Categories

Advertising
Affilate Programs
Arts & Entertainment
Business
Communications
Computer-technology
Computers
Construction
Culture-and-society
Disease & Illness
Education
Electronics
Employment
Entertainment
Entrepreneurism
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Fitness
Food & Beverage
Gambling
Health
Health & Fitness
History
Hobbies
Home
Home & Family
House And Home
Insurance
Internet
Internet Business
Internet-Business
Internet-marketing
Kids & Teens
Legal
Loans & Mortgages
Magic
Marketing
Medical
Men-issues
Miscellaneous
Motivation & Self-Help
Network Marketing
News & Society
Parenting
Personal-development
Pets
Politics
Press Releases
Product Reviews
Public Relations
Publishing
Real Estate
Recreation & Sports
Recycling
Reference & Education
Reference-&-Education
Reference
Relationships
Religion-and-spirituality
Reviews
Science
Self Improvement
Shopping
Shopping & Product Reviews
Social Issues
Society
Speaking
Sport
Sports & Recreation
Technology
Travel & Leisure
Uncategorized
Vehicles
Womens Issues
Writing And Speaking

Your Basket


Article Basket

You can put articles in your basket and download them in your favorite file format for offline reading



Hits (193) | Add to Basket | Send a friend | Download As | Printer Friendly

Four Basic Questions Every Author Should Answer Before Choosing A Niche Market

by Sanyika on 2007-09-23

You might think the saying, pick a niche and grow rich is just some silly cliche. The truth is if you try to write to everyone, no one
will read it.

But when you laser focus on a specific topic and target market, you can sell more to fewer people than selling less to more people.

Joe Garris, creator of Product Idea Profitability Evaluator (PIPE) Software, suggests answering four basic questions before choosing a
niche market...

1. Is the market easily defined and reachable?
- Where do they hangout?
- What publications do they read?
- Do they have clubs or events that bring them together?
- Are they looking for information online?

2. Is the market small enough that there are few competitors but large enough to allow you to make a profit?

3. Does the market actually have and spend money?
- Do they actually buy stuff?

4. Does the group have a ridiculous amount of passion for the hobby or topic?
- Do they eat and sleep the hobby?

Finding a niche requires balance. You don't want to speak to so many people that no one hears you. Nor do you want to get so specific that not enough people fill the target audience.

We have all become heavily reliant on information to help us do just about everything. Although the average person admits to reading less than half of a book they've started, more than a billion books were sold in the last year alone.

People are buying books, but you must determine what they are buying and how they are buying them (i.e. online vs. bookstore, pBooks vs eBooks) before you write and publish your book.

Determining this before hand is your best way to ensure there is an interest in what you're preparing to write.

There are undoubtedly some books that you are better suited to write than others, as well as services you are especially suited to
provide. Whether you feel like you have a good handle on what that is or not, you'll want to:

- Study the market carefully to find profitable opportunities
- Ask potential buyers about a particular problem they might have
- Research books that already exist on the topic and note their popularity/success
- Identify at least five places/people groups that you can market your book to
- Visit online forums and bulletin boards related to your topic. Read and post relevant messages
- Identify the networks and resources that can supply the targeted outlet for your message.

Also, "Target Marketing" magazine is great resource for finding a niche market and learning how to use target marketing techniques such
as direct mail, e-mail campaigns and focused ad placement to reach your profit center.

I also recommend Joe Garris' Product Idea Profitability Evaluator (PIPE) Software. It will help you to identify if an idea or topic will
be profitable when sold online before you to invest the time to create it. You can even test the software out for 10 days free of
charge.

About The Author: