Find Your Niche at HubPages
51How to Find Your Niche on Hubpages
Finding your niche on Hubpages depends on the writer's willingness to let go of topics that are not working and change with new channels of writing. A topic of interest to you may not be relevant to your online audience. You will have to learn to let go of methods of writings on subjects that does not have relevance to anyone but yourself.
A journal will suffice if you are using hubpages to write of your own personal experiences that you know will get published regardless of the relevance. Hubpage readers and other readers of social media do not want to hear about your marriage woes unless there is information contained relevant to their situation and circumstances.
Hubpages is a community of writers who shares ideas and experiences. Experiences can be written to inform as well as to entertain. Your quest is to find your niche at writing. You should not write just to create a hubpage that is only relevant to you. Would you sell a product successfully because you benefit or because the customer benefits? You sell a product for the benefit for the customer and you should write a hubpage article for the benefit of the myriad readers. We love to write about ourselves as a gentle release but the readers are interested only if that gentle release involves them and what they may be dealing with. You find your niche when your readership increases on a relevance of their interest and not a topic that is just important to you.
How do you find your niche? Hubpages have various tools that can help you. The easiest tool is the excel listings of all of your written work that has been published. Hubpages monitors your readership on the edit page under stats. if your stats are not increasing dailyly, then you have not found you niche of popular or relevant written talent.
Review your written work on the hubpage home page and look at the readership of each article on the Hubpage excel page. An article that has increased readership daily indicates that you have found your writing niche. You should concentrate all of you writing efforts on that niche topic.
Writers are very creative people. It is easy to get stuck writing something that only interests you because of your vast imagination coming from self. You should write for public reasonance to convey topics of interest. Creativity manifests itself into an art form that can be viewed and enjoyed by others through their senses. Your writing niche should perform the same task. Your writing should attract readership for others to share and experience your artistry. Use the Hubpage tools, preferably the stat page and the URL tracking channels to categorize your artices and find your niche. Write consistently where you have found an audience and stay with your niche market of topics.
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Comments
This is great advice, Linda. Thank you for sharing this information.
earnestshub, thank you for your comment. I normally write from four to seven articles daily so I did not specifically write this hub for the hubchallenge. As the article is in the timeframe of the hubchallenge, I included it with the Twitter hash tag and Hubpage tag. Most of the articles this month will be about writing hubs because there may be a need for hubbers to know various tips if they are writing more because of the hubchallenge.
Thank you futonfraggle for you comment. If the article sounded a bit strong, it was because of the propensity of hubbers to write about themselves. Writing about one's self is not a niche but merely a topic. The writing may provide release of some sort but is not necessarily of relevance to the reader.
I think this Hub offered good advice and it is well written, as always. You're good. And I appreciate your efforts.
James A Watkins
Thank you for your comments.
Hi Linda, thank you for the tips, developing a niche has now become a lot clearer
Hawkesdream, thank you for your comment
Nice article. Not much experience with Hubpages, but I do have some with IM. Oddly enough, in my world of attemting to creatively write articles for submission in order for readers to build an interest in certain products, I find better results now in writing to my own experiences rather than focus on the readers. Think it might be a moving trend in the world of internet marketing due to a general sense of alarm among consumers on the dishonesty surrounding 'good' sales pages. Too many sites now appear to overwhelm readers with so much information and defeat there own intending purpose of selling a specific item, membership, program etc... My two cents...
Dollorstorm, thank you for your comment. Your advice is worthy of more than two cents:) The government now has legislation to regulate product reviews that are paid for by the manufacturers or distributors. Your honest opinion of a product is really what the internet marketers are looking for and it is a good thing to use your own experience when writing about a product.








earnestshub says:
7 months ago
Great hub Linda, did you write this as part of the hub challenge?