|
Absolute Beginner's Guide to Creating AdSense Income Websites the RIGHT way! Step By Step Success Formula. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
Home | Email | About Us | Contact | Policies | Advertise | Exchange Links | Submit |
||||
|
|
||||
|
|
Finding Your Niche I get so sick of reading instructions to start with a keyword search before you even decide what you want to do! The theory is flawed, and the place to start is NOT with research, but with YOU! You cannot produce a quality website on a topic which you are not highly familiar. You can't do that even if you use someone else's content, because you won't know what is good content, and what is bad. Someone once said that there is a 90/10 rule. 90% of the stuff available for using as content is pure trash. 10% of it is good, but only a small portion of that 10% is going to be good for YOUR site - that is, if you want to produce a good one! Never mistake, quality is EVERYTHING! So to produce good quality, you have to be able to recognize the 10%, and then to target the small bit of that which is perfect for your winning site. Ok, so the first thing you have to do is to research YOU. Most people are really astonished when they start to think about it, by how much they really DO know. You don't have to be a worldwide expert, but you do have to be competent in the topic. Start with a brainstorm... well, a drizzle if that is all you can muster! Get out paper and pencil, or pull up a word processing document (or if you use an organizer, pull out that). Start listing things you have any degree of familiarity with, passion for, enjoyment of, understanding of, etc. For me, the list looks like this:
When someone asks me, what do I know about, I generally tell them computers, websites, and online business - or kids! But when I sit down to brainstorm what I know enough about to teach someone else, or what I enjoy doing that I would like to share, I can come up with all sorts of things. Some of them are just little blips, but enough to build a site around. Others are enough to build an entire empire on if I so chose! The list could be much longer than it is, but you can see from that list that I have a wide variety of interests and knowledge, and that while some if it is interrelated, some of it is not at all connected. How many of those things can I build a website on? Well, I am mostly limited by time! It is unlikely that I can do it all in my lifetime, so after I brainstorm, I prioritize: First I look through to see what I have the MOST understanding of, and the greatest interest in. Because that will be the simplest thing for me to either write about or gather information on. Build on your strengths, and you'll have an easier time of it, and your potential for success is much higher - Less Work, More Return. Then I narrow down the options to just one. This is usually more a personal decision than an academic one. Once I know what I want to do, then I find out whether it is a crowded market or not. For example, I know a lot about diabetes, but diabetes is a HUGE arena, VERY crowded. The big guys like Glaxo have got that market pretty well saturated. But I also know about natural supplements, and quite a bit about how diet effects diabetes. And that market is less saturated. In fact, when I go searching for information on it, I have a hard time finding the kind of information I want. This tells me that there is an opportunity here for me to provide that kind of information for other people. Look for a creative twist on a common theme. Don't choose a broad category like diabetes, narrow it down, and approach it in a new way. I also developed a site on marketing. But instead of focusing on "internet marketing", or "marketing strategies" or anything else that was high demand and undistinguished, I called it "Bad Marketing Ideas", and aimed at a slightly different market. It gained top positions in the search engines right away, because it hit on something needed, but with a unique twist. Think of a fresh way to approach it that people can strongly identify with. At this point, if I wanted to do keyword research, I could. I'd go and find out the number of searches on those words. I would NOT go and find out what the keywords pay! In fact, I'd NEVER solely base my decision of whether or not to build a site on the listed price of keywords! Here is why: 1. Keyword prices change daily -
sometimes radically. Finding one listing for $50 is pretty meaningless. The point here is that keywords are only a nudge, not the determining factor in your choices. Choose first what you love and know, second what, out of that niche, is potentially the most successful. Next, do your homework. Plan out your site with a full and complete coverage of the topic you chose. If you don't know everything you need to know, then go research. Learn enough to be able to take a stance, and present a cohesive message in your site. Make sure you know your topic well before you start in. At that point, you are ready to gather or create your content. Your entire site needs to be designed to reflect the message you choose. Each page needs to focus on a specific facet of that topic. This is the essence of niche marketing - getting specific with your site, and then giving each page an even tighter focus on just one element. Screen carefully for quality. Do not publish anything which does not echo the message you are trying to deliver with your site as a whole. Do not publish any article that is not well written, and that is a lot more than just a glorified ad. Look for articles that have a sense of personality, and which are both enjoyable and informative. If you write your own content, be a real person, talk about personal examples, and keep it lively and fun. Present a distinct conclusion, have an opinion, and show some character. Give them something that they cannot get anywhere else. Choosing a niche is half work, half intuition. The work covers the details you can research, the intuition is formed around educated guesses and gut feelings about the things you cannot predict. Don't fret too much about getting just the right thing for your first site. Whatever you choose, you'll learn from it, and you'll have time long term to fine tune, nudge, and improve it. It is just a starting place, and even if it is not the "perfect" niche topic, it will give you something back that is of value.
|
|||
|
We strive to provide accurate and informative resources on our website, but we are not licensed business professionals. Use this information at your own risk, and contact your own financial advisor, tax professional, legal counsel, or business expert before acting on information you find on this website. We are a community driven web portal, and cannot be responsible for the contents of pages linked to this site which are not part of this site. Site Design by Firelight Web Studio, Copyright 2006, All Rights Reserved |
||||