
Direct Response Marketing
February 22, 2022
How to Identify Your Ideal Customer
March 8, 2022Selecting your target market
When we ask business owners who their target market is, many tend to respond with “everyone.” In reality, this means no one. Many business owners worry about narrowing down their target market because they don’t want to exclude any potential customers.
This is a typical beginner marketing mistake.
Let’s examine why excluding customers is actually a good thing.
Most large company advertising falls into a category called mass marketing, sometimes also referred to as “branding” or “branding awareness”. Business owners are like an archer in the middle of dense fog, shooting arrows in every direction in the hope that one or more of them will hit the intended target.
The theory behind mass marketing is that you want to “get your name out there.” The theory is that if you broadcast your message enough times, you’ll by chance get an audience with your prospects and some percentage of them will buy from you. However, you might be thinking – if the archer just shoots enough arrows in all directions, surely he’s bound to hit his target. Right? Maybe, but for small – to medium-sized businesses at least, that’s the wrong way of marketing because they’ll never have enough arrows (in other words, money) to hit their target enough times to get a good return on their investment.
Harnessing the Power of Focus
Now you may be thinking why on earth would we want to limit our market so much?
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You have a limited amount of money. If you focus too broadly your marketing message will become diluted and weak.
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The other critical factor is relevance. The goal of your ad is for your prospects to say, “Hey, that’s for me.”

