Defining Your Niche as a Virtual Assistant
Niche (n)
a. A situation or activity specially suited to a person's
interests, abilities, or nature.
b. A special area of demand for a product or service.
Niching (tr.v.)
To place in a niche.
As a Virtual Assistant (VA), you know about filling a niche
because you are already doing it by being a VA. You cater to
the administrative, technical, creative, and financial needs of
your clients by assisting them virtually. This itself is a
niche.
If you’re like many entrepreneurs when first starting in
business, you took every job that came along. You did it from a
place of necessity. Even if you thought yours was the
exception, no company can meet every need of every client
throughout the life of a business. There is no doubt, however,
that this approach serves us well in the beginning!
If you are an exceptional entrepreneur who has developed a
reputation of excellence in everything you do, eventually you
will need to make important decisions about the future of your
company because you have more business than you are able to
manage. What a dilemma! You are no longer in a place where you
must accept work because it provides revenue. Your hard work
has brought you to where you have the opportunity to
pick-and-choose your clients from this point forward. What a
thrill to redefine your growing business!
This is the perfect time not only to increase your fees, but
also to decide on the specific industry or industries and
type(s) of clients you most want to serve. This is known as
niching.
By narrowing your focus, you:
• have the opportunity to work with people in the industry
of your choice.
• have inside exposure to different aspects/news of the
industry from the perspective/experience of your clients.
• can position yourself as the VA expert within your
industry and use this to market your services, e.g. “We cater
to the ____ industry and are the first and only ones to do so.
We are best equipped to meet your needs because we know the
industry from the inside out!”
• will have the passion and tenacity on those days when you
question your sanity and wonder if you truly have what it takes
to be a VA. You will be serving an industry you love and that
will carry you to your next new client/task.
• keep your focus on those clients/markets that most
interest you and will continue to interest you over the life of
your business.
• are maintaining a concentrated marketing/advertising focus
instead of diluting your efforts by trying to meet every need
of every client in every field.
• increase your ability to get an hourly rate that is higher
than a VA business with no niche focus. If you have insider
knowledge of a specific industry, your expertise is more
valuable and therefore, you can charge more for your
services.
Initially, you may think that you risk losing business
because you are niching yourself too narrowly. However, if your
focus is catering to a specific industry and all your marketing
efforts are placed there, you will soon reap the rewards of
clients who come only from your chosen industry . . . an
industry you love and want to cater to anyway! You will have
more business than you’ll be able to manage and can soon raise
your rates again!
Okay, now that you’ve decided you want to niche tighter, you
may be asking yourself how to go about choosing an
industry.
A key factor in deciding on a specific industry is to spend
a few hours assessing your own interests, work style, and
personality characteristics. With at least an hour of
uninterrupted time set aside for this specific task, use a
blank sheet of paper and answer the following questions:
1. What are my hobbies?
2. What are other areas of interest that are not yet
hobbies? What passions have I not had the time to explore?
3. Which existing clients bring me the most joy? Why? In
which industries do they work?
4. What are the work and personality characteristics of my
ideal client?
In answering these questions thoughtfully, you will begin to
see patterns emerge. These patterns will offer clues about
which industries to further investigate as possible options for
your new focus.
Now that you are thinking more about focused niching, it is
a perfect time to go through your list of services and cut out
the ones that:
• you don’t love
• aren’t lucrative
• aren’t requested often enough to warrant keeping them on
your list of services
These points will move you closer to being in full alignment
with providing the services that you most enjoy! You are
creating a vacuum . . . an open space that will be filled with
dream clients in your desired industry! How does that sound?
Think about it. If your current circumstance is filled with an
unfocused direction, clients coming in from fields that hold no
interest for you, and old service offerings, it is your duty to
yourself and the life of your business to draw in a situation
that is a much better match.
Okay, so you have chosen your niche market, developed a new
plan of how to market your VA services, cut out services that
no longer play a part in your new direction, and it occurs to
you to ask the question: What do I do with my existing clients
who are not in the industry on which I have decided to
focus?
Great question! By all means, keep them! They are one of the
reasons you are in the place to be able to take this important
step. And no doubt, they will continue to be excellent clients
and make referrals based on your well-established
relationship.
The primary focus is that NEW clients come from the industry
you have decided is the best match for the person/business you
are now.
In following these guidelines, you will find your work
becoming more and more fulfilling because your efforts truly
meet the needs of those who most interest you! Only with a
narrowed market concentration, can you truly meet the specific
needs of your clients.
Happy niching!
by Charlon Bobo, Muse works™ ©
2005
All rights reserved. Charlon Bobo is the
President of Muse works™, a dynamic trend-setting Virtual
Assistant company in Southern California that caters to the
niche needs of entrepreneurs in the handmade beauty industry.
To learn more about Muse works™, please visit Muse works™
and http://www.museworks.blogspot.com.
You may contact Charlon at 805.405.4944 and via e-mail
at charlon@museworks.org.
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