In the summer of 2010, I joined Pat Flynn and Tyrone Shum in a public Niche Site Duel — a challenge to build profitable niche websites in full view of our audiences so readers could see different approaches to the same goal. This is the story of how I chose my niche and got started.

My Approach: Outsource Everything

Pat Flynn documented every detail of his process with his trademark thoroughness. I did not have that kind of time, so I took a different approach: I would outsource every possible element of the project and dictate progress updates for transcription rather than writing polished blog posts. The point was to see what a busy part-time entrepreneur could accomplish by leveraging virtual assistants and available resources.

Three Criteria for Niche Selection

When selecting a niche, I focused on three things. First, it needed to look profitable — real products and affiliate offers that people were already buying. Second, I wanted to be genuinely interested in the topic, because I knew from experience that I was more likely to follow through on projects I cared about. Third, it needed to have widely available materials — themes, PLR content, affiliate programs — that would make outsourcing practical.

I chose the learn-to-play-guitar niche. There were established affiliate programs, plenty of content resources, and it was a topic I personally found interesting as a guitar player.

Quick and Dirty Keyword Research

I used Micro Niche Finder to do fast keyword research, looking for terms with decent search volume, manageable competition, and available exact-match domains. The tool identified “learn guitar basics” as a solid keyword with learnguitarbasics.net available as a domain. I grabbed it immediately.

I also identified related keywords including “guitar tricks review” and “guitar tricks coupon” — terms that people searching for the Guitar Tricks affiliate product would use. These terms did not appear in keyword tools based on AdWords data, but they showed up in Google's autocomplete suggestions, which told me real people were searching for them.

Getting the Site Up Fast

I found a complete guitar website theme bundled with PLR content for twenty-seven dollars and had my virtual assistants set it up. I then outsourced six tasks: breaking PLR into an autoresponder email sequence, customizing the website theme, integrating Guitar Tricks affiliate creatives, adding an email opt-in form, rewriting PLR article titles and content for uniqueness, and commissioning ten original articles around target keywords.

Lessons That Endure

The specific tools and tactics from 2010 are mostly obsolete. Exact-match domains no longer carry the SEO weight they once did. PLR content will not rank in modern search results. Article marketing directories have lost their effectiveness. But the strategic thinking remains valuable: choose niches with clear buyer intent, identify the keywords your prospects actually use, build an email list from day one, and match visitors with relevant offers. Those fundamentals have not changed in sixteen years, and they are unlikely to change in the next sixteen.

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