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"The Brutal Truth About Choosing a Niche in Coaching"

Jan 30, 2024

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The Brutal Truth About Choosing a Niche in Coaching

Imagine stepping into a huge marketplace, filled to the brim with vendors trying to sell their products. Now picture yourself as a vendor, screaming at the top of your lungs amongst this commotion, trying to get everyone to buy what you’re selling. Feels exhausting, doesn’t it? That's what you're doing when you refuse to choose a niche as a coach.

Often, coaches believe that having a broad focus will enable them to help a wider range of clients. The truth, however, is quite the contrary.

Determining your niche is imperative to your success as a coach. Let's delve into the reasons why.

1. You Become 'Somebody’ Rather Than ‘Nobody’

Choosing a niche allows you to tailor your message, develop precise marketing strategies, and create targeted programs for a specific group of people. Without a well-defined niche, you become a 'generalist' in a sea of coaches, losing your chance to truly stand out.

2. Paves the Way for Expertise

Becoming a master in a specific area enables you to not just coach, but provide value-augmented coaching. This value is derived from years of experience, learning, and understanding of a particular niche.

3. Helps in Gaining Clients’ Trust

With niche mastery comes trust. When clients see you as an expert in the area they need help with, they are more likely to choose you over a coach who has a broad (and generic) understanding of every area.

4. It's Easier to Market and Sell

Marketing to everyone is marketing to no one. If you know your target audience, you can create tailored content, promotional strategies, and solutions that resonate with them. Not only do you catch their attention — you hold it.

5. You Achieve Better Results

By focusing on one specific niche and learning everything within that realm, you will yield better results for your clients. Better results mean happy clients, and happy clients mean solid referrals and good business growth.


Committing to a niche can feel scary. It means saying no to certain potential clients and opportunities. But remember, trying to talk to everyone often results in connecting with no one. By choosing a clear and specific niche, you make it easier for your ideal clients to find you, trust you and invest in your coaching.

Conveying your unique value, understanding, and area of focus becomes a beacon guiding them through the noisy marketplace and straight to your door. That’s the brutal truth about choosing a niche in coaching – it's not just an option, it's a necessity.

Of course! Here is a counter-argument


Playing Devil’s Advocate: The Benefits of Not Choosing a Niche in Coaching

Defining a niche is often suggested as an essential step for a coaching career but, in some cases, the beauty of coaching lies in its adaptability across various contexts. So, what about not choosing a niche? Although this approach goes against conventional wisdom, there are certain situations where not choosing a niche could potentially have its benefits.

1. Greater Master of Adaptability

A generalist coach won't be restricted to a particular niche. Their wide range of knowledge and techniques can be adapted to almost any situation or client requirement. This adaptability allows them to facilitate growth and change across different areas of an individual's life or various organizational settings.

2. Wider Opportunity for Career Exploration

Being niche-less offers more room for exploration, especially if you're new to coaching. This broad scope can help you to identify areas you might not have initially considered and expose you to the full spectrum of coaching opportunities out there. This breadth of experience can be valuable early in your coaching journey.

3. Increased Capacity for Building Transferable Skills

Without a niche, coaches can acquire and develop a broad set of skills that can be used across various fields and disciplines. For example, communication, empathy, patience, creativity, problem-solving, motivational skills, etc., can be effectively transferred and applied to various domains, making the coach multifaceted in their approach.

4. Offering a Holistic Approach

Not having a specific niche enables coaches to maintain a holistic view over their client's situations. Some clients may seek support in multiple areas of their life, and being "niche-less" allows a coach to support their client's growth more comprehensively.

It's important to note, however, that while avoiding a niche can offer the above advantages, it may make it difficult to stand out in a crowded marketplace and may hinder the ability to deeply connect with a specific set of clients. Your tribe, your prospective clients might prefer specialists in their specific area of need, so coaches who spread themselves too thinly might face challenges in validating their all-around expertise.

So, the decision to specialise or not requires careful reflection on your career aspirations, personal interests, target client base, market demand, and the value proposition you intend to offer.

Remember - whether you're a generalist or a specialist, the goal is always to create value for your clients. Who you are being and how it aligns with who you are, your authenticity is ultimately what matters once you have the clients in front of you. 

But if you are struggling, like I did in the beginning then what have you got to lose by choosing a niche, building a reputation, gaining referrals from other coaches and building your own warm audience, who know like and trust you.

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