How To Create Small Niches - That Attract Wealth!
|
 |
Visited: 1233 |
|
|
| 4.5/5.0 (2 votes total) |
|
|
|
|
by Roy J. Primm October 02, 2003
|
Adaptation
is one of the most widely used principles for creating powerful
niches. It's simply looking at what another successful business;
product, service, or person is doing, then finding a way to adapt
it to your own business, product, service, or self.
Henry
Ford did it when he adapted the assembly line concept to making
Model T Fords. The banking industry did it when they adapted the
drive-thru concept from the fast food industry. And the oil industry
did it when they adapted the self-service concept from the 7-Eleven
type outlets.
Because
of the success of this principle, it's getting harder and
harder to tell where an original idea came from. If an idea works
in one business or industry, the next step is for a business in
a different industry to test if it can work for them. This can create
a decisive advantage over their competitors.
The
main question to ask when applying the principle of adaptation is
"will object A work with object B?" That's the
formula.
The
simplest way to create a new idea is to do what others have already
done successfully. Next, see if you can adapt it to your own business,
product, or service. Show me a successful business, and I'll
show you a business that has adapted some aspect of what they do
from other places.
You
can find endless examples of products and services that use the
principle of adaptation. In fact, a fun exercise you can play is
to see how many ads you can find that apply adaptation to their
product or service.
For
instance, I just saw an ad telling the virtues of a time-released
deodorant. I can name at least 10 products that use the time-release
concept in their products. Such as time-released cold medicine,
hair shampoo, pain relief creams, diet pills, bug killer, plant
food and more. Notice how many products are covered by this short
list using the principle of adaptation to the word time-release.
Are
you starting to see how you can adapt a successful idea, old or
new, from another product, business, or industry to your own? If
you can, it could make the difference between success and failure.
It could propel you ahead of your competition almost overnight.
When
you apply the principle of adaptation, your using the natural process
of how your brain functions. That's why anyone can do this;
it doesn't require a college degree, or even a high school
diploma. All that's needed to succeed is your attention, along
with a pen and paper to write down the ideas your brain spits out
to you.
The
principle of adaptation is used in thousands of products and services
today. For example, Velcro is used as a fastener for clothing and
shoes; it's also being adapted to hundreds of other uses.
Velcro
can be used as picture hanger, as a book fastener, to secure items
on shelves in case of earthquakes (comes in handy if you live in
California). In fact, Velcro can be used on any object that needs
holding down, closing or hanging up. This is not a commercial for
Velcro, but a simple illustration to how the principle of adaptation
works.
Use
the principle of adaptation in your business and watch your profits
soar. |