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Just Wasted A Ton Of Money On A So Called Niche ?

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, to the heart of it - what is Niche Marketing ? Is it another of those overhyped terms or does this fad have some legs?

So let's see what its isn't. - It isn't something you can buy - It isn't something you can make ( well not directly ) - It's not a new job opening so don't ask your boss for a transfer - And as usual, the hordes of people taking a stab at it are nearly all probably going to fail.

So Let's Look at An Example

Here is my own quick definition : Niche Marketing is an examination or sales analysis of a very narrow marketing segment that is being under-served by the competition. Let's see what this looks like.

Marketing to those that buy - runners. Niche or not? Not - Nike runners. Niche or not. Not (What did that surprise you?) - Nike marathon capable running shoes. Niche or not? Feeling the sun yet ? - cpu enhanced marathon capable Nike runners. Niche or no Niche? Jackpot !

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 even! You have heard this street english term before right? No, I am not keeping this niche area for myself, so don't think I am holding back. Truth is, our premise of a niche marketplace sounds good but is unproven.

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 was that a poor example of a Niche Market ?

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.

So, what kind of additional information does one need beyond how much competition is there and how many possible clients are searching for the product? This isn't even the base of the 20 or more variables that a strong Niche software tool can hand a newbie in under a half a minute.

You may be someone with experience with keyword usage based on several of the great tools out there like KeyWordwatcher or the excellent google adwords tool that gives you exact number of potential clients for broad, phrase and exact searches. Perhaps even you were like me, thinking that I could use those excellent tools to find Niche Market products. Well, you probably can if you have an enormous amount of time, but a total newbie using specific niche software would blow us all out of the water due to the specificity of those tools now.

A specialty software tool will use those numbers and up to two dozen or more variables, including rating scores on competition based not only on whether the key words show up in the sites ( which is not necessarily competitive ) but also whether the keywords are in the url, the domain or titles. The same tool might also check for commercial or non-commercial articles for article publishing as well as opening clickbank for affiliate products and opening up other affiliate product searches to verify that there are related affiliate products. And this might be 1/10th of what a commercial niche tool based product might do for you.

Why anyone would want to search for niche products the old manual way is really beyond me. Save yourself some time have a look at a few potential products that you can use. Watch the videos and see what I mean.

Something new in niche keyword research. Recently there has been a fair amount of research concerning something called commercial intent. Microsoft's ad center has an online program that enables one to determine to some degree whether a searched for phrase has more commercial intent than research behind it.

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