You should be able to narrow this person down pretty specifically. Your final answer might look something like, “My ideal buyer is 45 – 65 years old with an income upward of $100,000 per year. Hehas some experience with art, having purchased a few pieces before but is now looking to add to hiscollection and exploring the work of artists that he admires. He is an avid golfer, enjoys bright colors,and also owns a pack of doberman pinschers.” If you're a painter who does a lot of dog portraits, this person might be an ideal client!I told Dave & Alexis that I would really love to work with artists, since I am an actor and my wife is a painter, and I really love creative people. I believe that the Starving Artist mentality that so many artistshave is just wrong and a total myth. They told me I should bill myself as someone who works withartists and I was like, “But wait, I can work with anyone. What I know can be applied to any business.I'll lose a bunch of customers!”You, as an artist, are probably thinking the same thing right now. “If I focus on one group of buyers, Icould lose all the rest.” I'm going to show you how that's exactly the opposite of what will happen.When you start focusing on your ideal client, your voice begins to be more authentic to them. If I starttelling artists that I am also an artist, and that I focus on helping artists learn about online marketing,that has a lot more impact than me just walking up to any person and saying, “Hey I'm an Internetmarketing consultant. Hire me.”I see artists do this all of the time. They put their work out at a fair or on a website with no thought towho is going to be in the audience. They show their work where all of the other artists show, they dowhat all of the other artists do. The really successful artists put a little more thought into it.As an artist, this can take many forms. Instead of saying, “I'm a painter” or even, “I'm an oil painter,” a portrait artist might say that you “paint people's dreams” or that you “create paintings that capture theessence of childhood.” Whatever gets you really fired up and passionate when you're painting, that'swhat you should do. Think about people like Thomas Kinkade. As much as artists love to hate him,everyone knows him as what? Right, the Painter of Light. Your USP should be simple and direct. Mineis right at the top of the Web site – Dispelling the Starving Artist Myth.Of course, people will ask what that means, because it's a little vague, right? That's exactly what youwant to have happen. Your USP should be interesting enough that people want more information. Seehow this works?
“Hi, I'm Cory. What do you do?”“Hey, I'm Eleatta, I paint people's dreams.”“Whoa, really? What does that mean? How do you do that?”
Imagine where this conversation goes next...
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