5 Simple Steps to Own Your Market Niche For Free

At no point in marketing history has it been so easy to own your market. If you have a product, service, or personal interest to offer and want to be the Internet leader in this space the path to success is relatively straight-forward. The strategy is really as simple as: If you want to be the expert, BE the expert. Fill your niche market with the content, discussions, and answers and then make them authoritative. Here are 5 simple steps to filling the void and becoming the expert.

Start with a Niche

This is where I work the hardest and spend the most time with my clients--discovering and finding their first niche to attack. Your starting point should be an inventory or survey of your business. What are the products and services you offer? Who is your ideal customer? How did your current customers find you? Are there any similarities in your customers' personal interests? What makes your approach unique?

This inventory should have given you a few key concepts. Those concepts contain keywords that define you and your current expertise. Refine these concepts into a list of keywords and take the next important step--find out if anyone cares!

Go to Google's Keyword Tool and see which of these keywords or phrases get a significant amount of search inquiries. Once you have a few picked out that have a reasonable number of inquires per day it is time to begin taking control of those terms.

Build a Foundation

Owning any space on the Web is solely about authoritative content. Internet consumers go to the Web with their questions. Search engines index, sort, and prioritize the answers they get. They do that by what their little automated "spiders" conclude are authoritative. Your challenge is to convenience these little pieces software code and your curious Web searches when they arrive you are the expert on topic.

To become the authoritative source in your chosen niche you have to create the center point for your authority. That focal point, of course, is a website. The quickest and simplest strategy to build an authoritative repository of content is a blog. Depending on your expertise you can host your own or create a free one at Wordpress.com. Once you have your site you should systematically begin posting (blogging) articles that tell readers (and the search engines) what you know about each of those keywords and phrases that you know they will query when faced with the problem you can solve (i.e., an FHA mortgage, finding short sale bargains, setting up a day trading business, building a downline in your network marketing business, etc.).

Now that you have your foundation, don't forget the two final important pieces: give them something free to take away (and pass around to friends), and a way to contact you.

Create a Network

With a focus on what your niche is and where you are going to send people to prove it, you need to build a fan base. Don't get confused. These are not customers. Your network should be "sneezers" and entertainment. Your network serves three purposes: promote, validate, and entertain people when they arrive. Understanding your goal(s) in building the network I will share a few of my favorite techniques:

  • Promoters: the quickest way to build an initial base of promoters is using your Blogroll, MyBlogLog, StumbleUpon, and Digg. Find like minded (content and topics) individuals and promote their stuff. That means links at first and traffic over time.
  • Validators: This takes a bit more time because you need to build a bit of credibility. Once you have a good base of quality content, drop an email to some of the top experts and bloggers in or related to your area of expertise. If they like it you will begin to see yourself mentioned, linked to, and promoted.
  • Entertainers: Most of the time these will come on there own. They are the colorful personalities and commenters. They are the rivals. Sometimes they are bloggers or commenters that take your counterpoint. Or, my favorite, competitors that validate you are a threat to their business.
This group of folks swirling about your websites widen the funnel and opportunity for customers to find you and be confirmed that you are the expert.

Become Authoritative

Being authoritative is sort of the capstone concept. It is the result of creating a solid foundation of quality content and creating a validating and promoting group of people around that content. This powerful combination creates an obvious authority to visiting consumers looking for answers and a strong link structure that tells Google, Yahoo!, and MSN's little search bots this is the place to find out about [fill in your niche here].

Expand the Niche

Owning your little niche of the market is only the start of the opportunity. You may start with how to create mind blowing email campaigns and expand to all of direct marketing. You might start with FHA loans in Livonia, MI and expand to the Nations' "Home Loan Experts." You may start with how I use Twitter and expand to a social media guru.

Design your approach with expansion in mind. Create milestones and benchmarks to assess where you are and where you are headed. And don't forget what you are attempting to do. This is not your teenager's MySpace page. You are not looking to gather a bunch of meaningless followers and funny quips on your web pages. You are running a marketing campaign and business website. You are demonstrating that you are the professional, the expert, customers want providing the solution to their problem. You want to generate solid leads for sales.

Nothing generates more leads and produces better sales results than being the best in the business. The Internet creates an infinite space to work within, frame off your niche and become the expert. Then build on that platform to whatever success you can conceive.

Bill Rice is a leading authority on lead management and the lead generation industry. He is a frequent writer, sharing insights on sales at BetterCloser.com, providing commentary on the lead generation market on Lead Marketwatch and speaker, featured at venues like Leads2007, LeadsCon, Ohio MBA, and Online Lead Quality Summit.

Real Estate Marketing Online - How And Why To Use Chat Programs

When it comes to generating leads and inquiries online, real estate agents need to use as many different techniques as possible.

After all, you never know where people will go when they reach your website. You don't know their personality, their desires or their motivations. So if you present them with options, there's a much better chance they will move forward.

Chat programs are an often overlooked method of generating leads online. But these programs can be very effective when used properly, so I've dedicated this entire article to the subject.

The Value and Simplicity of Chat

In order to use this technique, the real estate agent or broker must have an office manager or customer service person -- someone who is near a computer for most of the day. So if you are a true sole proprietorship with no from of customer support, you might want to put this technique on the side burner for now.

For those al estate agents who are lucky enough to have an office manager or customer support person, let's move on to this useful technique for lead generation.

You've probably visited a website in the past that had a button encouraging you to "Get live help" or "Click to chat." These tools are a great way to get a spur-of-the-moment response from website visitors, the kind of response that could lead to a business relationship as well. Instead of sending an email and waiting for a response, people can click the chat button and have a dialogue with a live person.

How the Process Works

Here are the nuts and bolts of installing and using a chat program on your website. It's actually pretty simple, thanks to some handy software programs that are available these days. Here's an overview of the steps involved:


  1. Choose a program to use.

  2. Complete the setup process.

  3. Put a chat button on your website.

  4. Train the person handling the inquiries.

Step 1 - Choose an Online Chat Program

For starters, you will obviously need to choose a program to use. These are third-party programs that will either be (A) installed onto your web server or (B) hosted remotely by the chat software company. I've done a little research in this area to get you started.

The best approach when comparing these programs (or any software product for that matter) is to do a free trial of the software. To the best of my knowledge, all of the companies / products listed below offer a free trial. This allows you to judge the product firsthand, before buying any software.

Step 2 - Complete the Setup Process

Once you have chosen a program that meets your needs, you will then have to complete the setup process. Depending on the company / product you've chosen, this might be a very short step. If you are hosting the program on your own server, you'll need to upload all of the files to run the program -- a downside to this approach.

On the other hand, if you're using a remotely hosted program, you can forego this step. "Remotely hosted" means the program will run from the chat company's servers. This approach has the advantage of being easier and requiring less technical involvement on your end.

Step 3 - Put a Chat Button on Your Website

This is an important step, because it directly relates to the number of people who use the tool. If online chat is going to be an important part of your lead generation program (and it could be), you'll want to give the chat button its own piece of web space.

Where you place your button will depend on the layout of your website. If you have a left-hand navigation menu, you might want to add it at the top of that menu. The main thing is to give it some space so that the eye is drawn to it, a fundamental practice of Web Design 101.

Step 4 - Train the Person Handling Chat Inquiries

When I say you must "train" the person, I'm not referring to the technical details, which are fairly straightforward. Instead, I am referring to how you want to handle the online communication process with strangers. For example, how will you move these strangers toward contacting you by phone or email? After all, when they pop up on the chat screen, you'll only have their first name -- but no phone number or email address.

So the person handling the inquiries must be trained to balance two things at once. He or she must answer the person's immediate question (which is the whole point of a customer service chat program), while also moving the person toward a more formal conversation via phone or email. For this purpose, it will help to have some copy-and-paste scripts the customer service person can use, after handling the person's initial inquiry.

Brandon Cornett is the author of many e-books and articles on the subject of real estate leads and other aspects of online marketing. Learn more about this subject by visiting http://www.armingyourfarming.com/knowledge/article57.php