Niche Marketing Product
By Phil Johnson
Tailoring a Product for Niche Marketing
Business and romantic relationships both depend on the suitability and compatibility of two partners towards each other. The same rule applies for products and niche marketing. You need to find a product that can satisfactorily fill the gap of a particular market niche. When you’re tailoring a product for niche marketing, what you’re actually doing is finding a niche in the market for you to sell your product.
Target an Existing Market Niche
Small businesses especially must ensure that their products or services are already able to satisfy a particular want or need of an already existing marketing niche. It will be time-consuming, laborious, and definitely expensive if a business has to create or develop a market all by its own.
Using Your Knowledge to Market Your Product
The greatest businessmen are those who are able to produce or sell products or services to people just like them. In short, your target market must be a reflection of what you yourself want or need as well. Your product or service must be something that you yourself will benefit from.
As such, before concentrating on marketing your product or service, you need to make a self-assessment first of how you believe your product or service will benefit you. Which parts of your life will directly and indirectly benefit from using your products or services? Only upon determining these can you be able to move on to the next step and apply your knowledge in marketing your product.
When addressing your niche market, think of it like you’re selling a product to yourself. What words or phrases do you think will catch your attention the most? What words or phrases do you feel might discourage you from purchasing a particular item? What advertising, selling, and methods and techniques do you think will appeal to you best?
Evaluating Your Market Niche
Now, of course, you’re just one of the many people who may have an interest in your products and services. Although you and your future customers share lots of similar interests, there’s a possibility that your market niche may also have a few unique characteristics that you’re not aware about.
This is especially important if your target market is actually something that doesn’t mirror your wants and needs, and yet you still wish to push through with your project. Your business still has a chance to succeed, of course, but you’ll just have to work a bit harder this time.
The best way to evaluate your market niche is by interacting with the people that constitute your market. Talk to them, spend time with them, befriend them and ask them questions. Gather as much information as you can about them by getting involved in the activities that they commonly participate in.
Since you’re targeting just a small portion of the market, it’s most likely that your potential customers belong to a specific community. They may, for instance, live in the same village, play in the same country club, or belong to the same church. You need to know these little details about your potential customers and join and participate in them.
Delegating this very important task to someone else may be the costliest mistake you can make. Remember that one of your few competitive advantages over large companies and those that use mass marketing strategies is your ability to customize and personalize your marketing techniques to directly address the needs of your market.
Delegating this job to someone else could provide you with irrelevant, invalid, and inaccurate information about your target market. Accomplish this task yourself as much as possible.
Is It Worth It?
The above paragraphs had taught you how to effectively tailor your product to a niche market. Now, it’s time to learn whether or not all those efforts can pay off. Before you push ahead with your plans to familiarize yourself with your target market, make a preliminary research first about the potential income you can get from your target market.
Population – Estimate how many people make up your target market. If you have lots of competition and a small target market, it might not be feasible for you to focus on that particular niche.
Income Class – If your product or service is more of a luxury than a necessity, make sure that your target market has enough money to be able to afford what you’re selling.
About the Author
Phil Johnson is the author of Viral Marketing Advertising .com, a resource on the wide topic of marketing. He also contributes to article sites such as Information Junkie and The A-Z of. Writing mainly about the various aspects of marketing Phil has vast experience of both online and offline methods having over 15 years in the marketing business after a sucessful career as an accountant.
Source: Viral Marketing
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