Niche markets can be rewarding and lucrative places to do business. If you’re trying to run an enterprise in a limited industry, though, you need to have your finger on the pulse of your end users even more than is usually in the wider business world.
Here are three fundamental reminders to ensure that you’re doing everything you can as a company to cater to your niche audience.
1. Detail Your Audience
In most cases, you don’t want your actual content to be too niche. This unnecessarily limits the scope of your audience and can even come across as snobby or elitist.
With that said, it’s wise to get a thorough idea of the intricacies of your ideal customer. Understanding the ins and outs of how a particular consumer thinks, acts, and approaches life can give you a critical perspective as you create content for them.
Some of this knowledge will translate directly into your marketing messages and business strategies. Other elements of your knowledge of your audience will show up subtly between the lines. In either case, it will help boost your authority in the eyes of those who you want to consume your content and marketing messages.
You can’t create individual marketing messages for every customer, but a buyer persona is a great compromise that helps you keep your finger on the pulse of what your average audience member is like. Build a solid buyer persona and then keep it up to date as a fundamental step in maintaining a detailed understanding of your niche audience.
2. Segment Your Audience
Yes, you’re already dealing with a highly personalized group by catering to a niche audience. Nevertheless, it’s always possible to zoom in a little further and find key differentiating factors within your audience.
If you want to cater to a niche audience, divide that audience up further into segmented groups. These help you create hyper-targeted messages that resonate deeply on an individual level, even within a limited crowd.
Spark Admissions, for example, targets parents with children thinking about the college admissions process. Rather than keep its messaging focused on the general college admissions process, though, the brand divides its site into sections focused on the needs of students. Some sections focus on individual grade levels and others focus on the needs of students with varying interests, such as athletic recruiting, attending art or film schools and BS/MD programs.
If you’re catering to a niche audience, don’t assume you’re already diversified enough. Use segmentation to ensure that each message is attending to the specific needs of each part of your core constituency.
3. Provide Customer-Centric Marketing and Support
If you’re catering to a niche audience, your customers will be aware of that fact. From nerds to vacationers and everything in between, if a consumer is part of a small and specific group, they’ll know it.
That said, it’s important for businesses to not just understand but clearly demonstrate that they are focused on the customers that they uniquely serve. This should be a priority everywhere, but it should specifically shine in your marketing and support channels.
Customer-centric marketing is ground zero for emphasizing the customer. True growth comes from catering to customer pain points and aligning them with product features and benefits (not the other way around, as is the case with many traditional marketing models).
If you’re planning on showing your customers that you understand them, you want it to be obvious. Show them that you’re invested in meeting them where they are from the moment they first see your brand right through to the customer retention process.
Showing Your Niche Audience That You Care
You can’t afford to come across as uninformed or uninterested in a niche audience. By definition, any niche competitors in your field will naturally be more honed in, as well, which leaves little room for error.
From understanding your audience in detail to segmenting them into hyper-focused groups to providing them with customer-centric marketing messages and well-informed follow-up support, make sure you’re putting your niche customers first. The results will speak for themselves.