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The Sweetest Niche – Part 2

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

What is your choice of indulgence? A delicious French macaron, a pastry cream-filled brioche, or maybe even something as simple as a cupcake? It is important to satisfy your cravings, especially when it is something so delectable and sweet! Local pastry and sweet shops definitely target those with a sweet tooth, so we are here to give a shout out to those we think you will CRAVE the most! This selection is from the Minneapolis area:

Sweets Bake Shophttp://www.sweetsbakeshop.com/
Offering cupcakes, brownies and French macarons made fresh daily, Sweets Bake Shop really knows who their target audience is: anyone and everyone who enjoys something SWEET! Sweets Bake Shop tries to use natural, local ingredients as much as possible, including butter from Hope Creamery located in Hope, Minnesota and organic, free-range eggs from Larry Schultz Organic Farm in Owatonna, Minnesota. Delish!

Salty Tart Bakeryhttp://www.saltytart.com/
Calling all pastry lovers! Nationally acclaimed pastry chef, Michelle Gayer, knows her perfect niche audience. Offering beautiful, custom-made weddings cakes and mouth-watering pastries, it is safe to say every true dessert-lover should test this one out. Salty Tart Bakery knows how to customize your bakery request to a tee. Sure gives other pastry shops a run for their money!

Chocolat Célestehttp://store.chocolatceleste.com/
Truffles, Bon-Bons, Toffee…CHOCOLATE. Need I say more? Named one of “10 Best Emerging American Artisanal Chocolatiers”, Mary Leonard definitely knows how to keep her customers satisfied. Mary uses fresh ingredients from local farms, imported European chocolate coming from the best cacao growers in the world, and (very importantly) never any preservatives. The result? One of the finest calibers of chocolate from a direct shipment from Europe. Talk about impressive!

Kari Nordvik is an intern for CRAVE.

The Sweetest Niche

Saturday, April 30th, 2011

Southern red velvet cake, strawberry shortcake, butterscotch pudding, and bite size s’mores – oh, my! They make the mouth water and the tummy growl with just a simple thought. We love baked goods that taste just like something out your grandmother’s kitchen. They bring back memories of childhood summer vacations, family barbecues, and honestly just make you feel great! So, in honor of banana pudding, sugar cookies, the bakeries, and women who’ve made these delectable goodies available, we’re extending some love to CRAVE businesses specializing in sweet treats!

Violet’s Cakesvioletscakes.com

Ingredients as fine as Bitter Sweet Callebaut, Valrhona Chocolate, and Tahitian Vanillas lend a hand in creating rich fudgy “can’t stop eating good” brownies and artful cakes covered in delicious arrays of butter cream. Congrats to owner Denise Weber – Violet Cakes is certainly a dream come true bakery in Pasadena, CA! It has a down-home vibe with interesting classic cakes.  In flavors like French toast or root beer float, it’s the elaborate flare in cake design which has brought them a lot of attention. Sounds fabulous, doesn’t it?  It very much is!

Susie Cakessusiecakesbakery.com

Mama knows best! She know that sweets like rich pecan pie, gooey chocolate whoopie pies, or luscious lemon cake will have you wanting more. Maybe you’ve been wishing for those days when you snuck in the kitchen waiting to sneak a piece when she wasn’t looking. Don’t worry, Susie Cakes is the answer to those nostalgic cravings. Offering impeccable, retro-chic desserts that leave your tummy feeling good, your taste buds satisfied, and give you what you need, it’s a slice of heaven!

Gotta Have S’More - gottahavesmore.com

Eating warm, sticky, sweet s’mores by the fireside isn’t just for summer camp. Carmen Linder of Gotta Have S’more flipped the script on that tradition. Her online store offers her delectable, bite-size treats. They’re created with love from just the right amount of graham cracker and marshmallow goodness then combined with different assortments of flavors.  These little desserts make a great event or entertainment treat. Once you have one, you’ll need a second!

Tifany Williams is an intern for CRAVE.

Blog for Business? Identify Your Audience!

Friday, April 29th, 2011

One of the first steps of developing a new business is carving out your niche. There is no one-size-fits-all approach to identifying a niche. The strategies that I recommend are for entreprenesses who blog for business.

Listen to Your Voice

Just because you are a lady blogger, doesn’t mean that you have to blog for ladies. Who you attract to your blog aka your target market, will depend upon your writing tone. Think about it. If you constantly address your readers as “darlings” and “dolls” then that is who you will reach.

Authenticity is key when developing your online business. Your readers will want to feel like they are having a conversation with you. Readers love familiar voices and not ones that talk at them. If your natural tendency is the doll and darling route, then embrace it and accept that your target audience will be dolls and darlings.

“I’ve listened to my voice, now what?”

Identify Competitors But Stay True To Yourself

Market research serves two purposes: (1) to make sure what you are doing hasn’t already been done; and (2) if it is being done, then it helps you determine how you can do it differently- in a way that matters. Keep a list of competitors, their subject matters, their apparent audience, and how your blog will differ. For example, you want to start a blog to connect mompreneurs, but you find that the concept is already in use. Consider making your topic location-specific; i.e. Connecting Mompreneurs in Chicago. Or, consider drilling down even further. How about making it a Resource Guide for Mompreneurs?

“Okay, I’ve got my eye on the competition. Do I stop here?”

Develop the Blueprint

Now you must do a more in-depth analysis of your target market. Key questions to consider:
What is the age range of my reader?

Which gender would be most interested in my subject matter?

What is the career stage of my potential reader?

What level of education do they have?

What is their marital or family status?

What do my readers value most?

Which, if any, special features of my blog will be most appealing?

Where do they get most of their decision-making information?

Use your answers to develop a concise target market statement. Here is the statement that I developed:
Ages 28-40 male and female, working professionals and entrepreneurs in Chicago-area who are in the mid- to upper income brackets, value quality of life, luxury living and personalized services. Graduate/professional level of education. They are internet- and tech savvy.

Your statement will give a clearer picture of who you are writing for and why, even down to determining article topics.

Prepare for Change

“The only constant in life, is change.” After all of the research, deep thought and mapping things out, know that where you start with your business will not always be where you end up. Often, our audience will show us what our true niche is, and no matter what we want it to be, we cannot fight against the grain of our natural grain and strengths.

____________

Patrice N. Perkins is the founder and editor of My Lifestyle ZEN, a Chicago-based blog for working professionals and entrepreneurs who value quality of life. You can visit Patrice’s website here: http://www.mylifestylezen.com/

My No-Fail, One-Step, Niche-Finding Exercise

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

When you’re an entrepreneur, there’s something about this idea of knowing your niche that can feel out of reach but all-powerful. Like you have to be a marketer to “get it right”. But marketing, done nicely, is no more fancy or cerebral than telling people what you do. And niche marketing is telling people you like what you do. You already know everything you need to beautifully market your business – you just might not know that you know.

One-step niche-finding
In one of the workshops I lead, I start things off by helping the business owners in the room figure out their niche – except that I tell them we’re “describing our ideal clients”. Same thing, but one sounds way more fun and it is. Here is the exercise:

Close your eyes. Picture yourself sitting in your living room. There are six or so seats available on your couch or with dining room chairs pulled in. Now, one at a time, invite into your living room your ideal clients. These can be people you already know or they can be imaginary.

Now get a scrap piece of paper and set a timer for 12 minutes. Write the answers to the questions below as quickly as you can:

What are the people in your living room wearing? Where were they before arriving at your place? Where will they go next? What labels do they give themselves? What communities are they a part of? What keeps them up at night? What do you love about them? What do they ask you for? What do you want to do for them?

You already know exactly who will “get” you and what your business is all about. You already know who wants to buy from you and what they need. And you’ve just written it down. Too simplistic? Nu-uh. You know why? Women are highly intuitive, emotionally intelligent beings. We’ve already collected and stored all the necessary data. When you do a timed writing exercise like this, your judgmental side doesn’t have time to meddle, so your creative side gets free reign. It can tap into and string together relevant data more quickly. It’s the opposite of simple – in marketing consultant speak, what you’ve just written up is a psychographic target market analysis. You’re such a smarty pants.

Now how do you use this information?
Design your promotions for the six people you pictured in your living room. Put your flyers where those people hang out. When you write your website or your event invitations or your newsletters, don’t write them for some faceless mass, write them for those six people. How would they like your store or clinic to look and feel? If you saw a redhead in Hunter boots on your imaginary couch, don’t pay any mind to what her husband would like.

Be brave enough to be specific.
I know it’s scary. This week, for the first time ever, I described my own business as “specializing in elegantly written and smartly designed websites for women-owned businesses.” Yikes. But what about business cards? I heard that panicked voice saying. And what about the men? You like men, Carrie. Which is true. But in every iteration of my own website, when I have dared to get more specific, I’ve always attracted more clients and more clients I LOVE who want to do projects I love. Which makes sense, right?

What niche marketing all comes down to, for me, is this: Life is way too short – and way too long – to do anything other than what you love with people you love.

Carrie Klassen is a green tea enthusiast, amateur poet, fine point pen aficionado, INFJ Scorpio, and president of Pink Elephant Communications, a writing and design boutique for inspired entrepreneurs across North America. She also teaches workshops at the brand new Pink Elephant Academy for Entrepreneurs (with self-study e-workbooks coming this spring!). Visit www.pinkelephantcommunications.com to download a free copy of 6 Ways to Attract Clients with Kindness.

CRAVE Portland Businesses Carve Their Niches

Monday, April 25th, 2011

All month we’ve been talking about knowing your niche, and today we’re calling out CRAVE businesses, specifically in Portland, OR, that embody this theme! Local businesses like the ones below make a city stand out from other cities and help make Portland the unique city that it is. Each one caters to a specific need that Portlanders need filled, and the city is a better place because of them!

TanQhttp://www.tanq.us/

“Kindness is contagious.” TanQ appeals to the hipster-chic do-gooder, of which Portland has many. Owner Judy Tan designs one t-shirt each month for a different non-profit and donates 100% of the profits for the first year. TanQ is a Portland-based online store that spreads a positive message, and the t-shirts allow you to tell your friends that you contributed to a cause important to you! All the t-shirts designed are limited so once they’re gone, they’re gone! Remember to get your limited edition t-shirt and spread the word!

Kimberlee Jaynes Interior Designs, Inc.http://www.kimberleejaynes.com/

Kimberlee Jaynes has a carved a niche for herself catering to people with discerning taste who desire gorgeous homes. An interior designer with many awards under her belt, Kimberlee has also been featured in many publications. She’s been an interior designer for the past 17 years and is an expert on helping clients discover their personal style for their homes. Kimberlee works with you to realize the vision of your home, and she specializes in color consulting, custom fine furniture and many more interior design services.

The Whole 9 Yardshttp://w9yards.com/

Calling all interior design junkees and fabric freaks! Are you into design projects? Would you rather upholster a chair than get a manicure? The Whole 9 Yards is a top notch retailer for interior fabrics and is the perfect place for you. They always carry very unique selections of trim and fabrics and are more than happy to help you with your search for the perfect fabric for your project! They also offer custom furniture and sometimes hold sewing classes at the store.

These are just a few Portland businesses that know their niche oh-so-well. Stay tuned this week to learn about CRAVE businesses in other cities that have conquered their niches and are thriving because of it!

Joe Nguyen is an intern for CRAVE

Tips for Reaching Your Target

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Congratulations my powerful entreprenesses- you have climbed over that 20-foot wall and defined your niche. You know who you want to work with but might be asking yourself, now what do I do?

You have the answer to the who, and now comes the “what”. What do you say to your target market to warm their buying temperature and turn prospects into clients? Ladies, it is time to climb the 10-foot wall of communicating with your target market.

Targeting all of your Communication

Now that you know your target, it becomes a lot easier to communicate with them using the features and benefits that are most important to “them”. Whether communicating verbally or in writing, you can address the issues that are most important and pressing to your target market. You want to put your business in the position of having the solutions to their issues.

Here are a few tips to ensure that your communication to your target market is speaking “to them” and “warming their buying temperature”.

Tip #1

Know the answer to this question: What are your client’s most urgent needs? (What do they want or need most?)

If you don’t know this yet, you can find it by doing online research, conducting a survey or holding a focus group. It doesn’t have to be anything elaborate – people are almost always happy to share their opinion.

Here is an example of what I mean by urgent need: The urgent need that may have you reading the CRAVE blog on a regular basis is a need for information that will help you strengthen and grow your business. Or maybe your need is for business support and information from female entrepreneurs who have done it, are doing it and are doing it well.

Find out what your target market’s burning needs are and be their problem solver.

Tip#2

Know the answer to this question: What are your client’s desires?

(Where do they want to be, want do they want to do better, what do they no longer want to do, how do they want to feel?)

When you develop your communication you want to include how your service or product will help them fulfill these desires.

Analyze yourself for examples of potential desires. Your desire may be to have a thriving business that allows you to work 4 days a week or to have more financial freedom.

Tip#3

Know the answer to this question: What are the full-fledged benefits your clients will receive as a result of your services or products?

When answering this question, gloating is allowed. This is not the time to be reserved.

Use your list of benefits in your communication to your target market. Always ensure that you taking about benefits for them, not you. Also double check that each benefit is helping to fulfill their desire and/or give them the solution to their needs or wants.

With the responses from the series of questions above you, will be able to target all of your communication to your target market. Always remember when connecting with your target market that the aim is to position your business in a manner which takes away the “cold sales” like nature and allows your target market to view your business as the “go to business,” because you know their pains and can help to alleviate them.

Karen Donaldson is a Motivational Speaker, Public Speaking and Presentation skills coach and Founder of Karen Donaldson Inc and Panache Life Inc. She has helped numerous executives, entrepreneurs and sales professionals become panic free presenters, communicate with confidence and clarity, command attention whenever they speak and deliver presentations that close the sale.

Visit Karen at www.karendonaldsoninc.com for free resources, one-on-one coaching and upcoming events.

Clarify and Collaborate Vs. Compete

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

With most of this month’s bloggers focusing the power of the niche on your target market, I thought I’d take a different approach and focus on you. Your voice. Your contribution.

Be Clear On Our Voices

About a year ago, five of us found each other on Twitter. We all run female friendship businesses, and significantly, we are all bloggers on the same theme. One might call us competitors. But I’d say we’re collaborators. The difference in this case? We each know our voice.

While we are all in the same industry, writing on similar subjects, and trying to be heard in the same social media streams, we know what we each have to offer:

  • Dr. Irene Levine of The Friendship Blog writes Q&A advice columns and comes from a psychologists perspective.
  • Dawn Bertuca & Tina Bishop of Girlfriend Celebrations are two friends who together have a unique & warm voice as they share girls night out ideas.
  • Rachel Bertsche of MWFseekingBFF is a late twenty-something that blogs in first person about her personal experiences in making new friends in a new city.
  • Debba Haupert of Girlfriendology does everything she can to inspire women with interviews, social media and appreciation for our friends.
  • And, my Shasta’s Friendship Blog, tends to be very how-to practical, with a soulful slant that comes from my background in ministry.

You can quickly see, at a glance, how much richer cyberspace is for having all of us talking about the same theme from different perspectives, backgrounds and angles. A psychologist will bring a very different perspective than a girl in Chicago looking for friends. And both are helpful! The same woman could read both those blogs and be appreciative of the honest insight and self-deprecating wit of Rachel and learn from Dr. Levine as she helps gives suggestions to a specific woman with a question.

Be Clear on our Benefits!

Here’s how knowing my voice has enhanced my business:

  1. Less worried about competition. No one else can write the way I do, with my perspective and personality. You might have the same service or product as someone else and even be trying to get it in front of the same target audience. But knowing your voice and being able to showcase it will mean no one else can offer it the same way you do.
  2. More helpful to my target audience. Because I know who I am and who I’m not, I can cheerfully promote other voices to my audience knowing it will benefit them. I can’t be all things to all people so I’m thrilled to introduce them to others who can also be a part of their success.
  3. Increased promotion of my peers. I don’t live with the philosophy that only one of us can succeed. I think all of us have amazing things to offer and the world is better for having each of us do it our own way. I want your success. When I know my voice and can celebrate yours—I can trust there is room for all of us. I show up in this world grateful and hopeful.
  4. Clearer on how I communicate. When I know who I am and how I show up differently, then I know how to market myself to prospective clients, potential employers and other collaborators. I can describe to them exactly what they’ll get with me. I don’t have to pretend to be you or try to sell myself as something else. I know my presence as a speaker, writer or team player on a project.

So much attention is given to knowing who your audience is, but really you need to first know who you are. If you speak the voice that only you can, you will undoubtedly attract a following of people who hunger for what you offer. As you identify your niche this month, may you also grow in confidence that you are perfectly positioned to offer it in a way that is uniquely you. Bless us with you.

Written by Shasta Nelson, M.Div, CEO of the friends matching web site www.GirlFriendCircles.com, columnist for Huffington Post and weekly blogger at Shasta’s Friendship Blog.

Zoom In, Zoom Out, Repeat

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

As the owner of a public relations and marketing firm, one of my first questions for prospective clients is usually, “Who is your target audience?” There are always an overzealous few who say, “Everyone! Our products/services are so great, so we target EVERYONE!!”

We’ve all heard variations on the phrase: “If your target market is everyone, you’re targeting no one.” Even so, the impulse reaction is to strive for as many customers as possible and if one could get “everyone” to buy…well, the whole wide world as a target market may seem ideal. Ideal, but not realistic. The woman who reads Vogue, isn’t usually the same woman who reads Woman’s Day. Or the woman who seeks commentary from Donna Brazile may say, “Snooki who?”.

When we hear the “everyone” response, we encourage those individuals/companies to truly explore who they want to reach. Asking yourself questions periodically during your business cycle can also help you to adapt to changes and the needs of your customers. You can then provide new solutions and update where you should focus your efforts.

A quick way to do this is to remember these three steps: zoom in, zoom out, repeat.

Zoom In On Your Target
If you could clone your favorite customers, what do they look like and how do they behave? Where do they shop? Who do they trust and where do they go for information? Are they faithful newspaper lovers or social media devotees?

Be very, very specific. Zooming in on your target will allow you to become familiar with a definite set. Yes, we’re all unique (just like everybody else), but in the general sense we can share some similarities as it relates to services and products. Zooming in will allow you to form focus groups, interview and interact with this niche crowd to find out how your business is hitting the mark or missing the mark. Everyone will always have opinions, and in business you can move in so many different directions if you listen to all of the noise around you. If you zoom in on one set, watch this group, listen, observe and gather their feedback, you’ll have a more focused approach on reaching your goals and continually growing your business.

Now…Zoom Out
Once you’ve identified who your ideal customer is (or who they are, as you may have a few select individuals who can identify with your business services and offerings), look at the broader picture of where these individuals fit.

Zooming out allows you to identify gaps that can help you develop or create new products or services. This may result in acquiring more customers who are in your target or creating a new market to focus on.

As you go and grow through business, you’ll go back and forth between zooming in, zooming out, and then repeating these steps.

Example:

Your concierge company is targeting the Boomer generation. Specifically Sandy. A working woman who is 50+, is married to a spouse who travels for work frequently, has two kids (one in high school and one in middle school, both with their own full social schedules), and she is active in her community through civic, volunteer and networking organizations. (Variables in the example may be that she is not in a relationship, the number and ages of the kids, groups she is part of, etc.)

Your concierge service makes the lives of women like Sandy easier, offering services ranging from picking up their dry cleaning to making sure that they’re aware of their high school kid’s soccer game. Sandy’s life is changing though. With the kids headed to college soon, she’s going to stay in the workforce a little longer and one of the major changes is that her aging parents (on her and her spouse’s side) have become a large concern. She’s so busy that she isn’t sure where to start when it comes to researching healthcare and services for her parents.

What does this mean for you? A new opportunity. Now you start to focus your services on the other aspects of Sandy’s life (zooming in on the specifics). You can now tailor your business (and marketing efforts) to recognize the challenges that Sandy has and how your concierge service makes things easier. If Sandy has these challenges, some of your other clients are likely to have them, too. Perhaps you will research doctor’s offices within a 15-mile radius for your clients, partner with companies and groups that may assist and essentially expand your service offerings. Your concierge business may now not only target the Sandy’s, but Sandy’s parents and offering your services to that set. You’ll then need to update your marketing materials to communicate to your clients that you’ll not only handle services as it relates to their immediate families, but also their loved ones; and perhaps you’ll create specific marketing for those loved ones. You’ve expanded your niche by zooming in and out on your target. Now repeat!

Nancy Vaughn is the principal, PR & Marketing Director at White Book Agency, a public relations, marketing and special events firm providing cost-effective communication strategies for entrepreneurs and businesses across the country.

How Do YOU Pronounce Niche?

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

In line at Voodoo Doughnuts

We’ve all heard about having a “niche” business- that sexy French word we aren’t quite sure how to pronounce.  It’s root meaning is to make a nest, cubbyhole, or nook, while in the business world it means to incubate and create something unique.  The business press talks about “niche markets” and “boutique” creative shops that focus on a specialized corner of business.

I grew up on a strawberry farm and, at 26, got into the fair concession business with strawberry shortcake.  Over the years my business wandered into many extensions of the berry product line–baking mixes, mustard, honey, cookies–but the real profit always came down to basic strawberries.  After 22 years of showing up with shortcake at local festivals, many people still tell us they come just for the shortcake.  It’s a great focused niche that (knock on wood) I feel I “own.”

On the other hand, I wonder who opened the first shop that “reinvented” the cupcake? Nowadays, you stand in line at the gourmet cupcake shop in every neighborhood in town.  That was a great idea.

Speaking of lines, in a scene right out of “Portlandia,” I recently stood in an hour and a half line to buy four donuts ($8!) at Voodoo Donuts in Portland.  The donuts are great, but it was more about the “experience” of hanging in line and finally making it to the front.  This place is the niche-marketing poster child.  It’s so literally weird and funky you could never cut and paste its DNA somewhere else.

My current love-child niche is our CRAVE guides, featuring over 100 entreprenesses in multiple cities.   I wanted to celebrate women-owned businesses and encourage local communities to support them.  We have a very specific guideline when we curate our book and we stick with that.  Our goal is to be the go-to resource for each local community, to find and be inspired by the rock star women we feature.  A great joy is when someone reads our book and starts their own business because of the role models in their community.   We are not a guide for everyone, but in our niche we strive to make a difference.

Not trying to be something for everyone is something I think about a lot.  Honing down. Having a tightly focused target.  A 10% potential market is huge.  And it’s not about reinventing the wheel:  really good niches exist in the tried and true–Biringer shortcake, or in reinventing the tried and true–those cupcakes, donuts, or cups of coffee we stand in line for at Starbucks.

Take a look at some great examples of a niche business:
bellacupcakecouture.com
blowoutgirl.com
talksportytome.com
shishiputter.com
annesylvain.com
gothamorganizers.com
citytreehouse.com

Would love to hear what your niche is…

- Melody

Who Do You Help & Why Should They Care?

Monday, April 4th, 2011

The reason niche is SOOOOOO important is because you have to trust that only some people (and not EVERYONE) needs you. This is hard for people to do, and they make the mistake of being GENERIC in their branding and in their marketing approach. Bad bad bad!

There’s an entire universe out there of people with varying needs. This is way it looks like for them: “Blah blah blah, WOW, there’s something interesting. Let me take a look! WOW, this person really gets me, I wonder what else she has up her sleeve. WOW, she lives nearby and she’s offering her services in a workshop in just one week. WOW, where’s my credit card, I have to be there!”

In other words, you need to know who your neediest client is and target your message to them so that they see it. Like a ticker tape, your CODE and your LETTERS and YOUR WORDS stand out to them above all others.

See what I mean?

So, who do you help, and why should they care?

Here’s another way to think about it: If your client wakes up, and looks to the foot of the bed, what’s the first thing on her mind? What does her day look like? What things is she likely to be doing that day, or on any given day?

Now, how does YOUR solution fit in to this picture? What 3 problems can you identify that SHE HAS and what 3 ways does your SERVICE or PRODUCT solve her problems?

It doesn’t hurt to think of your ‘elevator pitch’ at the same time you write a paragraph describing your ideal client. Your elevator pitch is simply a one-word sentence that describes who you help. The formula goes like this:

I help people who __________________, and who want to _____________________ (or who feel ____________________, or who are unhappy about ____________________,) do _________________!

For example, my elevator pitch goes like this:

Hi, my name is Jillian J. Davis, and I help people who hate their job, wake up to work they LOVE.

And here’s how I’d describe my ideal client: She is extremely talented, sensitive, interested and interesting, but can’t seem to find work that she likes. She’s tried everything, and still, she hates her job, commuting, and feeling uninspired. She is aged 25-55 and she typically loves friends, family, exercise, fashion, spirituality, and growth. She just needs a way to discover her passion, and profit from it. She can be found anywhere one finds engaged,busy, interesting woman are found – salons, malls, gyms, book readings, bikram yoga classes, taking their kids to the library, and driving her kids back to college on Sunday a night.

I carved my niche by understanding who I most naturally relate to (adult women on the verge), and by thinking about what I want to communicate in this world before I die (be adventurous, original, and live your life’s work). Sound like overkill? But this is really what it takes to define your niche and make yourself stand out completely from the crowd.

Otherwise, you come across like old milk: Boring, tasteless, and easy to overlook.

Think of it this way: If you wanted to get married, you’d date a lot of men. But you only need one man, and you’re only going to choose the won whose mojo, essence, habits, heart, and story grabs you within a few minutes of meeting him.

This is how your audience and niche is going to react to YOU, too. They are going to get very excited when they realize you’re THE ONE to help them with their PROBLEM.

Think carefully about who wants to receive what you have, and tailor all your products and services to him/her.

What are you waiting for? Write that elevator pitch and describe your ideal client and put this on a flash card right over your desk and think of this person as you create your standout brochure or market your next event.

Jillian J. Davis helps people define their life’s work and live it. You can find her blog and more about who she helps atwww.jillianjdavis.com.