There are 3 questions you need to ask yourself while choosing a niche product:
1. Are your customers accessible?
This comes down to niche marketing your product for the right people in the right space.
Demographics, age, income and gender all play an important role in this. Advertising a feminine product in an all-male gym in sounds crazy in the “brick and mortar” world but is easy to blunder on online if your targeting is not carefully planned out.
Let’s say you have a product that will help farmers grow more crops. You need to somehow figure out a way to communicate this product to them. There’s no point in advertising on billboards in big cities that farmers hardly ever frequent.
Make sure you have a clear niche marketing strategy to easily attract your customers.
2. Does the niche have potential to grow?
Does your niche product have the potential to grow into something bigger and better or it is a one-time phenomenon? What about business in future? When niche marketing your product, you need to consider the lifespan of the product. Sometimes niche marketing isn’t the best way, especially if your product is a one-time thing. Remember the reason for niche marketing is not to “hit and run” make a samll profit and move on, the objective is to be a first entrant in a space where rapid growth in demand will make your website the authority in that arena.
Niche marketing is great for those products directed at a targeted group with their individual needs as the focus. However, make sure your niche product has the potential to grown into future sales through repeat business or as the niche idea catches on with others.
3. Is the product already established in the market?
The key is to take an already existing product and transform it into something a niche market would use. Or, develop something that does not exist, but should. A little competition never hurt anyone but if a large and well-known company is already selling the same product in the same niche market, it is going to be hard to convince your audience to switch to your product.
As an example, the Swiffer Sweeper combines sweeping and mopping into one easy motion. It is well known and trusted by everyone. Niche marketing this same product under a different name to a specific group of people, say, university students, is not going to help you much. However, changing the Swiffer into a smaller version, one that fits inside a dorm room desk drawer, might just work.
So, before you jump into niche marketing, ask yourself these simple questions to find out if your
product is niche marketing worthy.










