Scouting Your Target Niche For Information Products
Before you start selling information products online, you need to make sure that you are targeting a market niche that will be profitable in both the short and long-term. The term niche simply refers to your target audience.
You will discover that some niches are much more profitable than others. You will have to examine your audience to make they are willing AND able to spend money in order to solve their problems.
For example, golf is a very expensive sport. Typically golfers have money to burn if they believe you can help them improve their score or beat out their friends (competition) on the links.
On the other side, a target market of single moms on a budget may not be willing to let go of $67 for your eBook on how to get organized. Sometimes, though, it depends on which of their problems you are trying to solve. They would like to get organized, but they need more money. Targeting this exact same niche of single moms, you might find that many are willing to pay $47 for your eBook showing them how to make more money working from home.
One good place to start is with online groups and forums. You can go to iVillage or Yahoo, Google groups, or Boardtracker and see what kind of groups garner the most posts. Men’s groups such as AskMen might give you insight into what kind of information products this portion of the population might need that help you generate a handsome profit.
You aren’t just looking for any broad group of people to cater to. You need to find those groups who have a lot of problems and are looking for easy solutions. In the beginning, you may want to build a series of products that all focus on one niche. This allows you to benefit from your own increased knowledge, as well as potential repeat customers.
In some cases, you will locate one large niche market but then realize you need to develop your product line toward a more targeted, narrow section of that niche. For example, parents have many problems you could potentially address. Raising smart kids, dealing with discipline, saving money and preventing drug use might be some.
But you can then narrow that niche to moms or dads and dig deeper by focusing on parents of multiples or parents raising kids with physical ailments. Just remember that an information product is not really a product at all - it’s a solution, so it needs to be marketed as something that will improve lives


