This is Why Newbies Sturggle to Find a Good Niche

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If you spend any amount of time on Warrior Forum then you probably already know of a few different money making strategies. It always comes down to the basics: provide something of value, grow your list of followers, and then offer something they'll want.

It sounds simple. It is simple. The problem most newbies face, however, is the first step. They need to find a good niche before they can start doing anything else. This is one of the biggest obstacles for newbies and some more experienced marketers as well. Over the years, I've realized why they have so much trouble with this first step.

They don't like their niches

What I see happening, far too often, is a newbie will learn the basic strategy for making money and then seek out a niche. Sometimes they'll pay someone to find one. Sometimes they'll do some research to uncover one. Other times they may just pick one of the most popular options.

The biggest inherent flaw in this is that they either don't know anything about that niche or are simply not that interested in the niche they chose.

Do what you enjoy

Honestly, picking a niche should be rather easy. You should be able to come up with a list of 10 different niches in a matter of minutes. The way you do this is by looking in the mirror.

What do you like to do? What interests do you have? What do you regularly spend money on? What do you spend the most time thinking about? If you were stuck in a boring meeting, what would you be thinking about instead?

This is how you find a niche that will work for you. You need to chose something that you're interested in, that you have personal experience with, that you understand on a personal level.

I am anything but musically inclined. I've tried a few different instruments and the results have been disastrous. Needless to say, I know nothing about what sells in the musician niche. It can be a profitable niche, sure, but I would be stabbing in the dark if I tried to market to musicians.

When you do what you love...

Newbies and veterans alike need to realize that IM takes time. It takes a lot of effort. You're going to be putting in a lot of hours, sometimes more than if you had a regular job. When you're putting that much work into a niche you care so little about, it's going to seem like a real chore.

If you choose a niche that you are personally interested in, that you can get excited about, you will actually look forward to working on it. This may not be an undiscovered profit explosion type of niche. I'm not even sure those exist. This is, however, a reliable, stable niche with a huge following of interested people.

You don't need to completely dominate that niche. Let's say you pick a huge topic, one that millions of people are spending money on. You only need to capture a relatively small percentage of that audience to make a significant amount of money.

Be real and they will trust you

This is the key here. If you're real, if you're honestly interested in that niche, the people who find your website or product will recognize that. If you're fake, if it's clear you're only in this niche to make money, it will be all too obvious.

You need to pick something you're interested in and put your heart into it. The internet has changed quite a bit over the past few years. Quality, trust, and authenticity are quickly becoming the most important elements in a successful site, book, or offer.

These are also the traits which will allow you to create something long lasting. You'll be building something because you care about it, because it represents you personally and that will shine through to your customers, readers, and clients. If you want to continue to succeed into the foreseeable future, you're going to have to do what you love.
#find #good #newbies #niche #sturggle
  • Profile picture of the author Kate Smith
    I also agree with this. It is very difficult to write on topics you don't like or know much about. The passion shows up in topics you really care about.

    I have seen others say the opposite, that they could care less about some of their niches because they are making money with them.

    I definitely think it is easier to make money on subjects you really like. That's just .02 worth!

    Kate
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  • Profile picture of the author ChantalVanderlaan
    It's true...I think you should really pick a niche that you truly enjoy otherwise it gets boring FAST. I've just recently made that mistake actually. I'm thinking about getting in the IM niche because it does truly fascinate me but I'm no IM guru so why should I even bother?
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    • Profile picture of the author Shadowflux
      Originally Posted by cbvsolutions View Post

      It's true...I think you should really pick a niche that you truly enjoy otherwise it gets boring FAST. I've just recently made that mistake actually. I'm thinking about getting in the IM niche because it does truly fascinate me but I'm no IM guru so why should I even bother?

      I think we've all made that mistake at some point. It's just human nature, I suppose. We hear about someone who made a lot of money in a certain niche and we naturally want to do the same thing.

      Having an interest in IM is great because you can become a guru by marketing to any niche you'd like. Guru level authority isn't created through a fancy website, it's developed over a long period of experience in a certain subject.

      Why do I know so much about writing? I do it all the time. I know about writing backwards, forwards, inside and out. I only know so much because I've done it for so long. The same is true for any topic that I can talk about endlessly.

      If someone asks you about a topic and you can talk for hours about it, that's a prime candidate for a niche you should market to.
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      • Profile picture of the author lucidzfl
        Originally Posted by Shadowflux View Post

        I think we've all made that mistake at some point. It's just human nature, I suppose. We hear about someone who made a lot of money in a certain niche and we naturally want to do the same thing.

        Having an interest in IM is great because you can become a guru by marketing to any niche you'd like. Guru level authority isn't created through a fancy website, it's developed over a long period of experience in a certain subject.

        Why do I know so much about writing? I do it all the time. I know about writing backwards, forwards, inside and out. I only know so much because I've done it for so long. The same is true for any topic that I can talk about endlessly.

        If someone asks you about a topic and you can talk for hours about it, that's a prime candidate for a niche you should market to.
        I think knowing how to monetize a niche is another problem. I started off with a niche that I knew about and loved. But it gets no traffic and has no clear monetization option.

        So just looking in the mirror is tough to figure out what to do. I think tahts why you see a lot of "health" "losing weight" and "fixing your credit" IM niche attempts.

        Most people need to improve something about themselves. I have plenty of hobbies, and aspects of my life that could make interesting niches and I could write about, but don't have any experience with upgrading or buying additional third party objects to support/upgrade/modify them.

        Case in point, I have a rolex, a porsche and $600 headphones.

        I could easily write about watches, but I only have ONE so I can't very well compare my rolex to every other brand. Furthermore, how do you monetize on rolex watches. Upgrades? Repairs? They all go direct to rolex.

        I could write about my porsche. It has a customized fiber optic stereo that makes it nigh impossible to DIY with anything in the car. There are no inexpensive IPOD installation kits, and even though there are some, many people are not going to want to take a putty knife to the wooden dash to slide the head unit out.

        I have $600 headphones. There are a small segment of people who want to buy nice headphones but this is my only pair. I can only talk about these particular headphones. Also, outside of linking directly to amazon affiliate for THESE headphones, how do you monetize THAT subsect of the market?

        I'm legitimately asking these questions because I think that understanding HOW to monetize a niche is a real stumbling block.
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        • Profile picture of the author BlindRabbit
          Originally Posted by lucidzfl View Post

          I think knowing how to monetize a niche is another problem. I started off with a niche that I knew about and loved. But it gets no traffic and has no clear monetization option.

          So just looking in the mirror is tough to figure out what to do. I think tahts why you see a lot of "health" "losing weight" and "fixing your credit" IM niche attempts.

          Most people need to improve something about themselves. I have plenty of hobbies, and aspects of my life that could make interesting niches and I could write about, but don't have any experience with upgrading or buying additional third party objects to support/upgrade/modify them.

          Case in point, I have a rolex, a porsche and $600 headphones.

          I could easily write about watches, but I only have ONE so I can't very well compare my rolex to every other brand. Furthermore, how do you monetize on rolex watches. Upgrades? Repairs? They all go direct to rolex.

          I could write about my porsche. It has a customized fiber optic stereo that makes it nigh impossible to DIY with anything in the car. There are no inexpensive IPOD installation kits, and even though there are some, many people are not going to want to take a putty knife to the wooden dash to slide the head unit out.

          I have $600 headphones. There are a small segment of people who want to buy nice headphones but this is my only pair. I can only talk about these particular headphones. Also, outside of linking directly to amazon affiliate for THESE headphones, how do you monetize THAT subsect of the market?

          I'm legitimately asking these questions because I think that understanding HOW to monetize a niche is a real stumbling block.
          Yes I'd weigh in with you on that. I agree its important to find a niche you care about but monetizing/marketing it is still a challenge.

          I am making a product based on a niche I enjoy and the idea is somewhat unique. I am not sure if this is a bad or good thing, but getting people to visit the website to download it will still be a huge problem, namely because of its unique and niche nature, finding the people to market it to will be a challenge.

          I'd be over the moon if I get 1K downloads from it.
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        • Profile picture of the author Shadowflux
          Originally Posted by lucidzfl View Post

          I think knowing how to monetize a niche is another problem. I started off with a niche that I knew about and loved. But it gets no traffic and has no clear monetization option.

          *snip*

          I'm legitimately asking these questions because I think that understanding HOW to monetize a niche is a real stumbling block.
          I think you're looking too closely at specifics. When I say "Look in the mirror" I'm really saying to look to yourself. You say you have these items but why do you have these items? Why does someone purchase $600 headphones?

          They purchase expensive audio equipment because they have a passion for music. I think it's a safe bet to say that most people who have one piece of expensive audio equipment will have other pieces as well. The motivation behind buying this equipment, however, is more important than the equipment itself.

          This is a quick overview of how I figure things out:

          1. Pick something I'm passionate about
          2. Brainstorm different ideas, any idea, about how to monetize in that niche
          3. Cross out any ideas which will clearly not work, are beyond my reach, or will not earn money.
          4. Pick the best of the remaining ideas

          We're really talking about passion here. Passion comes from deep within you. It may be reflected in the clothes you wear, the car you drive, or the house you own but these are the results of that passion and not the passion itself.

          If you had a strong passion for watches, for example, you would probably have a large collection of them. I have a great passion for books and I own more than I know what to do with. My brother loves airsoft rifles and he can't move more than a few inches without tripping over one.

          The key here is that if you have a passion for something, other people probably do as well. Since a strong passion for something can often lead someone to spend a lot of money on it, you've likely found a niche worth pursuing.

          In some cases the best monitization options may not be clear right away. This is when you need to think of related products. In the example above, passion for music leads to buying audio equipment. My passion for books leads to buying books. A passion for hiking leads to buying hiking equipment. A passion for history leads to buying antiques.

          It isn't so much a straight line. You aren't setting things up like You like something > Buy this.

          It's more like You like something > I do too > I own a site about it > You visit the site > You trust me > You'll buy the products I endorse.

          That's why I say it takes work.
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          • Profile picture of the author lucidzfl
            Originally Posted by Shadowflux View Post

            I think you're looking too closely at specifics. When I say "Look in the mirror" I'm really saying to look to yourself. You say you have these items but why do you have these items? Why does someone purchase $600 headphones?

            They purchase expensive audio equipment because they have a passion for music. I think it's a safe bet to say that most people who have one piece of expensive audio equipment will have other pieces as well. The motivation behind buying this equipment, however, is more important than the equipment itself.

            This is a quick overview of how I figure things out:

            1. Pick something I'm passionate about
            2. Brainstorm different ideas, any idea, about how to monetize in that niche
            3. Cross out any ideas which will clearly not work, are beyond my reach, or will not earn money.
            4. Pick the best of the remaining ideas

            We're really talking about passion here. Passion comes from deep within you. It may be reflected in the clothes you wear, the car you drive, or the house you own but these are the results of that passion and not the passion itself.

            If you had a strong passion for watches, for example, you would probably have a large collection of them. I have a great passion for books and I own more than I know what to do with. My brother loves airsoft rifles and he can't move more than a few inches without tripping over one.

            The key here is that if you have a passion for something, other people probably do as well. Since a strong passion for something can often lead someone to spend a lot of money on it, you've likely found a niche worth pursuing.

            In some cases the best monitization options may not be clear right away. This is when you need to think of related products. In the example above, passion for music leads to buying audio equipment. My passion for books leads to buying books. A passion for hiking leads to buying hiking equipment. A passion for history leads to buying antiques.

            It isn't so much a straight line. You aren't setting things up like You like something > Buy this.

            It's more like You like something > I do too > I own a site about it > You visit the site > You trust me > You'll buy the products I endorse.

            That's why I say it takes work.
            I guess its the last part that I have a problem with. I cannot endorse something I don't own, and I don't buy enough of anything in a particular market, to justify having a qualified opinion.

            I formed my own opinion based on reading other sites, and made singular purchases.

            Perhaps this is why I am more interested in getting ad space sold. If I find a market with paying advertisers, with surmountable competition and a reasonable amount of searches, I don't personally have to own any of it to be considered an expert do i?

            Case in point, I tried to do everything you mentioned, specifically, wrt my last chosen niche which was comic book investing. I have comics, i love comics, i have invested in comics. I can easily write a ton on it. I went off and running on that niche and then found out that only about 90 searches a month are done for comic book investing/investments. Worse yet, theres really nothing to monetize on the back end.
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          • Profile picture of the author Dorian Anthony
            Originally Posted by Shadowflux View Post

            I think you're looking too closely at specifics. When I say "Look in the mirror" I'm really saying to look to yourself. You say you have these items but why do you have these items? Why does someone purchase $600 headphones?
            I think this hits the nail on the head. Asking "why" is a great way of think outside the box.

            Another way to get creative is to blend niches that sell with those that don't.

            For example, Let's say my passion is math(God forbid). Math is a niche. Parenting is a niche. How can I create a product that makes teaching math easier for parents and interesting for kids? There are plenty of parents who feel insecure about teaching math because they haven't been in math class in ages, but now they have to teach their child who they very much want to succeed. Create an ebook that makes teaching easier and math more enjoyable.

            Have you seen this blog..Nerd Fitness: Helping You Lose Weight, Get Stronger, Live Better.. He took nerdy stuff and combined it with fitness. Nerd stuff alone probably wouldn't sell..but combined with fitness..I'm sure he's doing ok.

            Mix, match, blend, and simplify.

            Get creative and have fun.
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    • Profile picture of the author Kingshouse
      Originally Posted by cbvsolutions View Post

      It's true...I think you should really pick a niche that you truly enjoy otherwise it gets boring FAST. I've just recently made that mistake actually. I'm thinking about getting in the IM niche because it does truly fascinate me but I'm no IM guru so why should I even bother?
      As long as we have some genuine interest in a topic or helping people we can LEARN what we need to in order to become an EXPERT. We now know it does not happen overnight contrary to what some of the sales psychobabble tells us.

      Don't give up on an interest just because you are not yet an expert...work on it. The niche could be waiting just for you!

      Cheerio

      W D Kingshouse
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  • Profile picture of the author gcbmark20
    Hi,

    Picking a niche isn't just about picking one and hoping for the best.

    PICK A NICHE WITH LOTS OF SPENDING BUYERS IN IT.

    It really is that simple.

    Then just share your results them in the form of a product or service.

    This way you get to build a buyers list and the more products you
    create the more buyers you can add to that growing list.

    Keep it simple and stick to the plan.

    All the best warriors.
    Gavin
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  • Profile picture of the author SurrealPSD
    Finally, the voice of reason!! This is the exact point I articulated in another thread.

    lucidzfl - you obsess waaaayyy too much about SEO and keywords. You and I both know there is money to be made in that niche, regardless of what the Google keyword tool tells you.

    Figuring how to profit off the backend is where the true challenge lies in this game man, get it done 8-)
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    • Profile picture of the author lucidzfl
      Originally Posted by SurrealPSD View Post

      Finally, the voice of reason!! This is the exact point I articulated in another thread.

      lucidzfl - you obsess waaaayyy too much about SEO and keywords. You and I both know there is money to be made in that niche, regardless of what the Google keyword tool tells you.

      Figuring how to profit off the backend is where the true challenge lies in this game man, get it done 8-)
      Fair enough. And I admit, I am ignorant. But hey, that's why i'm here.

      However, if I legitimately thought there was money to be made in comic book investing as a niche, I'd put more effort into it.
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  • Profile picture of the author zdebx
    Pretty solid advice, however while choosing something that you already know and are passionate about might sound like an easy choice, but you have to make sure that there's money to be made in that "niche".

    You can have all the passion in the world, but if your niche is very limited in terms of what people buy, then you'll have a tough time making anything.

    In reality, with a bit of dedication you can become passionate/experienced in any niche, so it's more of a matter of "sticking with it".
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    • Profile picture of the author lucidzfl
      Originally Posted by zdebx View Post

      Pretty solid advice, however while choosing something that you already know and are passionate about might sound like an easy choice, but you have to make sure that there's money to be made in that "niche".

      You can have all the passion in the world, but if your niche is very limited in terms of what people buy, then you'll have a tough time making anything.

      In reality, with a bit of dedication you can become passionate/experienced in any niche, so it's more of a matter of "sticking with it".
      Thank you!!!

      I could write all day about sumerian mythology and its links to christian creation theory, but the search volume isn't there and neither is monetization.

      I agree that picking something that you love makes sense. But the world will not benefit from another Dr Who review site or "collecting talking chihuahuas" etc etc.

      Finding the magic combination of "something you like" and "has something you can monetize" and "has SOMEONE looking for it" is what i'm having a hard time with. I see a lot of people going "hey just go for it, start with something and run" but thats a great way to just spin your wheels for a long time. And I"m not doing it with my second niche site.
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    • Profile picture of the author BlindRabbit
      Originally Posted by zdebx View Post

      Pretty solid advice, however while choosing something that you already know and are passionate about might sound like an easy choice, but you have to make sure that there's money to be made in that "niche".

      You can have all the passion in the world, but if your niche is very limited in terms of what people buy, then you'll have a tough time making anything.

      In reality, with a bit of dedication you can become passionate/experienced in any niche, so it's more of a matter of "sticking with it".
      Pretty much this! But I guess you got to take a chance, start somewhere and put mistakes down to experience in learning how to find appropriate niches.
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      • Profile picture of the author Shadowflux
        You guys have struck on another important piece of the niche hunting puzzle. Before you put too much time and effort into something, you need to determine if there is money in that niche. Then you will need to determine what makes money in that niche.

        One way to do this is to figure out what type of niche it is. Is it product based, service based, or information based?

        Product Based Niches

        A product based niche is one which focuses heavily on a certain type of product. The products in this niche are a major part of the entire market and, in many cases, the market wouldn't exist without the products.

        Computers are a good example of this. It is a very product heavy niche. People buy computers, laptops, monitors, mice, keyboards, and software. They also purchase hardware such as RAM and graphics cards. This market is very product focused and will be interested in a great variety of related products.

        Anything which someone collects is also a product based niche. Collecting, by its very nature, requires you to amass a large number of a certain type of product. Comic books, trading cards, Pokemon, antiques, vintage cars, books, guns, all of these are great examples of product based collections.

        Service Based Niches

        Service based niches rely heavily on a service of some type. This service is an important part of the niche, it's a necessary element in what the members of the market do.

        Let's take stock investing as an example. If you want to invest in stocks, you're going to need a stockbroker. This is a requirement for anyone who wants to buy or sell stocks. Investing in stocks simply can't be done without this service.

        The most obvious way to capitalize on this is to offer the service the niche is based on. This works for web designers, writers, SEO specialists and anyone who can actually provide that service. If we zoom out, however, you can also see there are a number of other options such as CPA, affiliate offers, and even a book on how to choose the best service.

        Information Based Niches

        These are niches which are focused on information. People visit a website in this niche to read, watch, and learn. They are looking for information and that information is generally, thanks to the web, freely available. This can be one of the trickier niches to monetize but you can still do it.

        Education is a perfect example of an information based niche. People spend tens of thousands of dollars on education every year. It's one of the most expensive things people spend money on. Now, you may not be able to open your own University but you can promote things such as CPA or affiliate offers.

        You can also become the teacher. If there is a market for a certain kind of information then there is a chance you could sell a book, video course, or even collection of podcasts which all teach something.

        You could also simply create a website which offers freely available information on this niche and simply let the visitor numbers and relationship grow. Once you've become a bit of an authority on that information, you'll be able to promotes or create something relevant. At the very least, you can host Google ads and let them do the work for you.

        Just imagine if Wikipedia sold link space, there would be huge money in that.

        Finding a profitable niche

        When you look to yourself to find niches, you need to ask yourself a few questions. How much do you spend on this? What do you spend the money on? What have you purchased repeatedly?

        This is one of the first criteria by which I judge one of my ideas. I love learning about history too but, if I ask myself these questions, I can see I've never spent more than a few dollars on it. It isn't really a money heavy niche, it's more about freely available information. I could write a book about the Crusades, for example, but that will only appeal to a small minority of people.

        Hobbies are a great niche. Let's say you're into model railroads. That is a big money hobby. People buy such a great variety of different items for this hobby that there is virtually no end to the monetization options. If you were a member of this niche, you would know precisely what people spend money on, when they spend the money, and what products constitute a repeating purchase.

        So, in the end, you are still the key. If you spend money on something, other people do as well. If you don't spend money on something, other people probably don't either.
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  • Profile picture of the author Stuart Walker
    Whilst picking a niche you are passionate about is a good idea you have to look at other factors too.

    Whether that niche is profitable, whether there are problems that need solved, that your target audience is easily reached online (through forums, blogs, social media, search engines or wherever), if you can provide the content your audience will want to read, are there multiple products you can promote etc.

    It's much easier to succeed when you are passionate about it but passion alone isn't enough to make a success if none of the other factors are present.
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  • Profile picture of the author RogueOne
    If you're one of the very lucky few who can profit from your passion, good for you. The reality is that most people won't have that option.

    There are so many potentially profitable income opportunities online, if you can't find one, you are not looking very hard.

    If you keep your eyes and ears open and pay attention to the world around you, the challenge is not finding an opportunity, it's deciding which of the many possibilities you are going to invest your time on.

    Do you think old John D. Rockefeller was passionate about oil?
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  • Profile picture of the author Stuart Walker
    If you keep your eyes and ears open and pay attention to the world around you, the challenge is not finding an opportunity, it's deciding which of the many possibilities you are going to invest your time on.
    Indeed. I must add at least 15 new ideas to my 'niche list' every day that I plan to explore further at some point.

    Just by always having my marketing hat on.

    Whenever I have a conversation, watch TV, read a newspaper, go online or do anything I think about whether what I'm hearing / seeing / reading is a potential niche idea.

    It's so easy to come up with niche ideas just by going around your day to day business.

    Newbies tend to think they have to find out about some totally unknown, untapped, idea that no one else knows about. That's impossible. Someone else always knows.
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    • Profile picture of the author Shadowflux
      Originally Posted by Stuart Walker View Post

      Indeed. I must add at least 15 new ideas to my 'niche list' every day that I plan to explore further at some point.

      Just by always having my marketing hat on.

      Whenever I have a conversation, watch TV, read a newspaper, go online or do anything I think about whether what I'm hearing / seeing / reading is a potential niche idea.

      It's so easy to come up with niche ideas just by going around your day to day business.

      Newbies tend to think they have to find out about some totally unknown, untapped, idea that no one else knows about. That's impossible. Someone else always knows.

      This is exactly what I do. When you get into "marketing mode" it's virtually impossible to stop coming up with ideas. Some of them are good, some are bad, a few are outright crazy, but all of them are useful.

      When you start looking at the world around you with a marketing mindset, you start to see countless opportunities and potential gold nuggets everywhere. You can look at something and see exactly how you would make money with it, provided the conditions were right. You can see why something sells and why it might not. You can analyze everything you come across and use that to come up with new ideas.

      Never stop thinking. Never stop coming up with crazy ideas. You may come up with 500 different ideas and only get 3 good ones out of that but you only need 1 great idea to be successful.

      (And plenty of action, of course.)
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  • Profile picture of the author st0nec0ld
    "Do what you enjoy", works well for me.

    There is no such thing as best niche, there might some that will work for you but the best would always be what you love to work on. And I think that will be a good start before jumping to another niche.
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  • Profile picture of the author Moneymaker2012
    "Do what you enjoy", works well for me.

    There is no such thing as best niche, there might some that will work for you but the best would always be what you love to work on. And I think that will be a good start before jumping to another niche.
    I am totally agreed with this.I do that which i enjoy I start work on that niche which is my hobby like if my hobby is reading books then education is best for me.
    This advice is not for adult niche!
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  • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
    Great advice for newbies, OP. Thank you for posting! I especially support the Be Real and They Will Trust You suggestion.
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  • Profile picture of the author AffiliatingAlan
    This seems like bad advice to me.

    Potential > Passion

    It seems most big shots in IM are the ones who follow money not what they want.

    Im working on a niche I enjoy somewhat, and I put priority over others due to personal favoritism. But it was chosen by keyword comp not choice
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  • Profile picture of the author jbsmith
    I always begin with a market or problem that I am interested in...from there I go and do some quick research to determine commercial potential and from there I look at what is already selling around the problem area.

    All 3 of these have to be in line, along with some upside potential (for example, I market information products, I like to enter niches where there is potential for high-end products, not just a one time fix-it type product)

    Common mistakes are:

    1. People that pick me-too niches but aren't really interested...they launch and it dies because they aren't interested enough to put in the initial effort
    2. People that pick based ONLY on their interest and miss the market because they haven't refined their target or messaging -so they bang their head against the wall (because they love their space) but never earn more than a hobby income
    3. People that pick a "fix it once" type space that may get a significant number of first sale, but then very little opportunity to sell them anything else (Ex fix rare medical ailment versus dealing with something that recurs like stress or weight gain)

    The best combination is when you find a hot desire and demand within a market that you like (either with experience or are willing to dig in and really learn+participate) and have an opportunity to sell to that market over and over again.

    Jeff
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  • Profile picture of the author celente
    yes but which niche,

    which niche

    which niche


    which niche


    which niche


    which niche

    which niche
    which niche


    That is why they do not do well, they just cant pick a bloody niche. LOL

    That is step 1 one and most cannot get past step one. LOL
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    • Profile picture of the author Natasha2003
      I believe if you can first start with picking a niche that your passionate and knowledgable about..do a market analysis for what's in demand for your niche, create something that's "missing" or what's "needed" and deliver a quality product.
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    • Profile picture of the author Natasha2003
      Posted two .
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  • Profile picture of the author Hannak
    Thanks. This is really helpful!
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  • Profile picture of the author mfarg
    I definitely agree that niche choice should be based on passion and enjoyment. Most offline careers and businesses start that way. Onliners should, too. Do you really want to go to a doctor who just does it because he could earn a big check?

    Take two people selling the same thing. One's passionate about it and one's just trying to make a commission. It's pretty obvious which one gets the sale. Passion is contagious and can't be convincingly faked to astute buyers.

    That said, you can probably get away with serving hungry niches with certain offers that don't require much personal trust like with cpa offers and some affiliate marketing. With that kind of stuff you can get response as long as the offer gets seen by the right traffic.
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    • Profile picture of the author wakizashi99
      My thoughts are that if it is your job, just do it, dont be so picky about your niche if its profitable and you have specialized knowledge. I'm not so sure about everyone has a career doing something they love. A lot of people go where the money is good, so they can live the personal life outside of work that makes them happy.
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  • Profile picture of the author aceshigh888
    no way, if you do what you love, you'll end up hating what you do. It's a fact of life. The mechanic who has a broken down rusty car that barely get him to work. The travel agent who never travels, the dr's who die at age 55 consistently. If you love it, then leave that aside. If you end up doing it for money and for work you'll end up hating it in the end. It's like your wife. You loved her at first, until you married her. Now you hate her. I know that's crude but I'm just saying what's true
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    EXERCISE: Take a deep breath, hold for 10 seconds, release. ..... There see you feel better now???
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