BrokerVille Says:
Work Less Hours, Earn 50% More, How to Pick a Niche
If you want a big and profitable business—focus, focus, focus - develop a market niche. Notice that every great company of today (Intel, Cisco, Microsoft, Sun, Oracle, Home Depot) does only one thing and does it really well. In other words, they have a product or market niche. If you deviate from this principal, your business will only be a fraction of what it could be. A recent study by Cerrulli Associates found that 75% of financial advisors offer the same products and services and are indistinguishable from one another. Those that carve out a niche earn 50% more.

Our recommended model at BrokerVille is to start with the triangle below and build your market niche from any corner. Many advisors think that focus means selecting a target market niche such as engineers. That’s only one way to succeed—by selecting a group of homogeneous people (e.g. people over age 60 who are retired who live in zip codes 94556, 94559 and 94563, employees with stock options from technology companies, owners of business with revenues less than $5 million). You can also build your business around being a product specialist. Let’s say you are a wizard at selecting annuities. You can succeed very well with such a product niche or you could succeed with a marketing methodology. Maybe you have a skill at developing direct mail campaigns. Maybe you have a skill at giving seminars. Start at one point on the triangle, pick your niche,and then build your business around that to get focus.

Let’s say you want to do seminars as your marketing niche and build your business around that. That will dictate that you can only do business with people who will come to seminars. People in their 40s and corporate executives are too busy. So, you must focus on retirees and small business owners because that’s who you can get to come to seminars. Notice that these types of people will then dictate the products and services you offer. You would not offer investments in stock options for these two groups but you would offer estate planning. Because you choose to build your business by marketing with seminars, your business must be local. People must be close enough to you to attend a seminar (therefore, you will not be doing business with people who live more than 20-30 miles away).
Even though some producers think that seminars no longer work, we know at BrokerVille that this continues to be a viable marketing option. Seminars lead to face-to-face appointments so you will either need a nice office near your prospects or be ready to go to their homes and offices. This also dictates a need for a nice wardrobe.
Notice that the initial choice of your marketing niche, seminars, upon which you build your business dictates everything else, such as office location, how you dress and the types of people you prospect. The truly successful business builds everything around the selected business niche.
Let’s take another example that
we observed at BrokerVille.
Assume your business is insurance solutions for business owners (key
man insurance, deferred comp, disability). Clearly, you
have identified both your product niche and your target market in one
shot. However, you’ll get even more traction and expand your business
faster if you specialize in specific business owners, e.g. those with
business revenues of $5 million to $15 million or those business owners
with a manufacturing business or a supplier to a manufacturing business.
By adding more focus, you can get more referrals from owners
who know each other (birds of a feather flock together), you get much
clearer about the needs of a homogeneous market and in a short period,
you position yourself as a specialist.
Focus entails turning away business. For example, when your business owner client asks if you can help his son with his 401k choices, you say no, and promptly refer him to a colleague that works with employees.
Here’s an example from an advisor we know at BrokerVille, whose target market niche is seniors. Therefore, he markets with seminars because seniors like to meet people face-to-face in a non-intimidating venue. He manages a lot of blue chip stocks, sell annuities and provides estate planning—the niche services that seniors want. His office is close to where they live. He prospects in only THREE zip codes with a high senior population and his office is right in the middle. He's in an elevator building so the clientele don’t need to walk up stairs. His building has parking because they come to see him a his office. His business name is Senior Resources. He wears light colored shirts and dark ties (same as they do). Notice that everything he does is built around his initial selected business niche.
By dealing with one type of client, a niche set of products and services, you become much more efficient, you work fewer hours and you get the benefits of higher income that accrue to a specialist. You build a better referral network of homogeneous prospects and you gain insight into your market that other advisors do not gain. And using the BrokerVille lead generation service, you can get leads that match your target market.
Before you turn your attention to finding a better prospecting system or hiring a new assistant to increase business, first consider that lack of focus is the source of less-than-desired economic success. When your business is unfocused and you take any client with a few bucks to invest, you can never build a business of value.
http://www.broker-ville.com
can help you build your niche.
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