Posts Tagged ‘target market’

This Blog’s Identity Crisis

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

I’ve been quiet around here lately, I know. As I posted over at the Mom Masterminds blog, this blog is having a bit of an identity crisis as of late. Allow me to explain.

As part of my ongoing efforts this year to examine, improve, and focus, I’ve sold another website with the overall goal of moving away from the work at home Mom market.

My main target market is the one I speak to with my podcast (and several smaller content sites). I also have an active blog over there.

I’m not entirely out of the wahm market as I still have an information product for natural business owners (and want to be’s), private label rights article packs for natural business owners as well as several free ecourses for that market. But that’s ok with me because it still fits into the same larger market.

But this blog all of a sudden doesn’t quite fit neatly anywhere.

I certainly don’t want to get rid of it entirely. I enjoy talking about being a work at home Mom. I like sharing my wins (and trip-ups!) with internet marketing. I like helping people and guiding

them to good products and services that will help them make smart business decisions.

So I’ll put the question to you:

What do you like to see on this blog?

I got some fantastic feedback from the commenters on the MM blog which has given me some food for thought.

Nell and Angie said they wanted to see more personal “life as a wahm”" stuff here. (Nell also suggested I ask myself some pointed questions to figure out my goals with this blog.)
Erin said to mix it all up so my readers could see my unique perspective on marketing online.
Linda said I need to keep digging to find my target reader here.

What’s your take?

Making It Better: Content Site #1

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

When I said I was going to update you on my “Making It Better in 2008” progress, I wasn’t kidding!

Here is a site that has been gathering dust for FAR too long. I haven’t added content to it or made any changes in over a year (although I have sent out a couple of newsletters to the list.)

I thought of selling it, but decided to keep it since it fits into my overall target market. I also had some ideas on how to improve the site. One of the reasons I wanted to start with this one is because it makes NO money. It’s the only site I own that doesn’t generate sales or Adsense income.

So, similar to the thinking of a person who pays off their debt starting with the lowest balance for the psychological boost it will give them, I am starting with this one. Anything would be an improvement. LOL!

For starters, this is a content site all about limiting screen time. It has articles on why too much TV is a bad idea, and ideas on what to do instead. It makes affiliate recommendations, mostly books about research on TV’s effects and a couple of other products (some from Amazon.com and a few ebooks). It has a newsletter (actually just an autoresponder with a bunch of messages) with tips and ideas for family time that don’t involve screens. There are over 1,000 subscribers on the list. There is serious potential there, so I need to work on getting those folks to buy too.

I thought it had potential however, and was already getting some decent traffic and had incoming links from similar sites in this “un-TV” genre. It gets search engine traffic from a couple hundred unique keyword phrases.

Here is a screen shot of the Before:

And about half an hour Later:

You probably can’t tell a whole lot from the pictures, but I did the following:

  1. Removed Adsense ads from 90% of the pages. The ads were making NO money. When I emailed a friend about the site, she said she wasn’t surprised that this was the case, since the ads were showing up all about watching TV on the computer. DUH! People who are trying to watch less TV aren’t likely to click on ads about watching TV, are they? So that was an obvious thing to change.

  2. Changed the left nav menu so the links were smaller and shorter. I also added several affiliate recommendations to the left menu, and that font is a bit larger, making them stand out more.
  3. Wrote a bolder, more direct headline.
  4. Made the font larger and bolder on the right nav to draw attention to the newsletter sign up box.
  5. Added a picture of a product that I found on Amazon, it’s a perfect fit: a device that plugs into a Tv, computer or video game that enables a parent to set a timer that will turn the device off completely. This is a higher priced product than most I promote so I’m interested to see if it converts well.
  6. Made the page wider to give it a more modern look.

That’s it for now. Later on this month I’ll: add some more content, hire a ghostwriter to write an article I can send out, do some keyword research to guide me when I add new pages, and look for more appropriate affiliate products to recommend.

Stay tuned. No pun intended. ;)

Blogging Can Get You Free Samples

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

I’ve gotten free stuff before, but this takes the cake. See what my newest sample is?

It’s a 2008 Dodge Caravan. It’s sitting in my driveway for one week. Apparently the Dodge people consider me their target market, and they wanted me to take it for a test spin for a few days to see what I thought (and blog about it, of course!). They even gave me a free camera to snap a few photos.

If you’re not blogging for business yet, better get started. As Kelly McCausey says, we bloggers are da media. :-)

Focus, Or Where I’ve Been

Monday, December 31st, 2007


I’ve been missing in action here on this blog in the last month! There are good reasons for that.

One is that I’ve worked less in December than in previous months. The other reason is that I’m moving away from the market this blog serves, which is the work at home Mom/internet marketing audience.

For several months now I’ve been pruning away projects that had that group as a focus. I spoke with my business coach Kelly McCausey about it and posted at Mom Masterminds too asking for advice and what to expect. And now I’ll blog about it here for the benefit of those still reading. ;)

When I mentioned my decision to move out of the wahm market, my fellow wahm and Mom Masterminds coach Lynette Chandler said:

“While you will achieve a temporary set back in income, the focus will allow you to do more. You’ll surprise yourself how quickly you’ll bounce back or even over take the income from the other sites.”

I thought she was just being nice. ;) I wasn’t sure it would be exactly true, but here’s the thing:

My income didn’t drop at all. In fact, the opposite happened.

I’ve been doing a bit of analysis lately, something that many of us business owners are doing right now. A bit of early spring cleaning if you will… I realized I’ve sold several websites, given one away, and let several domains expire since last spring when I took Alice Seba’s Spring Cleaning course. Recently I dropped two wahm oriented content sites and was really concerned that it would take me months to get my income back up… but as I said, it hasn’t dropped.

What did happen was that two of my on-focus sites are experiencing large increases in traffic due to the little bit of extra love I’m giving them. I’m not working a bit harder. ;)

So if you’re thinking about selling a website to focus more on a market, don’t hold back!

Focus: This unsubscriber could teach me a thing or two

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

I’ve said before on my blog that people who unsubscribe from your newsletter can be a good thing for your business.

For one, they can teach you what you might be doing wrong. If all your unsubs say the same thing like: “Your newsleter is crap!” then that’s pretty valuable information.

They can also teach you who your target audience is. If they all say something like: “I’m not a Mom with young kids”, you know that you’re mostly talking to Moms of young kids.

You can even make money from your unsubscribe page. And, sometimes unsubs can teach you something entirely new.

Last weekend, I wrote as a guest on Kelly McCausey’s blog about focus. Focus for me is like a journey, not a destination. Just when I think I’ve focused, I realize I need to refocus!

Awhile back I got an unsubscribe message from a subscriber. It read like this:

Comments:
Please understand, this has nothing to do with your product so much as it has to do with my focus. I am becoming accutely aware of the fact that too many options available to me is only a distraction. You are not the first and only marketer I have recently opted out from.
I have recently chosen two directions on the Internet in which to begin my Internet marketing, and two is overwhelming already. I have to sacrifice from one just to work on the other. Three would certainly be out of the question: Although your product does look interesting…but I think I would go into information overload if I took another step forward with anyone eles’s offers.
I wish you the best in your endeavors.
Take Care.
Sincerely,
John Doe
First of all, aren’t my subscribers nice? :-) He took the time to write a long explanation almost as if he cared about my feelings. But the point is, he realized something very valuable:
That listening to too many people or going in too many different directions would make him lose his place in his marketing efforts.
Pretty smart marketer. ;)
What have you done recently to focus? Or re-focus? I sold a website and am moving completely away from one of my markets. What about you?

Freebie Friday: Content Skills to Pay The Bills

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Sorry I’ve been a bit MIA around here. You see I’ve been hard at work on a couple of things:

  • Re-Focusing. I’m dumping a couple of projects and even leaving an entire market behind. I’m learning that Focus is a moving target instead of a one time goal! More on that later.

  • Busy with mine and Tiffany Washko’s new Natural Mom PLR membership site.

But enough about me. Let’s talk about the freebie for this week. It’s all about using Content to grow your online business. This won’t take all day to read, in fact it’s just 9 pages long. But it touches on the following points:

  • How content sets you apart from other businesses
  • Why you want to be a “value added” marketer – and how to get there
  • What to do if you’re not a great writer
  • Getting other people to write content for you – free and paid
  • How to figure out what your ideal customer wants by way of content
  • And more good stuff.

You can download it here: Content Skills

Feel free to pass it around. :)

19: Focus, Focus, Focus

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

2 things: First, I don’t typically put articles on my blog, but I wanted to share this one that I wrote recently about finding focus in your online business. It was originally published in the WC, which if you’re not a subscriber, you must get your free subscription now by clicking HERE.

Second, if you haven’t yet listened to the PLR audio with Kelly and Nicole of Easy PLR, DO! I listened and even got some great new ideas on how to use PLR myself, which kind of surprised me! Get it here: PLR Audio

Now for the article.

Internet Success Tip: Put Blinders On

I’ve been focusing on focus lately. You see, Kelly McCausey interviewed me as a case study of a work at home Mom who finally found some focus, with great results. Let me share the story of 3 work at home Moms. I hope their experiences will help you realize the importance of putting on blinders with your internet business.

Distracted Darla

Distracted Darla started learning about affiliate marketing. She built a small site and when it began to earn income, the wheels started turning in her head. She was doing direct sales when she started this website, but was feeling burned out. She wanted to truly be home and so decided to put her energies into affiliate marketing exclusively. Not long after, however, she heard about a new hot direct sales company with a product she loved and a great pay plan. She joined up and had great success for a few months, until the company went bust.

If Darla had put blinders on and focused on her affiliate marketing business, she would not have wasted those months. Her websites would have been much farther along than they were. She lost so much momentum as a result of allowing herself to become distracted!

Bandwagon Brenda

Being new to the business world, much less internet business, Brenda was unaware of the concept of a target market. When she built her first niche website, she went for what she thought was “hot”. She gave almost no thought to “who am I trying to sell to?”

Although her website experienced some initial success, she became bored with the website concept and had no motivation to continue. She had no idea who her target market was and therefore didn’t know what kind of content to add to the site or what to say in the newsletter (which was growing surprisingly fast!) Later on she repeated her mistake by buying up some crappy private label rights articles in a “hot” niche. That ended up being a big waste of time. Because they were outside her area of expertise, she couldn’t write any articles to help drive traffic and had to rely on search engines alone. Growing traffic to the site was a constant uphill battle every time Google did a dance.

Focused Franny

Fran stumbled around for a while on the internet and had some success, but then she joined Mom Masterminds. Her friends and mentors there kept suggesting that she choose a target market and focus on it for maximum success. She noticed that the wahms who were making the big money had a tight niche and grew their online presence by constantly building new sites and new products to offer to that same target market.

Unsure of what her strengths were, she decided to listen to what her Mastermind group was telling her. She realized that sometimes it’s difficult for you to recognize your own strengths unless they’re pointed out to you by someone else.

At first glance, it seemed that choosing her target market would limit her and would get boring after awhile. But that was not the case at all for Franny. In fact, the opposite was true. Once she chose her target market, she kept thinking of new ways to serve them, new ways to find them online, and new products to market to them. The possibilities were endless and she was excited about her business again!

Additionally, the more she served her target market, the more they began to recognize and find HER online. The more they asked her questions, which she could answer and create articles and products for them and the more her market referred her to other people. Her business kept growing, and at a much faster rate than before. When she launched a new site or product, she was able to tap into her existing subscribers, customers, traffic and affiliates to promote it. She was no longer starting from scratch each time she had a new idea.

Ladies, I have a confession to make. I know the stories of these 3 wahms so well because they are all real women. I don’t suffer from multiple personality disorder, but I have been Darla, Brenda AND Franny. My question to you is this: who do you want to be?

p.s. (You may use this article on your site, blog or newsletter if you include the following bio. Thanks!)

Carrie Lauth (http://www.CarrieLauth.com) is the host of Natural Moms Talk Radio and the creator of the Natural Moms Business Guide (http://www.NaturalMomBusinessGuide.com). She owns a network of sites including Natural Baby World and Natural-Moms.com. Want to guess who her target market is?