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We've just finished several months of development on a new software
product here at Worldwide Brands, Inc., and it's now available to you as a FREE
TRIAL. I'm very anxious to tell you about it; I'm sure you'll be as excited
about it as we are. :o) (I know I wish I'd thought of it first... Donna :-)
First, though, I'd like to tell you why we spent all that time and
energy, working with many very successful ECommerce experts, to develop this new
software.
For years now, through all the time I've been working in and writing
about ECommerce, I've always come across one single question far more often than
any other. It's a question everybody has, and nobody seems to be able to
answer easily. What's the question?
"What should I sell on the Internet?"
People email us and ask us that all the time. People call us and ask us
where they can find out how to make that decision. I myself have struggled with
it many times. Lots of people know what products they want to sell
Online. Nobody really knows ahead of time if those products stand a
chance of making you money.
If you really want to know the answer to that question, your only choice
is research, and lots of it. Based on years of experience,
here's the basic process that we and many other successful Online Retailers
would go through every time we try to decide on a new product to sell on the
Internet.
If I'm going to be a food vendor at a baseball game, what
should I sell there? I may really like salted peanuts. Maybe I get up every
morning and eat salted peanuts for breakfast, and drink a salted peanut flavor
Power Drink. Than I have a salted peanut sandwich for lunch, and two processed
salted peanut patties on a bun for dinner. So, I really love salted
peanuts, know a lot about them, and think they're the greatest thing in the
world.
Does that mean that I should sell salted peanuts at that
baseball game? Well, it's something that I know people like to eat at
baseball games. I know people do buy them at baseball games. However,
there are things I don't know yet.
For example, how many people at that particular game are
likely to want to buy salted peanuts?
Generally, salted peanuts are a good bet to sell at a baseball
game. However, I may not know the area very well. If I'm a traveling food
vendor, following sports seasons through the country in different states and
different kinds of weather, salted peanuts may not always be a good
idea.
Salted peanuts are pretty good when they're fresh and slightly
oily. During the summer, people just eat them up left and right at baseball
games. During cold weather, though, they tend to get more dry and crunchy, and
the salt doesn't stick to them very well because the oil gets hard. If it's cold
enough, eating salted peanuts outside can be a bit like chewing gravel.
Yech!
Weather isn't the only problem. If it turns out that the game
I'm going to sell at is a special event to raise money for the Worldwide Allergy
Sufferer's Foundation, I will probably find that many people there might have an
allergy to peanuts of any kind! That means that there is a much lower demand for
my product than I'd like.
So, where is the game I'm going to be selling at? Is it a
cold-weather game? Who's sponsoring it? Are there likely to be many people there
who can't eat salted peanuts?
These same ideas, silly as some of them might sound, apply
to Internet Sales as well. After all, the Internet is just another
place to sell products. The basic concept of Demand is the same there as it is
anywhere else, and has been for all time. If there aren't enough people who want
it, there's no profit in selling it!
When we at Worldwide Brands, Inc., want to know what the
Demand on the 'Net is for a product, we spend many hours, and sometimes days,
researching.
To find out what the Demand for something is, we need to find
out how many people are searching for it in the Search
Engines.
We try to find out how many people are using those Search
Engines to look for the product we want to sell, then we categorize that
information according to the different search term variations people
use.
For example, if someone were searching for a place on the
Internet to buy salted peanuts, they might use the search term "peanuts, lightly
salted", or the search term "salted peanuts", or many other variations. We have
to try to think of what those variations might be, and find out what the Demand
is for each of them. Overall, we're looking for numbers on just how many people
are searching for our product using different search terms. The more people who
are searching for it, the higher the Demand.
Once we have those numbers, we go on to the next part of our
research.
So, what else do I need to know if I want to sell salted
peanuts at a baseball game?
Well, I've done my Demand research. I know that this
particular game will be a summer game, so the peanuts won't get cold and
crunchy. So, I know I have a good Demand for the product.
Now, I need to know what my Competition will be like. Before I
pack up my peanuts and go to that game, don't you think I should try to find out
how many other vendors I will be competing against?
If there are fifty other vendors in the stands selling salted
peanuts, I do not want to be 'salted peanut vendor number
fifty-one'!
So, I'm going to do some more research. I'm going to contact
the ballpark's management office, and try to find out how many of the vendors at
the ballpark are planning on selling salted peanuts. They may not know exactly,
but they'll have an idea. If there are fifty other vendors selling salted
peanuts, I'm going to ask how many vendors are selling lemonade. I may
not like lemonade. Maybe the taste of it makes my face scrunch up and look
goofy, and the sugar gives me the squeaking jitters.
However, if there are only five other vendors selling
lemonade, I'm going to screw together my courage and darned well sell
lemonade at that ballpark instead of salted peanuts. Knowing salted peanuts
as well as I do, I know there are going to be a lot of thirsty people there,
with fifty salted peanut vendors roaming around.
Again, the internet is the same way. The 'Net is just another place to
sell things, and if there are too many people selling the same things, nobody
makes any money on them. That's what we're here for, after all, right?
We're in this ECommerce thing to make money, not to satisfy our personal
taste.
Once again, when we at Worldwide Brands, Inc., want to know
what our Competition is for a new product, we spend many hours, and sometimes
days, researching on the Internet.
What are we looking for? When we look for our
Competition, we know that there are two basic ways that people sell on
the Internet. They use Internet Stores, and they use Auctions. So, we need to
look at both.
We start with a dedicated Internet Store shopping site with a
high degree of popularity; Yahoo Shopping. We spend hours in there, acting like
a customer, using different search terms to search on the product we want to
sell. We find out how many Stores sell only that exact product, how many sell
products similar to it, and how many sell the exact product and others
similar to it. We look at which Stores have higher popularity, and which of
those feature our potential product more prominently than others.
We break all those numbers out into categories, and write all
that information down. Then we go to the next part of our
research.
Salted peanuts are a bit of a "gimme" in this area. Everybody
knows what they are, and most people like them. On the Internet, though, it's
important to find out what the general level of knowledge and interest is for a
product before trying to sell it.
Here at Worldwide Brands, Inc., we go out to one of the big
Search Engines, and search for our product again under many search terms. This
time, though, we do it not as a customer, but as someone interested in
information about the product. Kind of like the difference between
wanting to buy a package of salted peanuts, and wanting to write a
school report about how they are grown and packaged.
General interest in a product helps to gauge where our Demand
and Competition numbers fall into the big picture.
For example, if there isn't much Demand for a product, and
there isn't much Competition, it would seem that it might not be a good seller.
You can't sell something to people if they're not out there looking to buy it.
If there aren't many people out there trying to sell it, either, then it's
probably not a good idea.
However, if there is a lot of General Interest, it may
be that we've stumbled across the Holy Grail of Internet Retail research; the
fabled Untapped Product Market!
That's rare, but it happens. People find Untapped Markets, and
begin to exploit them through associative advertising (advertise a more common,
related product to lead people to a new one).
However, as I said, the more common use for General Interest
information is to help us understand what our Demand and Competition numbers
mean.
Once we have General Interest numbers, we go to the next part
of our research.
Let's say that based on my research so far, I think I can make
a good business out of selling salted peanuts. I'm not just going to sell them
at baseball games, either. I decide I want to place an ad in my local Yellow
Pages, and sell salted peanuts to a lot more people.
Should I just jot a few words down, and send them off to the
Yellow Pages Advertising Office?
Of course not. My research is still not complete. I'm
going to need to see how many other people are advertising my product in the
Yellow Pages. If there are a good number of them doing so, it may mean that it's
a good product to get into. And if it is a good product to get into, I'm
going to want to see what others are doing with their ads to make them
successful.
So, I grab a copy of the Yellow Pages, and turn to the "P"
section. Lo and behold, I find ads for salted peanuts. Some are big, some are
small. Some are cheesy, and some are pretty interesting. I don't think there are
too many ads to compete against there, so I decide to run an ad. I'm
going to study the best elements from my competitor's ads, and create a better
one than any of them.
Same thing on the Internet. If you're going to sell a
product Online, you're going to have to advertise it in some way or another.
Today, Pay Per Click Search Engines are the dominant force in Internet product
Advertising.
So, here at Worldwide Brands, Inc., we hit the three most
influential Pay Per Click Search Engines; Overture, Google, and Findwhat. That's
where we begin our research.
Once again, we act like a customer. We use as many search
terms as we can think of to search for the product we think we want to sell.
What we're looking for here is twofold:
The number of other people Advertising the product gives us a
feel for whether the product is overexposed. If there is too much Advertising,
that means too much Competition, which is not a good thing.
The way other people's ads look and what they say gives us
ideas as to what our own Advertising could say if we decide to sell the
product. We spend hours at a time gathering links to other Internet Retailers'
ads for the product, then looking them over, comparing them and making our
choices as to which ones we like best. Then we combine the kinds of elements we
like from all of them, and create our own unique Advertising, hopefully better
than any of the others.
Finally, we move to the last phase of the research
process.
The Analysis process is not easy, nor is it pretty! It
involves spreadsheets and charts and graphs and links and lots of time, cups of
coffee, bleary eyes and late nights.
We have to look at all of the data we collected on Demand,
Competition, and Advertising, and make a decision as to how they all balance
out.
Here are some of the issues to consider:
-
Not enough Demand (as compared to Competition) means not
enough people are going to buy.
-
Too much Competition (as compared to Demand) means not enough
of a profit to go around.
-
Too much Advertising drives up the price of Pay Per Click ads,
and increases Competition as well.
-
Not enough General Interest, combined with a low Demand, means
that there may not be a good market even if there is some Competition out there
trying to make the sales.
Those are just some of the things we consider. Overall, we
compare all the various Demand, Competition, Advertising and General Interest
numbers against each other, and use our own unique formula to make sense of it
all.
Still with me? I know it's taking a long time to get to the
point, but it's important that you understand the research process
first!
Here's the good part of the story.
Several months ago, we were batting ideas around with Jon
Wittwer, developer of the Market Matrix. Jon was telling us that he had based
his Excel Spreadsheet-driven Market Matrix partly on information he read on our
site. Funny how these things work. :o)
Jon's Market Matrix gathers all that detailed research
information we talked about above automatically, by searching the
Internet. We thought that was great. However, it still didn't complete the
research process for us. We still had to manually sift through all
that data and apply the unique research formula we use, in order to
make sense out of all that information.
Somewhere along the line, a light bulb magically appeared
above our collective heads. We said, what if we could combine some of the
functions of Jon's Market Matrix with our own unique research formula, and build
the whole thing into a computer program?
Great things can happen in the course of a phone call and a
cup of coffee, folks. Believe it. :o)
We had just realized that we could completely automate
this entire time-consuming manual research process!
With Jon's blessing, we forged ahead into developing that
software. Well, it took months to do that, as I said. Our Programming expert,
who is the most good-natured human being I have ever met, worked so long and so
hard that he almost got annoyed once! That was a first. :o) My Business
Partners, myself, and our Research Team also put in a great deal of time and
effort into combining automated information-gathering techniques, and our own
research formula, into a single piece of software.
Finally, we created The Market Research Wizard.
(Trumpets sound; the crowd goes wild!)
The Market Research Wizard does in minutes
what it used to take hours, or even days, to do.
- It's a computer program in which you can type a couple of
words describing the product you want to sell, and less than a minute later,
gives you an actual Analysis (from 0% to 100%) of that product's chances of
success on the Internet.
- It connects to the Internet and automatically collects all
the information I talked about above, usually in less than a minute.
Demand, Competition, Advertising, and General Interest. Then, it uses our own
unique formula (the one that I said we use ourselves, to make sense of all that
data) and generates an instant Analysis.
- That's not all, either. It not only tells you how much Demand
there is for the product you want to sell; it tells you what key words you
should use to market that product if you decide to do so.
- It not only tells you how much Competition you have; it tells
you where your Competition is, so you can decide if the product is better
marketed in an Internet Store, or an Auction.
- It not only tells you who your competing Advertisers are, it
gives you clickable links to their ads, so you can study and
out-Advertise the other guys.
- It also allows you to export all your instantly generated
research information to any Spreadsheet program, print your research, recall all
your past research on any product, and more.
All in just minutes.
Now, remember what we say all throughout our web site and
published information, folks. There is no magic bullet! The success of
your business depends on many things, and proper research is just one of those
things.
However, if you can take a process that you're not sure how to
do properly, and have it done for you, the right way, you're
greatly increasing your chances of success.
Along the same lines, if you can take a process that normally
takes hours or days to do manually, and do it in minutes, you're
gaining yourself a heckuva lot of time that can be used to concentrate on the
rest of your business!
If you've subscribed to our Newsletter for any length of time,
and you've been through our site and free information, you know that we are not
into making heavy sales pitches. That's why this Newsletter goes to such great
lengths to describe the manual process that we've used in the past to do our
product research.
So, if you like, you can try the manual research process that
I described above.
Or, better still, you can go right now, and download a
FREE TRIAL of our new Market Research Wizard. It won't cost a cent
to try it, and we know it will save you a tremendous amount of time,
while helping your business succeed.
Chris Malta
CEO
Worldwide Brands, Inc.
& Donna Maher
CEO/DM Software Solutions
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