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In Your Place

How to tell if your start-up idea is based on a niche, a trend or just a fad that will fizzle
October 1, 2003
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/64644

Starting a niche business--one focusing on a small, underserved piece of a market--is often key to entrepreneurial success. But how do you identify your niche? Here are some terms to understand:

The key to correctly identifying a niche lies in understanding the customer base that forms it, the unique products and services that can be delivered to it, and the underlying trends that are likely to support and build it in the long run. Tennis provides a good example of the dynamics of niche markets. Remember tennis clothes and jogging suits? In the 1970s, people--particularly middle-aged people--wore jogging suits everywhere. Tennis and other athletic gear became a trend in the '70s, which marked a lifestyle change as midlifers went on an exercise kick. Parts of this trend did become marketable lifestyle changes, served by health clubs, spas and so forth. But for the purveyors of tennis wear, the apparent lifestyle change failed to give lasting lift, and tennis is once again more of a niche market.


Excerpted from Niche and Grow Rich: Practical Ways of Turning Your Ideas Into a Business(Entrepreneur Press) by Jennifer Basye Sander and Peter Sander