Find Your Niche & Follow It
How to Find Out if There's a Hungry Crowd for Your Information Product BEFORE You Write a Single Word
OK, this is the first part of a series called: Find Your Niche
& Follow It.
Mark Twain once said: “Find out where the people are going and get
there first”.
With the advent of the internet you can certainly find out what
folks are wanting. Being the first at the front of the line to bill them
might not be quite so easy.
But there are ways to find out if there's an existing hungry crowd
for your information product, and more importantly a crowd with pockets
bulging with cash to give you.
In
this article I'm going to give you some tips that will save you much
heartache from chasing after the wrong market.
Firstly I believe that it is very important that what you sell
interests you, otherwise you sign up for a life of struggle and worse….
Boredom!
Motivating yourself to sell something you have no interest or
belief in is soul-destroying at the best of times, so don't do
it.
Just because “rubber cat suits” is your thing doesn't mean the rest
of the planet digs them at all. I mean that's a pretty small niche with
less than 560 searches performed a month. Yes I did actually go and check
out the stats for it.
One of things I've found in this marketing-malarkey is that I am
able to explore interests that I simply don't have the time or inclination
to actively get involved in.
Take archery, I can twang a bow as well as the next man, and have
done for the past couple of years. But the idea of traipsing off to all
those shows every weekend, predominantly talking a load of rubbish just
doesn't do it for me.
BUT sell this bunch of Robin Hood wannabees an infoprod, and I'm
game. Seriously though, I love archery, it's one of the few sports the
British government hasn't actually tried to ban… yet!
And that brings me to my point… What do you have an interest in
that also has a large number of people willing to do what I call “the
wallet flip”. You need to be looking for markets where the folks won't even
blink at spending $100 a year on the products you will be
selling.
OK
time to take some action:
- Draw up an
initial list of 10 of your interests.
- Scan your
bookshelves to see what reference books you've bought in the past, and
on what subjects or hobbies.
- Pay
attention when folks you meet start talking about their hobbies, their
passions.
- Pop down
to your local magazine store and see what interests are being catered
to.
- Can't be
bothered to pad down to your local store, then click over to http://www.mediafinder.com/and do some searches.
- Buy a
stack of these magazines and go through the classified ads with a
highlighter. Call up the ones you've circled and ask for their
information packs. Make a note of which ones you've called and see how
soon the information arrives. How are they selling? Good, bad, OK? Could
you improve on the quality of what they are offering? Over five to six
issues how many of the adverts are repeated? Make a note and watch that
market like a hawk. If they weren't making money the ads wouldn't be
running.
- Hop over
to eBay to research all the different sub-categories. Which ones are
active? Which ones are commanding high prices?
- Are there
any discussion forums related to your potential market? Buzz over to http://www.forumfind.com/and do a search.
This is just the beginning. Until the next issue I want you to
start paying attention to what people are interested in. This can simply
be as easy as listening to folk banter when they're in the checkout
line.
Scan the news, open your eyes and mind to opportunities. You'll be
amazed at how your brain kicks into “selective perception”. Don't know
what that is? Ever bought a car and then suddenly you notice the whole
planet is driving the exact same model. It's like everyone decided to buy
the car YOU just bought. Well that's “selective perception” at work. Same
thing happens when you actively go hunting down niche markets… actually it
can work great for an awful lot of other things… building keyword lists is
another example, and another story.
Until next time, now get on with your homework.
Rob Taylor made over $400,000 selling his very first self published
book in e-book and print editions. Take advantage of his battle tested information publishing strategies that can quietly make you five figure cash profits every single month as a self publisher!
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