How Niching Down Gives You the Power to Dominate Your MarketCarving a niche for your business gives you an ocean of your own.

ByJohn Murphy

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

When you start out in the business world, instincts tell you to sell your product or service to everyone. It's understandable — why would you deliberately choose to exclude a portion of potential paying customers?

But I want to challenge that notion and explain why niching down makes everything else you do in your business much clearer.

What is niching down?

一个概念由两位哈佛教授,受欢迎的called theBlue Ocean Strategy, explains the value of niching down. Where you're in a saturated market, you're in a cut-throat space fighting for the same customers, creating a bloody red ocean. For example, in a sea of hundreds of online electric bike stores, you have to do something that sets you apart from the rest. You could slash prices, but once one store does it, it's a race to bottom where nobody wins.

On the other hand, if you can find a corner of the market that isn't served, you can take that market all for yourself and have your very own blue ocean.

Related:Understanding the Concept of 'Niching Down' for Budding Entrepreneurs

Who, not what

When you try to be everything to everyone, your message is generic. You can't speak to 20-year downhill racers the same way you would to a boomer trying to keep up with their grandchildren in the park. But if your message stays generic, you don't get noticed.

Keeping with the electric bike scenario, there are plenty of ways to niche down. Think of who uses electric bikes. You could target adventurers going off road for action packed rides, retirees looking to stay active, people looking to reduce their carbon footprint or simply commuters that don't have an hour to sit in traffic in the morning.

Let's say you go with retirees. Now you can give a clear message with laser-focused marketing.

你可以与退休人员目标受众的自行车s enjoying life, or product descriptions that highlight how an electric bike will help to stay active and keep up with grandchildren on those Sunday park rides.

You see? Being laser focused will attract your customers because you speak directly to them. You are no longer a generic-sounding website saying the same thing as every other store. You have your blue ocean.

How to choose your blue ocean

When choosing to niche down, you need to be sure there are enough people to serve.

If you've been selling to a broader audience until now, you could dive into your sales history and see who buys from you the most and look for trends. For example, if you discover there are 100,000 searches per month for "ebikes for boomers' then you know you won't run out of customers.

Related:How to Market in a Niche Industry

Once you have identified your "who'

Now that you know who you want to serve, so it's time to get to work. Everything on your website should speak to your new tribe. The content you produce should be about them, their pain points and their challenges. When you have this valuable content, go to where they hangout online and share the content with them.

Don't try to sell to them. Instead, be there, engage in their forums, offer advice, answer their questions and be their go-to person, so that yo'ure top of mind when they are ready to buy.

By positioning yourself as the expert in the space that doesn't push for the sale, your new tribe will come to you. And when they're ready, they know who understands their needs and requirements best.

It can be daunting to deliberately eliminate 90% of your potential customer base, but when you niche down and truly serve one corner of the market, you can dominate it. Most of your competitors will be too scared to make the same call and they'll continue to swim around in a red ocean, competing with everyone else.

When you no longer try to be everything to everyone, you truly can serve and provide real value to people.

Related:How to Thrive in Niche Markets

John Murphy

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

Founder of Survivalist Inc.

John Murphy is the founder of Survivalist, a seven-figure ecommerce business.

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