Posts Tagged cialdini

Keywords which don’t tell you anything about the Gorilla in the room

Lowland Gorilla by TXZeiss.

That’s the problem with a lot of these niches we deal with. When we are simply trying to sell a product, we fail because some of these niches simply don’t have buyers in them. And worse, some people are telling you that the way you find buyers is to see if people are advertising in that area. (Really? How come people are advertising where there isn’t even any traffic? Google says they do – just look on their Adwords tool and see where there is “competition” even when there aren’t enough traffic results to make up a monthly tally…)

Since I got myself all worked up with that (above-linked) post, I then had to see what was actually going on.

So I set up my Keywords Genies: Google Adwords Tool and RankTracker and started to get to work figuring this all out. I started using Google Adwords to see if it would give me bigger and bigger traffic keywords through its synonyms. After I amassed about 12,000 keywords, then I quit to digest them by OpenOffice database.

Now, this is completely the reverse of what my research says to do. I was purposely looking for stuff that couldn’t possibly be a niche – waaayy too big. Of course, one of the first things I found out was that Google and WordTracker don’t agree on what the traffic for something actually is. (Big surprise – all these tools only deal with their own estimates of traffic. Your mileage may vary, as well – only your own analytics knows for sure.)

But what I did find is that there seem to be a huge number of really good one and two-word keywords with decent KEI. Even though they could (and some did) have literally a trillion pages of competition. No, you couldn’t dream of trying to get these on their own. So the niche theory of marketing empire-building still holds.

The review of these niches and their main keywords started showing something else (other than the fact I was really straining RankTracker and WordTracker – you can only check about 240 KW’s at a time before WordTracker shuts you down). That something else was the point that people who search on Google are just that – lookers. Doesn’t mean they are buyers. And you have to check that keyword on eBay or Amazon to see if people are actually able to sell something like that.

Even more striking was the observation that very little “stuff” was turning up with these keywords. Specific camera’s, or toys, or gadgets or books or authors weren’t coming up. But the big-ticket Maslow-pyramid-type phrases were. As niches.

But didn’t I just say you couldn’t sell anything in a niche that didn’t have buyers in it?

Sure. The trick is that the motivations to buy are there, not the stuff you can sell.

This means that people are actually searching for their wants and feelings, not just specific stuff they want to buy – although that happens as well, but not in two words or less (most of the time, anyway).

Your niches show up in four-word or longer phrases.

But something even more interesting showed up – you aren’t selling stuff, you’re offering solutions.

All of these wants and feelings people put in their search engine forms – these are just problems they are having in their lives (more or less). What they are plugging away at searching for are solutions which would improve their lives.

Again, go back to Maslow and Cialdini. When you take these two giants together, you see what people as individuals and as groups/niches are trying to solve in their lives. All these things people buy are somewhere on Maslow’s pyramid. And what you see selling on eBay or Amazon are translations of these items into the tribe-dominated Cialdini 6 (or 7) principle triggers.

Being blonde, young, trim, athletic, rich, famous, etc. – all of these have definite products associated with them. But below all these states are very definite wants and needs – and between those and the products that represent them are the person’s feelings. Which are what all sales are based on – feelings.

My point in this actually goes back to what I’ve spend the bulk of this life on – personal improvement and self-growth. Recently, I’ve been studying marketing to see how selling this type stuff is done. And so, now I know how to sell almost anything – find out what stresses are hitting people’s lines and offer solutions. Stresses are tied into feelings – and they come from a person’s purpose, something seemingly dis-related to marketing.

The reason I’m telling you all this is to keep you up to speed with what I’ve been discovering.

Practically, with proper market research, starting with keywords and then finding what products are selling in that niche – you could conceivably sell sun-tan oil to Eskimo’s if you wanted.

It’s all sitting there in the keywords.

So, go ahead, compile your own list of 12,000 Google Adwords and see what comes up.

May you be just as pleasantly surprised.

Some additional posts of interest:

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Where Hype Rubber Hits the Laggard Road

where the rubber meets the road by theilr.

I’ve recently been proving all those Madison Avenue psych studies right. By studying Cialdini, Gladwell, and Godin it pretty much says that we are actually being herded along in our tribes quite nicely. Of course my secret weapon in this is to study Maslow and then see that these tribes are far from being destructive, but are actually heading toward a better future quality of life for all members.

Madison Avenue has been helping, in their odd way, to enable people to spend their way to a better material quality of living. To do this, they need to keep earning more money than they have before. And people get sold on getting their kids through college (another tribe grist-mill) and living better lives.

Our use of this, of course, is to learn not to become effect of every marketing frenzy that comes along – and to re-learn our own mental habits so that we can make our own independent decisions. But meanwhile, as we become the lighthouse on the rocky shore for other ships passing through this storm we call life – we have to use these data to help people find our routes to success. Not that they have to follow it exactly – you just want people to be able to find it and utilize it. And if they become independent thinkers as well – hey, we might wind up with a huge tribe of people who care for each other and do the right thing more instinctively. Better for all of us on this small single world we share.

OK, today I wanted to tell you more about this tribe stuff and some fascinating explanations of what we go through.

Gartner’s Hype Cycle, Bridging the Gap, and Fads Vs. Evolution

First off, there’s Gartner’s hype cycle – which of course is full of hype. But it tells us that not everything is a fad. Somethings make their way into society and do quite nicely after they are widely adopted. Beany Babies aren’t one. Fire and the Wheel apparently are.

Figure 1.First Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies, 1995

Someone else approached the same concept of technology adoption and talks about Bridging the Gap for early adopters, using the Bell Curve to show where early adopters, main-streamers, and laggards show up. Unfortunately, this model only says that demand dies out for every new adoption.

A really bright lad made a great point over at Trashmarketing when he superimposed the two graphs. Not all of his arguments follow, but it’s a great start.

He opines that hype is much greater during the early adopters phase and that the chatter drops off as the mainstreaming begins.

Gartner is talking about technology and adoption curves. Use of the bell curve and this gap theory is fine for fads – but says that people won’t continue using an item.

I think that we are somewhere in the middle of these two curves. (And you’ll see that the Long Tail curve also is represented there – if you look closely around “Late Majority and Laggards’)

But you’ll see what I mean when you look at Detroit’s growth and decline. Compare the Edsel and the Mustang and you can see where Ford missed the boat and made it. Social media is going through this same scene, as some platforms are bought up and drop off. Practically, Nasdaq and our current real-estate economy bubble burst (thanks to Bill Clinton, Barney Franks, ACORN and Chris Dodd for our US version = you can’t legislate morality or award unearned success…) show this same hype curve to some degree. At least for now.

And technology stocks as well as real-estate will always be with us – much as Jesus talked about the poor. So there is some combination of these to start making sense out of things. Sure, the hoop skirt never caught on, but the mini-skirt is still around – just not as hyped as before (but just as enticing to males).

How do we use this? Realize that your marketing efforts have to be way out ahead of everyone else. What you are looking for are early adopter evangelists and “sneezers” (per Gladwell’s Tipping Point) in order to help your product get critical mass. And be prepared for that Dip (Godin wrote a book about it – which I haven’t read).

But you are wanting to keep true to your main, core idea and purpose – both of yourself and of your business. You are there, actually, to help move society and this culture forward – to help it evolve. Don’t worry if your company and product get snapped up and incorporated into some behemoth current juggernaut. Turn it over and start your next one – you’ve now got your own financing as that start up just went mainstream. Time for your next start up

The main point is to keep on keeping on. Don’t listen to the Joneses – but figure out what they really need next and offer them a better solution than the one they have. Like the fries at MacDonald’s which formed the basis for a world-wide trend in fast-food. Or that entrepreneur who found out that selling everything for a little less made a lot more profit – Sam Walton created a very recession-proof business which has improved the lives of millions through his ideas like spoke-and-wheel distribution.

So: the sky is no limit, actually. Just get out there and create your tail off. Learn from the best and do better than them. With what we can now know in this Internet Age, anyone can retire from any online business you create several times over after creating their booms, not bubbles.

Some additional posts of interest:

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