Wow...I was actually looking at favorites before you mentioned it because the way I felt was that those were people that didn't have the money yet ...but when they did ...they may become a future buyer.
I disagree personally re favourites. I have hundreds of items favourited and not a single one I’m interested in buying. Only ideas for selling. I’m sure in general that more favourites are made by people buying than selling but I just wonder, how much more.
super quick straight to the point question and please if anybody has more experience than me and can answer do so, if there is a listing that is 2 months old but has already made 580 dollars im that time span without etsy ads, would it be considered as a potential trend or high demand product alert?
Niches are "doing" things: fishing, boating, skiing, cooking, bushwalking, and so on. BUT there is a fine line because it's easy to drift in to sports as a niche and skiing as a sub niche. It's not a science, but sport is way too big a "category" unless you are a massive sports business. Mugs, t shirts are not niches because there is nothing below them: they're not a category they are a "thing".
On the topics of niches, does an art shop count as a niche? Because I don't think really have a specific focus beyond the designs I make, and if I had to draw the same type of things over and over again I think I'd go nuts. This would be for POD.
The word "niche" is commonly pronounced as "neesh" in American English. However, in British English, it can be pronounced as "neesh" or "nitch." Both pronunciations are considered acceptable, but "neesh" is more widely used in American English.
what if I sell jewelry? personalized jewelry no. handmade jewelry. one niche could be brides jewelry? kids jewelry? natural stones jewelry? or this last one is too wide?
Can you please tell me if a holiday would be considered a Niche. I’m thinking so, then I guess you’d have to sub-niche right. Like let’s say you could have a Christmas shop and sell mugs, shirts, stockings and so on but you would need a theme maybe to stand out, but I guess you wouldn’t want to be too specific though, like moose Christmas would be limiting…Also, if you aimed to just make the most money in a few months it would work right? I’m concerned though that if you aren’t making consistent sales all year will Etsy even know you exist or would they stop recommending you? also would you wait until say October to even list things or just go ham right now leading up to the season. I would love some input, I’m so hung up on this stage. It’s like my boat is wedged in the canal and I just want to start sailing already! 😅
@@brandcreators Yes that does help because you’re saying an event could be considered a Niche then, because a wedding is an event, the same as Christmas..would you recommend though that if a person was to choose weddings they would sub niche, like country wedding maybe, or just keep it less specific?
So if I were selling jewelry, and specifically a saturated item liked seedbead beaded necklaces, or personalized beaded necklace, what is my niche? Are these the same niche or 2 different niches? Thanks!
@@brandcreators From my research, it says boho chic hippi types. Not as cut and dry as teacher t-shirts, teacher mug, or campers who like camping equipment, etc. Your video tutorial helps though. If I were to do it all over again, I would find my target audience first, and then find products to suit them.
even at 1.25 playback speed this wasn't condensed enough. too little information spread over a video that's longer than an hour. please avoid doing this.
ha ha ha, thanks for the lesson 😂 I'll consider it, but I hear it both ways and NICHE (NITCH) feels better for me and Marc Cuban says it the way we do 🙂
The video was informative, but I have one suggestion. If you use a niche as an example, you shouldn’t pick a controversial one like hunting. This tainted the video for me because I’m vegan and anti-hunting. Well, we know which niche I will not be going into!