By Jowanna Daley
Understanding how to segment your market makes it easier to define your ideal client and forecast your revenue.
So you’ve finished your coaching certification, and you’re ready to empower the world! Now everyone is telling you to “niche down.” You’ve probably heard it in training, by experts, and parrots—but what does it really mean? Then, when you ask how you find your niche, you hear all kinds of opinions. It leaves you feeling deflated, intimidated, and demotivated. No, it’s not you.
What Is a Niche?
Niche is used in various ways. For instance, some people use it to describe your professional focus, others use it to describe their target market, and some use it interchangeably. A niche can describe your coaching focus, such as a business, life, success, or executive coach. A niche is also a smaller segment of a bigger market (also called a market segment).
Carving out your niche is not a straight recipe. Instead, it’s like that your grandma’s secret sauce—a dash of this and a pinch of that. Your niche can take on many forms, such as:
- A few specializations for one group (e.g., a life coach who sees divorced women seeking a new career, self-esteem, or goals success coaching)
- One discipline for a broad population (e.g., a life coach who specializes in self-esteem issues and sees anyone from 15 to 70+)
- One specialization for a targeted group (e.g., a relationship coach that sees engaged couples)
- Big companies have the resources to appeal to many segments at one time
- As a new business, you are learning your brand and your clients, and generic messaging will kill your business
- Enough studies show that you do better with a narrower focus (mainly because of personalization and budget)
- You are not going to know your strength and weaknesses for real before you get out there; reaching one niche (and one ideal client) at a time gives you time to evolve your business
- Demographic Segmentation is a quantitative way to view your market. This means you can count the population in this segment. Common ways to break up your demographics include age, gender, ethnicity, income, religion, family status or structure, occupation, and level of education.
- Psychographic Segmentation is a more qualitative or subjective way to view your target population. It is a powerful way to look at data because it gives insight into your market’s motivation. Common ways to break down the data are personality, attitudes, values, activities, and lifestyle.
- Behavioral Segmentation is based on how a person engages with your business, product, website, or app. It can also give insight into how they interact during the different phases of a purchase cycle. Typical ways to segment purchasing behavior include how and when they purchase, usage, loyalty, and benefits sought.
- Geographic Segmentation is based on the premise that people who live near each other use the same products or services. As a life coach, you may decide to see people close to your location because you want to have in-person sessions. Or you may choose people in a time zone that aligns with your work hours. Common geographic parameters include location, climate, culture, population, and language.