Table of Contents
Is it necessary to have a niche blog?
The common advice says your blog needs a specific niche, but this is only half true. It’s good advice in some cases, but in others, it doesn’t necessarily make sense, or rather, it does but not in the way you think it does.
Is a personal blog a niche?
Also, personal bloggers email their readers often. They become friends. As a niche blogger, do the same by creating a newsletter for your readers: you will build trust and loyalty and, of course, emails make it easy to build real, genuine friendships.
What are the dangers of blogging?
The Dangers in Blogging
- Do not have an online profile.
- Post anonymously.
- Avoid personal or identifying details.
- No photos.
- Avoid inappropriate dialogue.
- Lurkers.
- Timeless.
How much do blog ads pay?
It’s not unrealistic to make between $0.01 – $0.10 per page view in many blogging niches across display and affiliate ads. So if you get 1,000 page views a month, you can make between $10-$100 per month. But if you can get to 100,000 page views a month you can make between $1,000 – $10,000 off of your blog per month.
Is it easy to find a niche for a blog?
It’s easy to find another health blog, yoga blog, gardening blog, but you will never find another Nat blog, Justin blog, Taylor blog, Charlie blog, etc. A business needs a niche because the product has to solve a certain problem.
Can you really make money with an un-niched website?
Making money off of an un-niched site is considerably more difficult. Bryan Harris turned what was a blog on email marketing into a diverse internet marketing product company, and it made sense every step of the way. His products fit under a strong umbrella and are all interconnected.
Do you need a tribe to run a blog?
You don’t pay for them to turn up (at least you don’t have to). Instead they turn up because they share your passion. They crave a sense of community and association with the other people in your tribe. They want to comment, share and interact with you. Without a tribe your blog will die a slow death.
Why do people turn up to blogs?
Instead they turn up because they share your passion. They crave a sense of community and association with the other people in your tribe. They want to comment, share and interact with you. Without a tribe your blog will die a slow death. So how do you find your tribe and engage with them online?