You have found keywords with decent search volume, but can you actually rank for them? That is the question that separates people who build profitable niche sites from people who spin their wheels. Mark digs into how to analyze niche keyword competition, especially in the post-Penguin era where backlinking strategies had fundamentally changed.

What You'll Learn in This Episode

  • How to evaluate whether you can realistically rank for a keyword
  • Why backlinking profiles changed after Google's Penguin update
  • How to think about keyword difficulty when choosing targets for your niche site
  • The relationship between keyword specificity and competition level
  • How to decide between affiliate marketing courses and programs when you are starting out

Episode Summary

Mark continues his multi-episode deep dive into niche keyword selection, building on the brainstorming and traffic evaluation covered in previous episodes. This time the focus is on competition: once you have a list of keywords with decent search volume, how do you figure out which ones you can actually win?

A big part of the discussion centers on how Google's Penguin update changed the game for backlinking. Before Penguin, you could build a bunch of exact-match anchor text links and muscle your way to page one. After Penguin, that strategy became a liability. Mark explains that the way people were building backlink profiles had to fundamentally shift, and that understanding the competition now meant understanding how the top-ranking pages earned their backlinks, not just how many they had.

The episode also features a great listener feedback segment from Joe Webb in Kansas City, who is dealing with information overload and analysis paralysis. Joe wants to know which keyword research tool is best and whether he should invest in a structured course to get started. Mark walks through the trade-offs between different approaches and emphasizes that the most important thing is to pick a direction and take action rather than endlessly researching options.

Mark rounds out the episode by previewing the complete keyword competition analysis that will follow in episode 057's transcript, where he pulls the entire keyword research process together into a step-by-step framework.

Key Takeaways

  • Finding keywords with traffic is only half the battle; you must evaluate whether you can realistically compete
  • The Penguin update made unnatural backlink profiles a ranking penalty, not just ineffective
  • More specific long-tail keywords generally have less competition than broad terms
  • Analysis paralysis is the enemy; pick a direction and start building rather than endlessly researching
  • Understanding your competitors' backlink profiles is essential for judging keyword difficulty

What's Changed Since This Episode

Mark recorded this in 2013, and keyword competition analysis has become far more sophisticated and accessible. The manual backlink analysis Mark describes has been largely replaced by automated keyword difficulty scores built into every major SEO tool. Semrush, Ahrefs, and Moz all provide keyword difficulty metrics on a 0-100 scale that factor in the authority and backlink profiles of currently ranking pages.

These scores are not perfect, but they are dramatically better than the manual approach Mark had to use in 2013. Ahrefs' Keyword Difficulty score, for example, estimates how many referring domains you would need to rank in the top 10. Semrush's version factors in domain authority, content quality signals, and search intent matching.

Domain Authority (Moz) and Domain Rating (Ahrefs) remain useful proxies for understanding how strong your competition is. But the game has added a new wrinkle: Google's AI Overviews. For some queries, Google now generates AI-powered answers at the top of search results, which can significantly reduce organic click-through rates even if you rank number one. Smart keyword researchers in 2026 check whether a query triggers an AI Overview before investing in content targeting that keyword.

The courses and tools Mark mentions — Forever Affiliate, Internet Business Mastery Academy, Micro Site Profits, Keyword Canine — are all discontinued or defunct. Modern equivalents include Authority Hacker's courses for affiliate site building and Ahrefs Academy for free SEO training. The core principle Mark teaches — evaluate competition before investing effort — is more important than ever in a landscape where AI has raised the bar for content quality.

Resources Mentioned

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