Harness the Sales Power of Niche Marketing
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Title: Harness the Sales Power of Niche Marketing
Word Count: 572
Author: Joel Sussman
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Harness the Sales Power of Niche Marketing
Copyright 2006 Joel Sussman
The key to attracting new customers to your business,
whether online or off, lies in understanding a few simple
things about how the brain works. Usually at an unconscious
level, people are constantly scanning their environment to
separate the relevant from the irrelevant, the safe from
the potentially hazardous, the desirable from the
unappealing. The major challenge for the small business
marketer is discover what motivates their target audience,
and then to speak as directly as possible to those fears,
desires, goals, priorities, and needs.
But it Worked in the Movies
You’re only kidding yourself if you think you can be all
things to all people. That insidious form of self deception
falls in the same category as ‘If you build it, they will
come’. Woody Allen is quoted as saying that ‘Eighty percent
of success is showing up’, but bear in mind that comedy
(and sometimes drama) is often based on exaggeration.
Showing up -- which can range from creating an Internet
presence to attending networking meetings -- is a good
start, but it generally won’t get you too far unless you
throw in a dash of originality, competitiveness, and a
strategic plan of action.
Since people are constantly looking for specialized
information, services, and products, a strategy worth
pursuing is to devote at least 50% of your marketing
efforts to reaching niche markets. Granted, marketing is no
more of a ‘one size fits all’ endeavor than anything else,
but what isn’t going to change is the fact that people are
generally drawn to things that are customized,
personalized, or otherwise geared to their personal
preferences.
Are You Talking to Me?
Considering that your prospective clients and customers are
continually scanning the Internet, the media, and their
environment for information that’s relevant to them, why
not tip the scales in your favor by tailoring your
marketing message directly to the different niche markets
you’re trying to reach? Whether it’s senior citizens, new
homeowners, parents to be, recent graduates, newlyweds, or
frustrated job hunters, capturing people’s attention can
sometimes be as simple as recognizing them as individuals
or as a member of a specific demographic group.
For example, have you ever inadvertently ignored someone
who was saying to you ‘excuse me’ or ‘you dropped
something’; but if they called you by your name, you’d
immediately snap out of your haze and pay attention. Again,
it’s just a matter of breaking through people’s filtering
systems and being noticed. That’s often the number one step
to effectively marketing your products, your services, or
yourself. Actually, I’d break that down into three parts:
get noticed, connect with your prospect, and put them in a
receptive state of mind. If you convey the impression,
right off the bat, that your service or product is tailor
made for their needs, wants, or specific situation, then
you may have fulfilled all three requirements in one fell
swoop.
Once you’ve clearly and compellingly presented your case
for making your prospect’s life easier, more secure,
healthier, more comfortable, prosperous, convenient,
happier, or more problem free, your remaining challenge is
to anticipate objections, lower sales resistance, and
inject your offer with a subtle, yet perceptible sense of
urgency. If you’ve painted a vivid, benefits-filled picture
of your service or product, their motivation to experience
those advantages will help you convert them from a prospect
to a customer.
About the Author:
Joel N. Sussman, a New York business writer and Internet
marketer, has created an online small business resource,
called “Marketing Survival Kit.com”. Get access to hundreds
of free and affordable business marketing ideas,
strategies, and tools by visiting
www.marketingsurvivalkit.com
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