Journal of An Info Marketing Pirate

If you're looking to find hot niche markets and what these markets are looking for as far as information products then this is the place for you. if your in the info marketing business and are looking for tips, techniques, and strategies for creating info products, finding info product ideas, and just plain old rantings of a crazy man, then this is also the place for you. Enjoy you scurvy dogs!

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Name:
Location: Baltimore, Maryland, United States

I'm just a guy trying to find my way in the world with the wind at my back and the sun in my face. I enjoy my business and enjoy life in general. I love my family and going to Disneyworld on a yearly basis.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

So, what kind of info product can we create.

We have the product and hopefully you get
the concept. It’s not rocket science.

Now let’s talk about some ideas for an
info product.

If it were me, I would throw everything into
the product. What I mean is not only would
I demo the camera but I would also throw in
a section about how to take professional
photos with a point and shoot camera, rate
accessories for the camera, and the good and bad
about the camera.

You could even broaden your market by putting
together a product on “how to unleash the full
potential of your Canon powershot” and use the 550
as your demo camera. Since there are different types
of powershots you are broadening your market.

I’m not a photographer but I would think that most
of the powershots have a lot of the same features.
This actually could be a second product without
doing a lot of extra work.

1st product- Getting the most out of your powershot 550
2ndproduct- unleashing the power of your powershot-
broader market type product.

I hope this gives you some ideas for your next info product.

Until next time…

John Kiel

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Base your info products on the seasons…

What do I mean?

It’s summer time right..at least here in the states.
So I fired up Amazon to see what’s selling for the summer.
One thing that came to mind was photography and cameras.
I figure more people are on vacations and are doing
more outdoor activities.

So I looked under cameras (Top seller category). The hot
Camera that is selling right now is The Canon PowerShot
550 7.1mp.

TIP: Notice that this is a physical product and not a
informational product. Look for hot physical products
and turn them into an info products by demonstrating
the physical product. You can do video demo or you can
snap off pictures and write a PDF report with
you doing a pictorial demo for the product.

Obviously you might not own a Powershot 550 but you
get the idea. You might have something in your home
that you can demo.

By the way, there is a guy who sells demo dvds of different
Cameras and is making a fortune on Ebay.

In the next issue, we’ll put the product together….

Bon Voyage,

John Kiel

Finding a niche market is simple. Finding a PROFITABLE niche market is a little harder, but it's still easy once you know what you are doing. Otherwise, you will end up like 90% of the other niche marketers out there who spend weeks or months on a niche market only to find out there is no money to be made there. Luckily I will reveal the secrets to finding a profitable niche market later in this article.

There are literally hundreds of ways to find niche markets. You can spend your time searching for popular keywords using tools such as Wordtracker, or you can walk around your local bookstore looking for common book topics. I've tried both of these options when I first got started in niche marketing, and let me tell you, I lost the most money when I picked a topic that way. Why? Well, it's simple. Just because people are searching for a keyword or phrase online or because there are a bunch of hard copy books on a topic, it doesn't mean those markets will buy your products online.

Have you ever heard the advice "Target a niche market you are passionate about"? What a bunch of garbage that piece of advice is. It doesn't matter how passionate you are about a topic, if people in that market don't buy products online, YOU WILL FAIL and fail miserably.

Here are 2 ways to find cash generating, starving niche markets that you have probably never seen before...

1) Ebay - the unlimited supply of niches. Everyone has heard of ebay, but few people think to go to ebay to find a niche market. You would have to be crazy NOT to use ebay to find a market. This is one of the only places you can go and see exactly what people are buying in real time. Here is how you do it.

First, go to ebay's main page at www.ebay.com. At the bottom of the left column of links, click on the link that says "All Categories". When you get to the next page, click on the link at the bottom right of the categories that says "See All Categories".

What you have just done is list every product currently for sale on ebay, but even more importantly, you can see HOW MANY products are for sale in each category. There are literally thousands of categories of niche topics right in front of your eyes, and you can see how popular each one is in just a couple clicks.

I just clicked "See all Antiques categories..." and I uncovered several hundred niche markets within the antiques category.

This is what niche marketing is all about. The category "Antiques" alone is too broad. If you go after this one, you will fail, however if you go after a sub niche such as "Asian antique bowls" or "Antique sterling silver flatware", you greatly increase your success rate.

Then, go to http://pages.ebay.com/sellercentral/whatshot.html and see just how flaming hot they are.

2) The next way to find a popular niche market is by going to the website www.meetup.com. From the homepage, there is a link that says "Browse All Interests". The website will then list hundreds of topics in which people signed up to be a part of a group. It also lists how many people joined each group, or "niche market" if you will. Who would have thought there would be a group of over a thousand people crazy about scooters? I found this niche market under the automotive category.

Using these two methods, you should be able to uncover hundreds of niche topics to begin targeting immediately. Once you find a niche market you want to build your business around, the next step would be to learn how to develop products these markets will knock each other over trying to buy.

Mark Kessler offers a FREE 34 page report where you'll "Discover The Most Simple, But Extremely Powerful System that reveals the 4 secret steps you need to achieve maximum niche profits!" your copy is at http://www.profitattractor.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mark_Kessler

How Keyword Research Can Help You Find & Dominate Niches
By Carole' Nickerson


eBooks, articles and infoproducts are some of the hottest selling and most requested products online. eBooks are one of the easiest things to sell because they require no shipping & can be accessed within minutes of placing an order. When the ebook boom hit it's peak, they started popping up everywhere and now that marketers have perfected their selling & design tactics, there's no stopping them.


But just as the dust began to settle on the ebook bonanza and pay-per-click search engines bubbled to the surface with keyword data, the word "niche" started infiltrating the internet marketing collective. As more tools became available for researching the search patterns and requests of web surfers, marketers took notice and saw one golden opportunity after another. We now know exactly what people want, and how many people want it.


With laser precision, we can now easily dominate some of the most profitable yet overlooked markets on the web - and there are thousands if not millions. This insight has fueled all kinds of infoproducts and the rush is on to get those ebooks and articles published before someone else steals your thunder!


But if you're still not sure what to write about or haven't been able to figure out the whole niche writing concept yet, then you don't need to look any further than keywords.


Step 1 - Keyword Research


The best tool for this is Wordtracker. I've yet to find another tool which offers such excellent search data. This service will let you see exactly what people are searching for, as well as helping you determine how much competition you might have for a product in the search engines. You can start with an existing topic, or you can go fishing! Since I like to write about all kinds of topics, I enjoy the challenge of locating niches with no competition and then dominating those searches. But how do you "fish" for low-competing keywords?


You have to think in terms of the types of searches performed for information. Here is a list of a few keyword combinations which work well:


- How To


- Learn How


- Learn About


- Information on


- Find info on


- Find info about


These are basic terms you would enter into Wordtracker's "Comprehensive" Search feature which is located in "Keyword Universe". You will end up with numerous results displaying things like "how to make a cool xanga", "how to tie a tie", "how to make paper snowflakes", etc. What is happening is that Wordtracker is using your base keyphrase and filling in the results.


To take this one step further, you can use wildcards to get more unique results, such as:


- How To * New


- Learn * Online


- Info * Dogs


Wordtracker will fill in the * with any number of keyword strings that people are searching for, such as "How to Write a Newspaper Column" and "Info on northern inuit dogs".


Don't assume the results are no good just because the keyword or phrase shows a low count for how many searches are performed. The Wordtracker database uses information from search engines which get peanut traffic compared to Google or MSN. You might be surprised when you take the keyphrase, plug it into Overture and see that while Wordtracker displays only 10 searches within a 120-day period, Overture reports 300 searches every month. It's about percentages and this is probably what a lot of people overlook.


Here's another way of looking at it:


If search engine A gets 2% of all internet traffic, and a keyword in it's database reports 10 requests in a month, but search engine B gets 50% of all internet traffic, then you can assume that the same keyword is actually getting more requests than just 10 searches per month. So with that said, it's important to put keyword reports into perspective by looking at the numbers behind the numbers.


Step 2 - Competition Research


Wordtracker has a great feature which allows you to see which keywords have high and low competition in the search engines. Obviously, you want the low competing phrases for faster, more tangible visibility. It is important to learn how to use this research so that you can use it effectively. Wordtracker offers great tutorials you'll be able to digest in just minutes.


For example, the keyphrase "headache remedy news and information" has only 38 sites competing in Google's index. I would see this as an excellent target because it has many requests and would be easy to dominate. Immediately I see potential for products such as:


- An ebook about headache remedies


- An article about headache remedies (Easy Adsense Revenue)


- A forum, newsletter subscription (Easy Adsense Revenue)


- An intro page to an affiliate program


- All of the above!


Step 3 - Get Busy!


Now that you know how to use basic keyword research to locate niche ideas and dominate search engine results, you gotta get busy and start writing those ebooks and articles. You can choose to do one or both, offer ebooks for free or for sale. It really all depends on the topic you are focusing on. The obvious way to know which format is best is to look at how much content can be realistically written on a topic.


One interesting strategy to consider is writing an ebook or group of articles where your keyphrase and keyword research determines most of the categories. For example, let's say you find 10 great low-competing keyphrases like:


- "How to teach my hamster to fetch"


- "How to get my hamster potty-trained"


- "How to train my hamster to speak Spanish"


- "How to train my hamster to do my taxes"


- etc.


You get the point, right? You're basically just creating categories based on what people want. This way you're reaching a larger audience and getting even more search engine exposure.


Carole Nickerson has been a web developer and internet marketer since 1998. Visit http://web.thenetter.com for more free articles, tips and software.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Carole_Nickerson
http://EzineArticles.com/?How-Keyword-Research-Can-Help-You-Find-and-Dominate-Niches&id=121422