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Since I'm not writing anywhere else any more I'm going to be contributing a few newbie-friendly articles here this next few weeks as and when I have ideas.
This one is I think pretty pertinent to BuSo as almost all the threads about what people are up to are very similar. And I made the exact same mistake with what I chose to start doing last year... boo!
And what's more they're all very similar to what people who are very successful used to do.
What's worse is many of them start out by admitting they got onto the MFA/sniper site/super niche site etc train too late when they previously tried to build something. That's what the successful people had already moved on from at the time many were attacking them. Too late, and missing the new gold rush.
Don't Miss The New Gold Rush
The new gold rush was mega authority type sites - many of which have sold for huge numbers and continue to do so. I jumped on board (late) and the realization came to me that I'd fallen into the exact trap the late-to-MFA guys made.
Clients of mine sold for millions --> ooh I'll do that type of thing in a different niche --> of course they're not doing it again they're off doing something new/smarter/different.
Coming to that realization led me to (see my case study thread) hand the project off to my team and just let it flow. It's a 'done' model. Good writers + good linkbuilders + a good editor to oversee the strategy and lots of patience may see them work out.
But it's not something I can get passionate about. It's not something where someone is going to share one of those sites and say 'ooh check out this new thing...'. It's an old idea, maybe done better, and maybe done for newer niches but they'll just be 'another site' that either sells well or doesn't sell well when the time comes to flip them.
Finding Opportunities - Follow the Winners Into Their New Projects!
One of the hardest parts about all this is the old things - MFA or 'authority sites' or whatever publishing based model you copied - it was easy to come up with a niche or idea. Just search 'everything' you are vaguely interested in until you find one with money, interest and not as much competition. Get cracking. Everyone knows how to write about something they enjoy.
Of course, some people did it better. Brian Clarke (copyblogger) didn't just make some authority site about blogging and watch the adsense roll in. They built Authority and various other membership sites to really print the cash.
And sure, you can see similarities in his new 'Rainmaker' brand - there is a course, there are conferences. But he's made something real. The Rainmaker Platform.
I think, if he were 15 years older, Russell Brunson would have had authority sites and just private communities (he has some of those things anyway). But he's already in the new world and also made something real. ClickFunnels.
The mystical @CCarter could probably have chosen to turn the TrafficLeaks brand into a mega authority site about marketing. Instead we have SerpWOO shaking things up for the incumbents there and a new SAAS on the way.
Gary Vaynerchuk, despite being at the helm of the fastest growing ad agency in the world, is already talking in some of his videos about wanting to bring some kind of Facebook marketing SAAS to market for smaller businesses.
SEO companies are rapidly investing in other things - I've seen everything from cloud marketing tools to influencer marketplaces coming out of that space this last year or so.
Even Your Authority Site Competition Is Moving On
Even if you're wedded to the idea of being a content publisher and running an authority site - scraping 1/1000 of $50 for each visitor out. Your competition is building 'real things' to hit the same market:
https://studentloanhero.com/
That's what an authority site looks like in the student loan space now. They haven't even made it to page 1 (I see them top of page 2 for a bunch of stuff) for all of their big terms and yet they're already slaying it for traffic. The guys with just a blog homepage with 'tips to repay your student loan' will be under pressure really soon.
How To Even Get Started
Russell Brunson's story seems to be that he started and made his money as a marketer (selling everything from potato guns and vhs courses...) then paid to get development for his SAAS done. He's a 'marketing' founder not a technical founder. So you could go that route - do consulting, sell products, whatever you can do for immediate income and put 40% of it aside to pay for development of your idea.
BUT... many, many SAAS projects don't have to be built from scratch. Many are standing on the shoulders of the giants that are the open source community. Think of Rails, Django and all those powerful frameworks that let n00bs like me build our entire CMS and back end system for my linkbuilding agency in Django after doing two short courses:
https://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.10/intro/tutorial01/
Oh and it all looks passably pretty because of Bootstrap... one of the easiest ways for non-designers to make things functional. There are also a TON of awesome design kits you can buy to make it even prettier/more functional.
Including doing the courses it took 6 months. And I'm now on to building something commercial for others to buy/use as a SAAS based on what I learnt building for my own business.
Making something useful like SLH has the shortest learning curve in history thanks to the way software development has gone. Now sure I'll spend thousands after launch on a more experienced security and technical consultant to iron out the kinks and tell me off for the mistakes we make in our rookie beta development BUT it's a far cry from being able to do nothing yourself without becoming an expert coder first, and having to build everything from scratch in PHP.
Anyway - there is a new gold rush going on. And it's just people doing what successful people used to do...
PS - This isn't advice to just bin the project you've put blood, sweat and tears into. If you look at the discussion in my last post (https://www.buildersociety.com/threads/how-long-does-seo-take-for-newbies.2864/) you can see that things take time and you could hit that hockey stick right after the point you give up if you quit too early. Sometimes you've invested enough, and it's worth closing that out and selling properly before you move onto the new thing. But if you're sat here working out what to start or are just selling up and ready for something new, hopefully this was a useful post for you.
This one is I think pretty pertinent to BuSo as almost all the threads about what people are up to are very similar. And I made the exact same mistake with what I chose to start doing last year... boo!
And what's more they're all very similar to what people who are very successful used to do.
What's worse is many of them start out by admitting they got onto the MFA/sniper site/super niche site etc train too late when they previously tried to build something. That's what the successful people had already moved on from at the time many were attacking them. Too late, and missing the new gold rush.
Don't Miss The New Gold Rush
The new gold rush was mega authority type sites - many of which have sold for huge numbers and continue to do so. I jumped on board (late) and the realization came to me that I'd fallen into the exact trap the late-to-MFA guys made.
Clients of mine sold for millions --> ooh I'll do that type of thing in a different niche --> of course they're not doing it again they're off doing something new/smarter/different.
Coming to that realization led me to (see my case study thread) hand the project off to my team and just let it flow. It's a 'done' model. Good writers + good linkbuilders + a good editor to oversee the strategy and lots of patience may see them work out.
But it's not something I can get passionate about. It's not something where someone is going to share one of those sites and say 'ooh check out this new thing...'. It's an old idea, maybe done better, and maybe done for newer niches but they'll just be 'another site' that either sells well or doesn't sell well when the time comes to flip them.
Finding Opportunities - Follow the Winners Into Their New Projects!
One of the hardest parts about all this is the old things - MFA or 'authority sites' or whatever publishing based model you copied - it was easy to come up with a niche or idea. Just search 'everything' you are vaguely interested in until you find one with money, interest and not as much competition. Get cracking. Everyone knows how to write about something they enjoy.
Of course, some people did it better. Brian Clarke (copyblogger) didn't just make some authority site about blogging and watch the adsense roll in. They built Authority and various other membership sites to really print the cash.
And sure, you can see similarities in his new 'Rainmaker' brand - there is a course, there are conferences. But he's made something real. The Rainmaker Platform.
I think, if he were 15 years older, Russell Brunson would have had authority sites and just private communities (he has some of those things anyway). But he's already in the new world and also made something real. ClickFunnels.
The mystical @CCarter could probably have chosen to turn the TrafficLeaks brand into a mega authority site about marketing. Instead we have SerpWOO shaking things up for the incumbents there and a new SAAS on the way.
Gary Vaynerchuk, despite being at the helm of the fastest growing ad agency in the world, is already talking in some of his videos about wanting to bring some kind of Facebook marketing SAAS to market for smaller businesses.
SEO companies are rapidly investing in other things - I've seen everything from cloud marketing tools to influencer marketplaces coming out of that space this last year or so.
Even Your Authority Site Competition Is Moving On
Even if you're wedded to the idea of being a content publisher and running an authority site - scraping 1/1000 of $50 for each visitor out. Your competition is building 'real things' to hit the same market:
https://studentloanhero.com/
That's what an authority site looks like in the student loan space now. They haven't even made it to page 1 (I see them top of page 2 for a bunch of stuff) for all of their big terms and yet they're already slaying it for traffic. The guys with just a blog homepage with 'tips to repay your student loan' will be under pressure really soon.
How To Even Get Started
Russell Brunson's story seems to be that he started and made his money as a marketer (selling everything from potato guns and vhs courses...) then paid to get development for his SAAS done. He's a 'marketing' founder not a technical founder. So you could go that route - do consulting, sell products, whatever you can do for immediate income and put 40% of it aside to pay for development of your idea.
BUT... many, many SAAS projects don't have to be built from scratch. Many are standing on the shoulders of the giants that are the open source community. Think of Rails, Django and all those powerful frameworks that let n00bs like me build our entire CMS and back end system for my linkbuilding agency in Django after doing two short courses:
https://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.10/intro/tutorial01/
Oh and it all looks passably pretty because of Bootstrap... one of the easiest ways for non-designers to make things functional. There are also a TON of awesome design kits you can buy to make it even prettier/more functional.
Including doing the courses it took 6 months. And I'm now on to building something commercial for others to buy/use as a SAAS based on what I learnt building for my own business.
Making something useful like SLH has the shortest learning curve in history thanks to the way software development has gone. Now sure I'll spend thousands after launch on a more experienced security and technical consultant to iron out the kinks and tell me off for the mistakes we make in our rookie beta development BUT it's a far cry from being able to do nothing yourself without becoming an expert coder first, and having to build everything from scratch in PHP.
Anyway - there is a new gold rush going on. And it's just people doing what successful people used to do...
PS - This isn't advice to just bin the project you've put blood, sweat and tears into. If you look at the discussion in my last post (https://www.buildersociety.com/threads/how-long-does-seo-take-for-newbies.2864/) you can see that things take time and you could hit that hockey stick right after the point you give up if you quit too early. Sometimes you've invested enough, and it's worth closing that out and selling properly before you move onto the new thing. But if you're sat here working out what to start or are just selling up and ready for something new, hopefully this was a useful post for you.
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