop
sales
messages so sharply focused your prospects believe
you're
talking specifically to them? If not, use the
information in
this article to help you find a niche market of your
own.
Then tailor your sales messages to the specific
interests
and needs of that niche market. You'll see an
immediate
increase in your sales and profits.
Bob Leduc retired from a 30 year career of
recruiting sales
personnel and developing sales leads. He is now a
Sales
Consultant. Bob recently wrote a manual for small
business
owners titled "How to Build Your Small Business
Fast With
Simple Postcards" and several other
publications to help
small businesses grow and prosper. For more
information...
<mailto:BobLeduc@
aol.com?subject=Postcards>
Phone: (702) 658-1707 (After 10 AM Pacific time)
Or write: Bob Leduc, PO Box 33628, Las Vegas, NV
89133
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