When I ask a small business owner or a mumpreneur: “Who is your target market?”, I hear “women” or “everybody”. “My services will benefit everybody.”
Sounds good, but how do you talk to “everybody”?
- Where is “everybody” so that you can find them to inform them about your services?
- What language uses “everybody”?
- What are “everybody’s” biggest fears?
- How will you address “everybody’s” problems?
- “How does “everybody” learn best to understand your teachings?
- Does “everybody” respond to the same message in the same way?
You get the gist?
So, identifying your unique target market and your ideal kind of clients is of utmost importance because only if you know who they are, you are able to customize your service and support to them and their unique needs and situations. And – you can actually find (locate) them and tell them about what you do!
What’s the Problem?
Without a problem your services are not needed in the lives of your potential clients. People don’t buy services or goods that don’t fill a need, whatever need that may be.
There is a feeling behind a purchase decision and the hope that it will give the person peace of mind, excitement, happiness, beauty, satisfaction, fulfillment, youth, love, the solution to a problem or status. These are only some of the common needs and wants people have. Which one do you help solving and fulfilling?
If you only think about what your skills are and what services you can offer without considering why anybody would want what you offer, you have no chances of succeeding in an online business.
So, make some notes of what problem you are solving for your potential clients.
- What keeps them up at night? Why do they go searching for you? Why do they look at your website?
- Why do they crave to find someone who offers your services?
- What is their problem right now?
- What exactly is your business offering to its target market? What do people gain?
- People ask this question: WHAT IS IN IT FOR ME?
Tarket (= specific target market)
Lorrie Morgan-Ferrero, an internationally renowned copywriter who teaches entrepreneurs about using the right language to target women audiences, introduced the term tarket, which is a representative PERSON (real or imagined) for your target market.
Task:
Please describe one person you imagine or know who is your ideal client/customer. Please do this in depth, including a name, age, what this person is doing professionally, how many children, where does he/she live, how and where does he/she spend his/her money, how she/he looks like, what hobbies she/he has, pets, type of household, income, troubles, needs, language used (formal, informal, slang). Find a photo of a person who fits the description and pin it on your vision board to remember your tarket when you are writing a salesletter to him/her! Once you have your TARKET, hang it on the pinboard in your office to always have it in your sight when you write a salesletter or website content.
- Consider the age of your tarket
- gender
- marital status
- children
- education
- job
- pets
- fitness level
- physical appearance
- style
- religion
- what kind of home
- area/suburb they live in
- car
- type of holidays and frequency
- spending habits
- entertainment habits
- money management
- income
- recreation
- hobbies
- favorite shows
- books
- magazines
- dreams
- hopes for the future
- emotional or physical injuries
- disappointments
- experiences
- values
- health
- priorities in life
- decision making
- jargon
- language they use
- friends
- family
- technical knowledge
- what do they want out of life?
For more information about “tarket” check out Lorrie Morgan-Ferrero’s website, http://www.redhotcopy.com as Lorrie is the genius behind the term “Tarket”and the Shefactor Bootcamp – copywriting for women.
If you have questions about this article, please add them to the comment underneath.



Before ramping up your marketing when sales are disappointing, take a step back and ask yourself, “Do I know what my market really, really wants?” Being able to answer that question is the key to growing your business. By focusing on what people want, rather than on what you hope to sell them, you can begin to see the kind of success you desire.
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