Marketing Trend: Hits to Niches

Marketing Trend #7 - The Shift from Hits to Niches

This is marketing trend #7 in a series of 14 marketing trends adapted from Seth Godin’s book Meatball Sundae. Previously in this series: Cheap or Best

In the Old Marketing, everything was geared to creating mass market, best-selling, block-buster hits. If you didn’t have a hit you’d failed. Think movies, toys, books, fashion, food, music.

In the New Marketing, Chris Anderson’s Long Tail demonstrates that niches are king. Amazon profits more from the thousands of books that sell up to 100 copies a year than it does from the handful of books that sell in the thousands. The biggest selling product in most categories is now ‘other’.

Consumers are demanding more choice. We can use our computers to create that choice, and the Internet lets us distribute it efficiently and cost-effectively.

Your new goal is to create little pinkies and lots of them; lots of profitable niches. Instead of creating a generic marketing book, write one for beginners or for the experts; write for the online market or for self-storage operators. Profit from your niches.

[Tweet “Marketing Trend #7: The shift from Hits to Niches via @bookrapper”]

Source

This is from the Book Rapper issue Marketing How-Now that is derived from Seth Godin’s brilliant book Meatball Sundae.

 

More Updates

The Productivity Lie that's making you miserable - 4000 weeks

You’ve been lied to. There’s a lie that’s everywhere — in your planner, your inbox, your to-do list. And it sounds like this: “If I just

Four Thousand Weeks and The Power of Priorities

If you’ve ever said, “I just need more time”, you’re not alone. Most of us feel stretched, overwhelmed, and like we’re constantly behind. But what

Four Thousand Weeks and the Power of Saying No

Productivity advice usually tells you what to add: more systems, more habits, more tools. But what if the real power comes from what you stop