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Have you guys ever just flat out gotten too cocky and underestimated what it would take to take down a niche?
For instance, once upon a time I was working heavily in a certain vertical full of gov's and edu's. I beat them with this one MFA that became a mini-authority by accident. This was well before Penguin and I had the EMD... This was micro-niche really. But it boosted my confidence.
So later, I'm still in this vertical but it's now a post-Penguin world and I'm thinking... I'm going to take down a macro-niche... there's only one true authority site on the topic. So I got to work. 100's of scholarly articles later I had a fairly big site. I was guest blogging everywhere. Scored edu links, a gov link, communities around this topic were giving me organic links like mad, but I simply could not bust through except for one term that kept me afloat. Later on I added a directory that made it worthwhile.
But at this was when Google had shifted a lot of weight towards domain-wide metrics to block out spammers, before they got a good hold on relevancy. I could get 100's of links to a page, out-do them with on-page, and still not pop on page one, which was full of pages that had zero or 1 link and 100 words of content.
I mean, I boosted this site up to PR 6, DA 50+, and all those metrics. It was up there, and it was making pennies compared to what it should have been making. Ended up wasting a lot of time, effort, and money on this one. Later sold it and moved on.
Of course now the tides have turned again. It was bad timing on my part. I wasn't aware that this was going to be a giant fail because I kept assuming I just didn't have the juice yet, but I definitely did. I wish I could have failed sooner.
What about you guys?
For instance, once upon a time I was working heavily in a certain vertical full of gov's and edu's. I beat them with this one MFA that became a mini-authority by accident. This was well before Penguin and I had the EMD... This was micro-niche really. But it boosted my confidence.
So later, I'm still in this vertical but it's now a post-Penguin world and I'm thinking... I'm going to take down a macro-niche... there's only one true authority site on the topic. So I got to work. 100's of scholarly articles later I had a fairly big site. I was guest blogging everywhere. Scored edu links, a gov link, communities around this topic were giving me organic links like mad, but I simply could not bust through except for one term that kept me afloat. Later on I added a directory that made it worthwhile.
But at this was when Google had shifted a lot of weight towards domain-wide metrics to block out spammers, before they got a good hold on relevancy. I could get 100's of links to a page, out-do them with on-page, and still not pop on page one, which was full of pages that had zero or 1 link and 100 words of content.
I mean, I boosted this site up to PR 6, DA 50+, and all those metrics. It was up there, and it was making pennies compared to what it should have been making. Ended up wasting a lot of time, effort, and money on this one. Later sold it and moved on.
Of course now the tides have turned again. It was bad timing on my part. I wasn't aware that this was going to be a giant fail because I kept assuming I just didn't have the juice yet, but I definitely did. I wish I could have failed sooner.
What about you guys?