Hey peeps. My niche is anxiety and using natural lifestyle changes to manage it. I chose this because I have suffered from it, and feel that I can help others in their battles.
I don't think that the niche is too large at all. I like the fact that you will have so many options for people to consider as far as products to help them. That means you'll have a wide variety of price points as well, and that's always good!
It may take you a bit longer to rank on the more competitive keywords, but start with the smaller ones and move up from there. You can indeed "own" this niche!
Hi, and thank you for the response.
I'm building this site for longevity. I don't expect short-term gains. Granted, if a million dollars fell into my pocket tomorrow, I wouldn't go around fighting people because of it.
I just don't want to see hundreds of hours of hard work go to waste because I didn't research enough in the beginning.
I think I'm just going to do it... because that's what I want to do. I find a way to get things done in real life, so I'll do it online as well.
Thanks again,
Dan
I've been doing that for the past two days. Haha. That being said, most of my searches turned up positive results for the products I want to start with.
I'm just worried that Google won't rank me because I'm marketing 30 or more products. Everything I have is relevant, but just in different categories.
So do I not necessarily have to worry about it being too broad as long as I stick to the main theme? I realize that I'm competing with WebMD and other authoritative sites.
I think I can sum up my question with THIS question...
If I had a site solely for massage chairs for anxiety, would that help me rank higher than a broad spectrum of anxiety related articles and products? Will Google see me as THE authority on massage chairs for anxiety because I've posted so many articles on the subject, or could a broad range of anxiety related topics still help me rank?
I quite like reasonably broad niches so I think you're fine. What I would do though is theme a series of posts for individual parts of your niche - say 6-8 posts over a month. Once you're ranking for that set of key words you can then research and do another batch. Without going crazy with it a reasonable range of products just gives your site broader appeal ... at least that's my theory :-)
Mike
No bro anxiety niche is not too broad do what you want and help people that’s all that matters and the money will come much respect to you
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Hey peeps. My niche is anxiety and using natural lifestyle changes to manage it. I chose this because I have suffered from it, and feel that I can help others in their battles.
I don't think that the niche is too large at all. I like the fact that you will have so many options for people to consider as far as products to help them. That means you'll have a wide variety of price points as well, and that's always good!
It may take you a bit longer to rank on the more competitive keywords, but start with the smaller ones and move up from there. You can indeed "own" this niche!
Hi, and thank you for the response.
I'm building this site for longevity. I don't expect short-term gains. Granted, if a million dollars fell into my pocket tomorrow, I wouldn't go around fighting people because of it.
I just don't want to see hundreds of hours of hard work go to waste because I didn't research enough in the beginning.
I think I'm just going to do it... because that's what I want to do. I find a way to get things done in real life, so I'll do it online as well.
Thanks again,
Dan
I've been doing that for the past two days. Haha. That being said, most of my searches turned up positive results for the products I want to start with.
I'm just worried that Google won't rank me because I'm marketing 30 or more products. Everything I have is relevant, but just in different categories.
So do I not necessarily have to worry about it being too broad as long as I stick to the main theme? I realize that I'm competing with WebMD and other authoritative sites.
I think I can sum up my question with THIS question...
If I had a site solely for massage chairs for anxiety, would that help me rank higher than a broad spectrum of anxiety related articles and products? Will Google see me as THE authority on massage chairs for anxiety because I've posted so many articles on the subject, or could a broad range of anxiety related topics still help me rank?
I quite like reasonably broad niches so I think you're fine. What I would do though is theme a series of posts for individual parts of your niche - say 6-8 posts over a month. Once you're ranking for that set of key words you can then research and do another batch. Without going crazy with it a reasonable range of products just gives your site broader appeal ... at least that's my theory :-)
Mike
No bro anxiety niche is not too broad do what you want and help people that’s all that matters and the money will come much respect to you
See more comments
Hey Ya'al,
So I was a previous member of WA and had several blog posts on my first website. I haven't published for about a year. Now I have time to properly see this th
Maybe you can manually transfer all the contents and completely erase it from the old domain if you can still access it.
If accessing your posts entails spending because of its value over anything then you have to and abandon or sell your old domain after you have gotten what is necessary.
Is it possible to get hold of your old domain again? If so, if may be worth getting it, and doing a 301 redirect for the whole "old" side to the "new" content. Once the 301 redirects are there for over a month, it should be okay to let the old domain name "expire" naturally.
If it is an old .com site, you may be able to get it for about 15 - 20 dollars for a year. If it is "hostage negotiations", you have to judge rather it is worth paying the "hostage fee" or waiting for it to naturally expire and come back to where the public can buy it again (in the meantime, you are "risking" that someone else may beat you do it so it that is your thinking, keep it till yourself, until you have got it).
Good luck.
Well I still have the published content available in the WA database. I was just going to make some adjustments and upload the content to my new site. It's not much, but it is 8 decent blogs worth of content.
I no longer have access to my old site. It has expired, and I don't want to purchase it again if I don't have to. I was curious as to if my old content will still be ranked in Google and would I be plagiarizing myself by Google's standards.
Try doing a google search for some "old keyword phrase" that was on the old site. You probably have to include your old url (just the abc dot com bit) to see does it jump up. If not, maybe Google has forgotten about your old site.
Maybe writing 2019 versions of those 'old blogs' would be the way to go - using the old blogs as a starting point, editing them (not sure how much) and then adding to them ???
I did try that a few days ago, and no hits. I was planning on rewording things a bit, but I didn't want to have to reference myself. Haha. Thank you again for responding. I'll just do some editing and upload them as I go through the trainings again.
Cool. Good plan. Besides which if you edit, you are going to use different words and sentences anyway. You might even end up using different key words as well. After doing the training again, you may have fine tuned your key word hunting skills.
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Transferring content from one website to another?
Hey Ya'al,
So I was a previous member of WA and had several blog posts on my first website. I haven't published for about a year. Now I have time to properly see this th
Maybe you can manually transfer all the contents and completely erase it from the old domain if you can still access it.
If accessing your posts entails spending because of its value over anything then you have to and abandon or sell your old domain after you have gotten what is necessary.
Is it possible to get hold of your old domain again? If so, if may be worth getting it, and doing a 301 redirect for the whole "old" side to the "new" content. Once the 301 redirects are there for over a month, it should be okay to let the old domain name "expire" naturally.
If it is an old .com site, you may be able to get it for about 15 - 20 dollars for a year. If it is "hostage negotiations", you have to judge rather it is worth paying the "hostage fee" or waiting for it to naturally expire and come back to where the public can buy it again (in the meantime, you are "risking" that someone else may beat you do it so it that is your thinking, keep it till yourself, until you have got it).
Good luck.
Well I still have the published content available in the WA database. I was just going to make some adjustments and upload the content to my new site. It's not much, but it is 8 decent blogs worth of content.
I no longer have access to my old site. It has expired, and I don't want to purchase it again if I don't have to. I was curious as to if my old content will still be ranked in Google and would I be plagiarizing myself by Google's standards.
Try doing a google search for some "old keyword phrase" that was on the old site. You probably have to include your old url (just the abc dot com bit) to see does it jump up. If not, maybe Google has forgotten about your old site.
Maybe writing 2019 versions of those 'old blogs' would be the way to go - using the old blogs as a starting point, editing them (not sure how much) and then adding to them ???
I did try that a few days ago, and no hits. I was planning on rewording things a bit, but I didn't want to have to reference myself. Haha. Thank you again for responding. I'll just do some editing and upload them as I go through the trainings again.
Cool. Good plan. Besides which if you edit, you are going to use different words and sentences anyway. You might even end up using different key words as well. After doing the training again, you may have fine tuned your key word hunting skills.
See more comments
I found two separate keywords that could easily be used in one blog post. Is this a good idea, or should I create two posts using one keyword each?
You can, but you might read what others have commented on this before --- Two different key words in one post?
I found two separate keywords that could easily be used in one blog post. Is this a good idea, or should I create two posts using one keyword each?
You can, but you might read what others have commented on this before --- Two different key words in one post?
I think it's very good to address the problem and the solution on one and the same website