When we think of coaching, we think of it on a grand scale—for example, helping someone to turn their entire life around or to start and run a brand new business from scratch.
But those are just two types of coaching, not what we’ll discuss here.
When you get into online marketing, what is one of the first pieces of advice you receive? To choose a particular niche and then narrow that niche down to a profitable target market, you can help.
Coaching can work the same way. Instead of trying to be all things to all people or to teach someone every facet and nuance of starting a business from scratch, why not coach them on that one thing you are very, very good at
Maybe you’re excellent at writing or at getting ghostwriting assignments. Perhaps you are terrific at website building, SEO, or getting traffic.
Or maybe your specialty has nothing to do with online marketing, but instead, you are a master at meditation, organizing your life, prioritizing, or dealing with ADHD. There are infinite possibilities. And if you think about it for a moment, you will realize that you are good at something others want to learn.
By getting so specific, you can become a very successful coach.
Maybe you are a master at deciphering a holy book. Or you are terrific at helping people over 50 loose weight and get fit. Maybe you’re excellent at helping people find their sense of direction in life and discovering what they are meant to do. Or perhaps you can help someone present their business in a way that makes it stand apart from all others. The list is endless.
What skills do you have? Do you want to share them with others? Would you enjoy honing those skills even more as you teach them? Because when you become a coach, a side benefit is you become even more skilled and proficient in your subject. You get better and better at teaching it. And thus, you can charge more and more as you progress and get positive testimonials from your clients.
Getting back to the online marketing realm, forget about trying to coach a new marketer into building their 6 figure business and instead focus on just one aspect, such as adding 1,000 subscribers a week to their list, or on creating great content, or using social media to become a star in their niche.
There are tremendous gaps in the coaching realm, and if you can fill one of those gaps, you can get more clients than you can handle.
To do: Once you have chosen your coaching niche, you might create a simple information product that sells for a low price of perhaps $10 or $25. Then offer your coaching as the upsell.
Write guest posts and do interviews to talk about your specialty. Give lots of good info, but clarify that you can coach them if they don’t want to do it alone. Please spread the word, and those who need your coaching will step up to claim a spot before they all disappear.
Somebody can do coaching through Skype and email; you can coach anyone anywhere.
And once you get good at teaching your specialty, you can create a big-ticket course that teaches everything you would teach a coaching client. You can then sell this course for $100 to $1,000 as an alternative to your coaching services.
Don’t dismiss this concept, thinking that you have nothing to offer. Worst-case scenario, you might need to improve your skill before you start coaching. But one week of concentrated study can make you more of an expert on your topic than 99.9% of the people on the planet.
You can do this. You can become a coach. And it’s as simple as doing what every good marketer does – finding your specialty that appeals to a small but zealous segment of the market who want what you offer.
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