You Can Write for Niche Markets:
Dreaming Ideas and Writing Information That
Sells
You Can Write for Niche Markets: Dreaming
Ideas and Writing Information that Sells - A book
about finding and writing for niche markets - and packaging it
to sell.
[excerpt]
Introduction
In the busy, fast paced world, people want solutions. It’s
like, as the story goes, that everyone is walking around with a
radio tuned to WII-FM. Their whole focus is on WII-FM – “What’s
In It For Me.” People want answers to their problems. They are
looking for the missing puzzle piece. That’s where you come in.
You can write to those niche markets.
The markets today have become very specialized. Go to the
bookstore and look on the magazine racks to see how specific
magazines have become. There are more magazine today then ever
before. As fast as some disappear, others take their place.
There are already five magazines devoted to scrapbooking.
Creating Keepsakes, a magazine for scrapbookers, has
grown to a circulation of 500,000 since 1996. Most sports have
magazines devoted to their unique niches. Parenting magazine
abound. Crafts, health markets, business, technology—whatever
the topic, there are magazines for their eager readers. Is
there room for your articles?
For each of these magazine markets, there is a matching
market for books. Books abound on all of these topics and the
shelves seen to overflow with new titles every month. The
numbers vary depending on whom you talk to, but R.R. Bowker,
the leading provider of bibliographic information in North
America, listed more than 135,000 new books in 2001. That
figure is up 10% from 2000. The numbers for 2002 were projected
to be even higher. So is there room for more books? Or even
more specifically is there room for your book?
Going beyond books one can find other information products
that readers buy. Booklets are always in demand if the topic is
timely and right for the market. Then there is the whole huge
market of information sold over the Internet that never sees
ink on paper—electronic documents read on computer screens and
occasionally printed out on paper. Some of these are e-books
while others are reports and documents. Is there room for your
information products?
If your articles, books and information products are the
same as everyone else’s, the answer is “No.” But, IF you can
find a niche market, research it, verify the numbers exist to
make the writing worthwhile, and write specifically for it—then
the answer is “Yes.”
As I wrote this book, I played with different titles and
subtitles. The main title was easy. The subtitle is where I
struggled. In reality, You Can Write for Niche
Markets: Dreaming Ideas and Writing Information That
Sells is the title the book needed. Yet, I felt
strongly that “Everything is a Niche
Market” was also a true subtitle. I believe that
virtually every market for writers is a niche market. Whatever
your topic, whatever your medium and genre, everything today is
a niche market. Gone are the days of general publications. We
live in a market that has become highly specialized. That
specialization is needed to survive as a magazine and book
publisher, and subsequently for us as writers for these
markets. And so the challenge before us is to dream big and
write information that sells—for niche markets.
You Can Write for Niche Markets
will be released as an e-book, 2nd edition, early in 2009 at
FootworkPub.com.
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