Which Niche To Conquer?
I'm sure that you've heard about
how many start up companies fail when they first begin, and the reason
that most (if not all) of their failures is because they don't create a
good foundation to build on.
If we start right, it is easy
to go right all the time. But if we start wrong, it's much harder
to go back and get it right. So please pay close attention, get out
your pen and pencil, and let's get to work.
When you first start, you need
to decide which niche are you going to conquer.
When I first started my online
business, I made the same mistake that 99.9% of people make. I read
an ebook about how to make money online, and I decided that I would...
can you guess...?
I wrote my own book about "how
to make money." I compiled all of the regurgitated information I
could find, put a twist on it, and started to sell it. After 2 weeks
and a little over $30 in sales I started to think:
"Why am I selling a book about
how to make money... when I have NEVER in my life made any real money!?!"
You may laugh, but it took
me a few weeks before I realized that there was a problem there.
I decided to stop selling my book, and started to look for other ways to
make money online. What I stumbled upon next really gets exciting.
I was going to college at the
time, and my degree is in "Computer Information Systems." I knew
some things about programming, but not enough to create anything real.
What I did know is where programmers spend their time online.
So I started visiting places
where you could hire programmers and got to know a few. I then started
to search for a market that needed something.
What I came upon was the "Resale
Rights" market. Basically this was people buying and selling digital
products (ebooks and software) that they could then go and sell to other
people. This concept really excited me. I purchased a lot of
these products, but struggled to sell them because all of the products
had links back to the author's websites.
These authors were making money
every time I sold these products... on the backend. When I realized
that, the first thing I thought was,
"I wish that had a way to brand
all of these files with my own links."
And there the idea was born.
I just needed to create a product that would brand these "resale rights"
products. I wouldn't be competing directly with that market, but
make a complementary product that would benefit them all.
I went back to the programmers
that I had been building relationships with, and gave them my idea.
Within a matter of weeks they created a product that is now known as Zip
Brander. (You can see the product at www.ZipBrander.com)
I'm not going to go into how
I marketed it in this lesson (I'll save that for another day), but with
the one product I made over $1,000 my first month with it, and it made
us over $50,000 in 2004 alone.
Since then I've been able to
branch out to a lot of various niches and have had amazing success in most
of them. In other issues I will share exact case studies of these
that you will be able to model in your businesses.
How To Pick The Right
Niche
I want to show you now how
to choose your niche. Just follow these 3 simple steps.
Step 1 - Do not choose the
"how to make money" niche. I'm not sure why, but I made this mistake
along with thousands of other people. This is the most competitive
niche in the world. If you want to fight against the marketers, good
luck. But there is a lot more money (and it's made a lot easier)
in the niches I'll explain below.
Step 2 - Look at your personal
talents, and start from there. I have had this conversation more
then once - usually every time I discuss an online business with someone.
I ask them what their hobbies
are that we could market, and they almost always they tell me that they
don't have anything they could sell. The problem is that people usually
look at their current job, and can't think of ways they can market that
skill.
Don't look at your current
job, but look at what you do on your free time. The thing that is
your passion. This is where you'll find your niche.
Here are examples of the last
3 conversations I've had:
Friend #1 - works construction,
and couldn't think of a marketable skill. After 3 1/2 minutes realized
that he has twin girls. Found there was a huge market for informational
product in this niche and him and his wife are now working on their first
product.
Friend #2 - works as a manager
at Office Depot. One the weekends loves to shot guns with his dad.
They are creating a software program that helps people to increase their
accuracy when shooting. They are also creating video demonstrations
on how to improve your accuracy.
Friend #3 - came to me asking
for help promoting a "how to make money online" course. He had to
call me using a video relay because he's deaf. I told him that he
was going in the wrong direction with what he was promoting. He had
no experience making money online. I asked him what his hobbies were,
and surely enough told me he didn't have any that he could sell.
Before I even asked that question I knew what his niche was. He's
been speaking through sign language his whole life, and there are thousands
of people searching every month on how to learn sign language.
What do you do in your free
time when no one else is around? Are you good at video games?
Are you a good cook? Do you play any sports? Do you throw dinner
parties? Do you collect anything? Can you play an instrument?
What is your passion? When you can answer this... then you
know what your niche is.
Step 3 - Research your market.
Don't worry - this part isn't nearly as hard as you'd think. Within
about 5 minutes I can usually tell if a niche is worth looking at.
There are 3 things you need to do, and you'll know if it's the right niche.
First - Check out the search
engines. There are a lot more advanced tools then this, but this
one is completely free to use. Go to http://inventory.overture.com
and type in your niche. This will show you how many times that word
was searched for that month on their search engine. If there are
a lot of people searching for it each money, the it's likely a good niche.
Second - Search for online
communities related to your niche. People with similar interests
migrate to the same places online. Wrestlers hang out at wrestling
forums, poets hang out in poetry message boards, etc... Go to www.google.com
and type in "________ forums" or "_________ message board" or "_______
groups" (put your niche in the blank). Visit these forums and see
if they are active and how many members they have. You can often
find forums with 10,000+ members in it. If you find good communities
focused around your niche, then this is another good sign.
Third - Search for similar
products. If you can find others selling products in your niche,
then it's usually a good sign that there's some life there. Purchase
their products and get to know your competition (because they are going
to become your JV partners in another lesson).
After getting this far, you
should have a good idea about which niche you would like to conquer, as
well as some idea about if it is a profitable niche.
In the next lesson we are going
to discuss how you can turn those talents into a product. Product
creation is one of the most exciting parts of the game for me, so look
out for that lesson coming soon.
Author-Bio: Written by Russell
Brunson editor of www.conqueryourniche.com
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