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Do you know who your best customers are? Do you know what segment of the population is most likely to buy your service or product?
Defining a target market can be especially helpful for small business owners and managers. Directly appealing to the needs, wants, and tastes of a particular audience may make a small business more successful than its larger competitors. By targeting a specific population, a small company may be able to carve out a niche in which it can better meet the demands of the audience, and can appeal to a particular segment in a very specific way.
A business may define its market using research tools such as demographic reports, trends, and surveys, to determine which customers would be most likely to purchase its offerings. You can also evaluate which type of customers are already using your service or supplies. Analysis will help you develop tools and campaigns to cost-effectively market to potential customers who may fit the same criteria as your findings indicate.
By defining a target market for your company, you allow yourself to fully advertise with the greatest return on investment. Your business can invest in marketing initiatives that reach your target most effectively. In researching advertising options, an informed marketing manager would choose to place ads, send mail, or place calls to leads that best fit into their demographics... therefore, maximizing the chance that the lead will turn into a customer or a sale.
Your target markets may be much harder to define than you might imagine - but, rest assured - there are indeed target niches to be had for every business. Even though the process of researching and defining your market may be a large task to undertake, in the end the benefits of more customers, less wasted advertising dollars, and highly qualified leads will be rewarding.
Written by Rich Dusky, MindSpring Editor.