And part of that worrying has made me want to stop being all over the place and share
content in a specific niche.
Not exact matches
For instance, a great piece of free
content not only demonstrates your expertise to a targeted audience
in a
specific niche or industry, but it can also make you likable — especially if you inject some personality into your
content and use tools like video on your LinkedIn profile and posts to showcase your personality.
Preferred audience targeting allows you to identify a
specific segment of the population (by age, gender, location, language, interests, etc.) and increase the odds that people
in that
niche will be exposed to your
content in their news feed.
Once
content remains consistent, finding bigger accounts
in your
niche from Engagement or Facebook groups, Telegram and KIK apps, and negotiating cross-promotion on stories or post captions, you'll both be able to quickly gain high - quality followers
in your
specific niche.
Consider creating a piece of
content or free download that offers value
specific to your target audience or addresses a
specific pain point or problem
in your
niche.
You can then use this bit of
content to get noticed — share on social media, run a Facebook ad campaign, get coverage
in a
niche -
specific publication.
Most people like to see their
content accessed widely and so can learn some great tips (as well as read some good
content) from these blogs, but «most popular» doesn't always mean «best» I'd say that for any blogger a key to judging your own success is to think about the purpose and intended audience of you blog — if you have a
niche audience
in a
specific location you may not get a huge following but if you set out to acheive something worthwhile through your blog and you achieve it then that counts as success.
While the ability to let readers pin
content to their Pinterest boards or find region -
specific content based on their locations might be enticing to
niche markets of very
specific content publishers, the metered paywall system, which is an update from Release 26, allows publishers to provide not just
specific articles for free before charging or offering the opportunity to subscribe, but rather offer a detailed amount of any of their
content before the paywall kicks
in.
I love the section
in the video where he suggests that publishers will discover that they all of a sudden not only don't nearly have enough
content within these
specific niches but that on their own,
in their current state they never will.
Follow Dudes or
specific niches and interests to get quality travel
content listed
in your own profile timeline!