The Truth About Stuck Niches: How I Turned Bigfoot Into a Business (And What You Can Learn From It)

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Let me take you back for a second.

I started my first website thinking I had it all figured out. They told me to go with my passion — something I could talk about all day — and I did.

Problem was… my passion was Bigfoot.

Yep. Bigfoot.

And trust me, I’ve heard it all.
“Is that even a real niche?”
“How are you gonna monetize that?”
“You serious, bro?”

But here I am, still standing, still building, and finally seeing real growth. Not because I changed my topic. Not because I found a magic trick. But because I learned how to shift the conversation — without ever leaving my lane.

This blog isn’t just about Bigfoot, though. I want to show you how this same thinking can work in any niche — even if you're just starting or thinking about giving up.

So let’s dive in.

The Bigfoot Problem (and the Breakthrough)

When you build a site around a topic like Bigfoot, it sounds fun — and it is — but it can also feel like you’re talking to a wall sometimes.

What flipped the switch for me was when I stopped trying to sell Bigfoot and started creating content around Bigfoot.

I asked myself:

  • What kind of stories would intrigue people even if they weren’t looking for Bigfoot?
  • What’s happening in the world that touches my topic but doesn’t scream it?

That’s when I started writing about things like:

• Missing 411 disappearances
• Strange energy zones in forests
• Indigenous legends and oral histories

Each one led people back to Bigfoot, but more importantly — they created engagement, clicks, shares, and conversations.

And then something amazing happened...

Without planning it, that Bigfoot blog opened up two new content streams that now stand on their own:

A paranormal site — focused on mysterious lights, energy fields, portals, and encounters beyond logic
A survival and bushcraft site — built from all the time spent in the wild tracking, exploring, and learning to stay prepared

Now let me be clear — I’m not saying you need to go build more websites unless you actually need them.
I only did that because I had so much content growing in those directions that it made sense to separate them.

What I am saying is this: your one niche, right now, might be enough. You just need to start seeing the angles around it.

But What If You’re Not in a Niche Like Mine?

You might be thinking, “Well that’s cool for you, but I’m in a totally different space.”

That’s exactly why I built out the next part. I only have one niche — Bigfoot — but I wanted to show you that this same story-first, angle-smart approach can work in other topics too.

Let’s break down four real examples of how to talk around your niche without losing your mission.


1. Niche: Fitness for Beginners

You want to help people get in shape — great. But the space is crowded and the big names are everywhere.

Try this:
Subniche 1: Recovery and Injury Prevention — Talk about foam rolling, posture, mobility, or sleep hacks
Subniche 2: Home Fitness Gear — Review affordable gear, create beginner bundles, or compare resistance bands vs. dumbbells


2. Niche: Budget Travel

Helping people travel on the cheap sounds fun, but let’s be honest — ranking for “cheap flights” isn’t easy.

Try this:
Subniche 1: Digital Nomad Tools — Blog about VPNs, remote work visas, travel-friendly tech
Subniche 2: Cultural Curiosities — Haunted towns, strange customs, urban legends — stuff people actually search for


3. Niche: Pet Care for Dogs

Dog blogs are everywhere. So how do you stand out?

Try this:
Subniche 1: Canine Psychology — Teach people how dogs think, how to communicate better, how to build trust
Subniche 2: Grief and Healing — Write about pet loss, memorials, and emotional recovery. It’s raw, it’s real, and it connects


4. Niche: Mental Health & Mindset

This niche is powerful but tough. It’s highly personal, emotionally sensitive, and very saturated.

Try this:
Subniche 1: Journaling and Self-Reflection Tools — Offer writing prompts, printable trackers, and routines to support emotional growth
Subniche 2: Nature-Based Wellness — Tie in forest bathing, grounding, or trail time as part of healing. It blends naturally into self-care content while staying accessible


The Truth Most People Avoid

No matter what niche you pick or how weird it seems, it matters who’s in the driver’s seat — and that’s you.

If you can think it, you can build it.
If you believe in it, you can grow it.

It doesn’t come down to picking the “perfect niche.”
It comes down to belief and your drive to keep going when it feels like nobody’s watching yet.

You already have the one thing most people never develop — you started. Now it’s time to evolve how you think about what you’ve built.

One Final Thought Before You Go

You don’t have to blow up your site.
You don’t have to change your whole brand.
Sometimes you just need to step outside the box...

Why?

Most people won’t even try the outside-the-box angle — but it works. Just saying.

So I’ll leave you with this…

"Some trails aren’t marked, and some paths aren’t paved — but if it pulls you forward, it’s still the right direction."

Stay wild,
Shawn

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Recent Comments

22

Shawn,

Thanks so much! This post is super helpful.
I actually disappeared for years because I couldn’t decide on my niche. 😅

Now I’ve finally found one, but it’s still too broad… I often don’t know where to start.

After reading this, I realise I should focus on finding my subniche.
Really appreciate your insights 😊

Genie

Hey Genie, you're not alone, I think a lot of us vanish for a while when we're stuck in that niche limbo. It can be overwhelming when everything feels too broad to grab hold of. But now that you’ve got a direction, narrowing it into a subniche will give you clarity and momentum. Start small, talk about what you know lights you up, and let the rest unfold from there. You're on the right path, and I’m glad the post helped!
Shawn

Thanks so much, Shawn! Really appreciate your encouragement and the way you framed it—"start small and let the rest unfold" totally hit home for me. I’m feeling way more clear and excited now. Glad I came across your post, it definitely gave me the nudge I needed. Thanks again for sharing your insights! 😊

This is a great read. I loved the content, and thank you for your excellent advice. I never really thought of a niche like this. You have inspired me to keep going.

Appreciate that big time CBeardmore
Funny how one idea can light a fire right when you need it
I never saw myself diving into a niche like this either at first
but once you start following what actually pulls you in
everything starts to line up
Glad it gave you a spark
Keep pushing your own lane forward
You never know who's watching and getting inspired next.
Shawn

Great read and excellent advice. Thank you for this. It inspires me not to give up or give into defeat but to keep creatig content that is helpful and informative for my audience. Cheers 😀

Hey Peachcobbler, that means a lot, truly. Keep creating, keep showing up. The audience that needs your voice is out there, even on the quiet days. Just remember: the forest doesn’t always echo back right away, but that doesn’t mean no one’s listening. Stay wild and keep building.
Shawn

I think this is good advice. I've spent my entire life trying to think outside the box because that's just who I am! Thanks, as always.

Hey Gail, That’s exactly the mindset that keeps this whole journey exciting. Thinking outside the box isn’t just creative, it’s courageous. Keep doing you, and thanks for always bringing that spark to the table!

I remembered you Said you loved the Bigfoot image so i thought this would give you a good laugh for the day.

Stay curious
Shawn

Love it. And yes, I'm a huge Bigfoot fan - a total believer!

Love that Gail I'm right there with you
Have you ever looked into the UK’s deeper Bigfoot roots
The Woodwose, "wild hairy forest beings" show up in church carvings from the 1100s

By the 1300s they were all over medieval art
Some say the name came from wudu-wāsa, meaning forest dweller

And just this year fishermen in the South Downs reported growls and heavy footsteps in the woods

Welsh and Scottish folklore have similar stories too

Kinda makes you wonder what’s really been out there all this time
You might be closer to the mystery than most think

Shawn

Personally I believe there are many many creatures from so called folklore that just exist on a different frequency band to us most of the time, which is why we can't see them. Like dogs can hear certain frequencies that we can't. We have to be tuned into their frequency in order for our limited human senses to pick them up. Like dialling into a particular radio station. When you do, you can only hear what's playing on that station, but all the other stations are still out there; we just are tuned in!
My sisters and friends think I'm deluded but I know different!! :)

Gail, I couldn’t agree more, that radio station analogy is spot on, it’s not that these beings aren’t there, it’s that we’re just not tuned in most of the time. I’ve always felt like certain places, energies, or even moments of vulnerability shift that frequency just enough for us to catch a glimpse. And hey, if being “deluded” means seeing a bit more than the average person, I’d say you’re on the right station. Keep listening, some of us are hearing the same song.
Shawn

Does sound very interesting. Thinking out of the box is a good idea. I have a travel vacation website and have been thinking of ways to make it better and recently I have been doing vacation at beaches in my last 25 articles. Before I was doing ancient ruin places in South and North America. Have a bunch on canyons at different continents. My site is called mycampingvacationsites.com. Check it out if you like and I'd like to hear some feedback from WA as I have heard from other people that have clicked on my site. Your topic is an interesting thing to be working on as bigfoot is all over the planet. Like the Yowie in Australia are some stories about. Who knows with my niche camping may come across your topic also because there are stories about running into bigfoot while camping or hearing strange noises or have rocks come flying into someone's camp. There are many stories about that. Good luck with your website.

Hey Jasdiniver67, that’s awesome man. Sounds like you’ve built a really cool site with a solid niche. Beaches, ruins, canyons — that’s a killer mix of adventure content. I agree, thinking outside the box is where the magic starts.

You know, it’s funny, I don’t even have a camping site yet, but I do talk a lot about camping in my survival-focused site. There’s so much overlap between the two, especially when it comes to strange encounters out in the wild.

Honestly, I built that blog system not just to help others but to help myself get out of a creative rut. I struggled for almost 8 months trying to figure out how to keep my content flowing. That system finally helped it click.

And yeah, you nailed it. Bigfoot and camping stories go hand in hand. Rocks being thrown, weird sounds, something just beyond the tree line… there’s always a campfire tale waiting.

Wishing you big momentum and fresh ideas ahead. Your topic has a ton of legs. Let’s keep pushing.

"The trail doesn’t end where the map stops. That’s where the story begins."
Shawn

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