The product is about teaching
your parrot how to talk. Now THAT is a niche! http://www.yourparrotwilltalk.com
There are a few niche information products targeting pet
owners. Creating a product for pet owners is a very sound
idea. People love their pets more than anything else they
own.
Frank Kern created a product for parrot owners that is
making him $20,000 a year on autopilot. A search for "parrots"
in the Overture inventory tool at http://inventory.overture.com
returned 88,000 results. That means 88,000 people searched
for that term in February 2004.
Let's see how Frank is making money on autopilot with his
product. By typing "parrots" without the quotes
into Google's search box, I see that on the right side of
the results page, Frank's parrot site is listed in the number
one position.
It's very likely that Frank pays only the minimum of five
cents per click with his Adwords campaign because there
are only three other ads on that page. Let's say that Frank
gets two percent of people who search for "parrots"
to click on his ad.
He probably gets more than that since it's a very good
ad. The wording of the ad hasn't changed for weeks so it
must work, I've checked.
At two percent click through rate (ctr) that means 1,760
people visit his parrot site. If just five percent of people
order Frank's product at $37.77, he's making $2898.72 per
month. That's really an exact figure and I'll show you how
I came up with it.
Frank uses Clickbank as his payment processor. They charge
$1 + 7.5% for each transaction, that means out of $37.77,
Frank gets $33.94.
Five percent of people ordered so that's 88 orders. 88
x $33.94 = $2986.72 Subtract the cost of pay per click advertising
of $88 and that leaves Frank $2898.72 for the month. Multiply
that by 12 months and Frank makes $34,784.64 a year. That's
a nice income from a one page website using one source of
advertising don't you think? Frank could spend an hour a
week to monitor his Google ads and that's all the work he
has to do for his site.
Frank could probably double his income by making a few
changes to his business. Since he doesn't run an affiliate
program, he could switch his payment processor to one that
takes a lower percentage of his earnings.
Frank could also raise his prices. If he studies his market
of parrot owners he'll probably figure out how much they
spend on their parrots. Parrots aren't cheap pets. Also,
pet owners WILL spend a lot of money on their pets. People
send their dogs to obedience school, grooming services,
and buy them all sorts of pricey things.
All Frank has to do is send his list of customers a survey
asking them how much the information that they bought is
worth to them. He could raise his price for the product
or create a version 2 and sell more to his existing customers.
He could also sell parrot supplies to his existing customers.
Another thing Frank could do is have a subscription box
on his site to capture emails and then build credibility
with visitors who don't buy on the first visit, and in the
case study above, that's 95% of people!
Having listened to Frank talk on a bunch of internet marketing
teleseminars I know that his aim is not to fiddle around
too much with any one site. His method is called the "Underachiever
Method". His aim is to create 50 sites that generate
money such as the parrot site. What a good idea. 50 streams
of income that run on autopilot.
That got me to think. If he can create 50 sites like that,
for me to create just one site is good enough. I started
to research my own niches. I asked myself what other pets
could people be interested in that would create that kind
of income?
I searched for the following terms and found how many people
searched for those terms.
Rabbits - 139,995 Humming Birds - 110,692 Ferrets - 76,820
Tropical Fish - 155,579 Hunting Dog - 30,725
Woh! Excellent potential - bling bling. I searched on Google
and didn't find anyone selling information products on rabbits
or hunting dogs. I did find one on ferrets and tropical
fish. That shouldn't stop me from creating a product on
ferrets and tropical fish. There's always room for improvement
or joint ventures.
I looked at "hunting dog" more closely and saw
that some related keywords are:
"rabbit hunting dog" "hog hunting dog"
"squirrel hunting dog" "deer hunting dog"
and a lot more.
There are so many niches yet untapped it's unbelievable.
I think I'm going to create an information product for hunters
and use all those little niches for the chapters. I don't
mind revealing all this to you because I've got a bag full
of niches that I've researched.
One method I use to find niches is to type in just a single
keyword into the Overture tool and look at all the related
keyword phrases. Those related keyword phrases are your
niche markets.
If you're going to create a niche product, set up a Google
campaign to survey the market to see the potential success.
Once you're certain it's going to be successful, go to a
bookstore like Barnes and Noble and look up a book or magazine
about your niche. If there isn't a book about your niche
then you really should look for another niche.
Look through the book to see what kind of content it contains.
Now go to a freelance site such at http://www.elance.com
and hire freelancers to write your ebook for you.
Then set up a one page website, hook it up to a payment
processor such as Clickbank and then send some traffic to
the site. This should take you no more than a month working
part-time or two weeks working full-time.
Good luck!
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