16 MaySmall Business Market Research: Break In This Niche!

Last week, Michelle MacPhearson did an amazing steal this niche video that caught me totally off guard. Not because it was amazing content delivered for free but because I had run the same market research for the growing taller niche just weeks earlier for a Clickbank affiliate offer and never moved forward with that data.

This week, I was running some market research for a small business in the MMA (mixed martial arts) niche using the same strategies of finding profitable easy to dominate keywords that can rank quickly. This time, I recorded the information to make it easy to pass on to the business owner and on this blog.

Finding Keywords In Your Niche:

Market Research to Gauge Organic Marketing Competition

02 MayTreat Your Website Like The Business It Is: Just One Thing?

Lee Odden’s just wrote a great post on SEO for PR firms. I wanted to address something related to his post that I hear on a small business level from entrepreneurs who want to know the magic key to unlocking more sales.

They’d ask:

If I could only do one thing to make my website better what should I do?

Followed up by ‘How fast before I see results?’

First off, there is no magic key to unlocking a website to getting a business more sales, customers or visibility. What there is, is the ability to make a small change that will lead to the biggest change in results.

So whats the 80/20 for improving a website to help the business goals?

The number one thing a website can do for a business is get in front of the right people –your ideal customers.

There was an amazing copywriter, who recently passed, Gary Halibert who asked if all things being equal and we were both in the restaurant business what one advantage would you want to help you succeed?
Some might say the best food, or in our case the best features on our website, others said a great dining atmosphere, for a website a jazzed up design. Instead, Gary said the only advantage he would want is a starving crowd.
Where is your business’ starving crowd? What keywords are they using on Google to fill their hunger?

That would be the one thing to do. Get in front of the hungry web searchers who are looking for your kind of business!

If you could have just one thing to help your business what would it be? It would be on the top of the results page for the keywords that my ideal customer is looking for and watch how much sales increase.

The one thing I would do is be a top result for my buyer’s keywords.

If I was on the first page of the search engines for a hungry keyword, I could get untold more sales than the small businesses listed on the third, fourth or even second pages because I have the buyer’s attention right away and most never look past the 4th listing.

So the one thing I would do is Market Research for Organic Search Results for the business’ market. Make your website’s goal to reflect the best keywords your market is looking for and be the first thing they see.

Keep in mind you want hungry qualified people who are not just your overall market but your real detailed description of your ideal individual in that market. If you’re a small locally owned business, chances are most of your market is within a certain mile radius of your office. Make sure that area is part of your profile’s critera. For example, if you’re a chiropractor, don’t be looking at coming up for your general market of back pain but instead back pain relief in your town would be much more like the hungry searchers who are in your real market.

05 NovA Central Brand to Inspire One Level Deeper

Rohit Bhargava made some compelling illustrations of what the Obama campaign did with their main Obama brand and how it was modified to include special interest groups, many special interest groups. They go one level deeper to serve the interest and give a sense of belonging that matches the main Obama Change brand.

BrankdObamaGroups

He also compiled Obama’s branded call to action that visually tied together his Change brand and the action needed on a grassroots or one to one level.

BrandObamaCalltoAction

While I’m not interested in politics, I am interested in well executed campaigns that I can learn from.

Takeaways I’d ask my clients and small business owners are these.

First, the givens: I’m giving that your business has meaning. I’m giving that your business serves not the mass market but one or many sub-niches in a market.

  • How are you combining your message with the interests of your market?
  • How easy are you making it for your current clients to take you up on your call to actions?
  • How well does a prospective new client in your market feel about your ability to serve their needs?
  • How well can your market describe what your business stands for?
  • How well does your branding carry your company mission?

28 OctSmall Biz Check: Your Brand is Greater Than Your Logo

Seth Godin had written on the new logos that Best Buy and Pepsi have pumped big budget dollars into creating for the purpose of capturing market share.

He says that a logo is more akin to a first name or short identifier. I would add to it and say a logo should be a trigger. It should lead to an association with the relationship you have by delivering your brand to your market.

If Pepsi and Best Buy are worried about market share is their attention on a critical marketing factor that will strengthen their brand? No. It’s not. The critical marketing would be renewing and establishing relationships their brand should embody. If those companies don’t know what their brand means or to whom they are building a relationship with, then no amount of logo revamping will help them connect to the people who make up that market share they are looking to call their own.

The Small Business Branding Reality Check

So here’s my reality check for small business who are drinking that Pepsi for their afternoon pick-me-up or who go to Best Buy to look at new computer gear. A logo had nothing to do with your next interaction with those companies. As small businesses look to grow and serve their market, stay focused on fulfilling the expectations that your business wants to project onto your market.  That’s your brand. Its bigger and more important that what your logo looks like.

Big Businesses Have Money to Spend on Non-Core Branding Activities. You Don’t.

Steven Cardinale put together a concept that I think most small business owners should focus on.

I think Pepsi or Best Buy or any of the large brand corporations out there are having a hard time trying to figure out why people connect with their product and consequently they simply spin their wheels working on the external facing components of their brand.  And since they have these huge budgets they have the resources to expend chasing non-core branding tasks.

What you think a logo says about your business, probably isn’t what your market thinks.

Jay Ehret of the marketing spot laid the cards on the table for small businesses who put too much thought into their logo.

The deal is that no one, outside of your committee or focus group that thought up these explanations, will have a clue to those meanings.

So if you think people will look at your logo and see “fluid connections with upward growth” you are deceiving yourself. If you want these explanations for your own internal use, go right ahead. But I think you are spending way too much time on that. You just need a simple visual that relies mainly on a unique font presentation.

Build your brand, spend the money and the time to grow those relationships with the people in your market, not the symbols behind them.