Thursday, January 18, 2007

Finding Your Niche

I got an email from a customer recently with this comment: "I can't make any progress with my marketing until I know what my marketing niche is. Until I know who my ideal clients are going to be, I can't start with my marketing, so I really can't use your services until I'm clear about this."You might want to substitute your own concern: "I don't know what my services are yet," or "I don't really know what the ultimate outcome is that I provide for my clients," or "I don't know what makes me unique yet."And with this declaration of what you don't know, your marketing grinds to a screeching halt.My answer to this customer was the following:You don't find your niche. Your niche finds you. And this goes for your services, ultimate outcome, uniqueness, etc.What I mean by this is that you can't really figure it out in your head. You need to discover it. And the way you discover it is to jump into the process of marketing. I know this might not makes sense to you, but stick with me here, because this is really one of the biggest issues many businesses and professionals face. I've seen it hundreds of times. I've seen people completely stuck because they can't figure out their audio logo or perfect marketing message. And they "know" that when they figure it out, all their marketing will fall magically into place. Utter nonsense, I'm afraid.Here's the big secret that nobody has told you: You take your best guess, give it a shot and see what response you get. That's all, really. You don't get it right. You get it wrong - maybe for a long time - until it finally falls into place.My customer is confused about which clients she should go after. But she doesn't have to decide - yet. All she has to do is take a mad stab at it and say, for the time being: "These are the clients I'll work with for now." And then build a marketing message around that. She'll discover soon enough if it's the right niche or not. She'll talk to a lot of people. She'll use her newly created audio logo, ultimate outcome, etc. She'll get responses or not. If not, no problem, back to the drawing board. If she gets a few clients in this niche, she'll soon discover if they are ideal or not. She'll learn as she goes, and fine tune her message along the way. After awhile the niche will find her. She'll stumble upon it. Aha! That’s it! And then the next version of her marketing message will be right on target.Let me give you an analogy in another field.A new music student says: "I can't learn music until I know what composers I'm going to play. I'm really conflicted. Will I play Mozart and Bach, or Beethoven and Brahms? Difficult choice. But when I'm clear on whom, then I'll start to learn music.Wouldn't we roll our eyes if we heard this? Then why do we take the declaration so seriously that someone can't find their niche? Its nuts.Sadly, the chance of the above person ever becoming a musician is pretty slim. And with this approach, the chance of my customer ever becoming a successful Independent Professional is pretty slim as well. The good news is she's willing to try.And starting is easy. You won't be a marketing genius in a week or two, but you'll be way beyond where you are now. So get out of your head, let go of the need to have things perfect, be willing to fail fast and just do it!You don't figure out all your marketing strategies first and then start marketing. You start your marketing with one imperfect message at a time and figure it out as you go.

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