Sunday, November 1, 2009

When Is A Great Niche Market Not A Niche Market ?

By Trevor Weir

Fast growing amongst the popular terminology being thrown around by online marketers is the term Niche Market. It would appear to be dominating their every conversation and for good reason. It is actually where the money is.

So, for the newbies amongst us, what is niche marketing? Can we eat it, buy it, use it up or make the ecology green with it?

Perhaps its best explained by first discussing what it's not. Niche marketing is not marketing to a mysterious marketing segment called niche, nor is there a product called niche that a huge underground swell of people are clamoring over insurmountable walls to get. Nor, is there usually a department within any major corporation that has a position open in their niche marketing department. So don't call Human Resources at your local City Council and ask for a position in their niche marketing department. Sorry, just had to get that one out of the way, lol.

Niche Marketing - An example

Some would say that the definition of Niche marketing is narrowing down a broader need in the market places until one derives at a much more focused segment that has little or a smaller but reasonable number of competitors.

Marketing to those that - buy running shoes. Niche or not? Not - buy Nike running shoes. Niche or not. Not (What did that surprise you?) - buy marathon capable Nike runners. Niche or not. Uhmm you're getting warmer. - buy high arched marathon capable Nike runners. Niche or not. Yes absolutely!

So, the warmth of the sun is shining on our face, its going to be a great day. We can now see the light, yaddy yaddy, yaw. So where do we go from here? We have accurately identified a niche right? And isn't that what everyone is talking about? Do we stock up now or wait for Christmas?

Not by a long shot. If you are reading this now, thinking that I am holding back, stop, don't do it. Our research hasn't even begun yet.

The little questionnaire is not the process used to find a niche market product or service. You really need a tool for that. It can be done manually but searching hundreds of ideas manually isn't anyone's idea of fun. That was merely an example of what a niche market might look like, but for any number of reasons, I would never enter that marketplace - and I don't much care if 4 of my marathon running friends ask me for those specific shoes next week.

So, did I just give you a really bad Niche Market example?

It wasn't necessarily a poor example, but the truth is - far more research is required. To start off with, are those actually the keywords that people use to search for this product? In the past, only search engine statistics could tell us that. Then there were great search engine tools that could help further filter that information. But to help determine whether its a great Niche product, even search engine tools like KeyWordwatcher can only go so far.

Competitive websites and the number of potential clients would have been enough data to help in quantifying this as a niche product -- in the past. But not now. The competition has gone considerably further than that in their analysis and so must you - even as a newbie.

Perhaps you are experienced and know that this was not the process used to find niches. Perhaps you are still using the tools inside google adwords, or google trends or KeyWordwatcher. They are time tested and have worked wonderfully for the past few years but a newbie using a niche market tool and having little or no knowledge of the existing search tools from Google could blow you and I out of the competitive water in less than 5 minutes.

A software based Niche tool can be an extraordinarily powerful piece of arsenal for someone investigating this area. Most tools gave you competitiveness based on the number of sites that had the keyword in them, but most of us know that our search phrase is already on millions of websites but just a few hundred of those might be competitively attempting to get traffic based on that keyword. A Niche market tool, intuitively understands this and in this specific area searches for keywords in the titles, urls and domain names and comes back with a ranking. It can frequently open clickbank and other affiliate sites with your exact keywords to find affiliate products. Sometimes, these tools also understand article marketing and may directly find you an article for reprint.

Finding Niche Products is now so easy, even a newbie can do it. It does not require the in-depth type of intelligence that former adwords professionals used to use. Follow the links back to the videos. In 2 minutes you will be convinced.

Something new in niche keyword research. There is something called commercial intent. Microsoft's ad centre has an online program that enables one to see if a searched for phrase has stronger commercial intent than research behind it.

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