Most bloggers struggle to make money because they don’t have the one thing that is necessary to really earn an income from their blogs: the right audience.
The money is going to flow to blogs that can reach a specific target audience.
That audience could be people interested in a particular niche (home improvement, golf, healthy living, gardening, etc.) OR in a specific geographic location. Choose the location you love and know the best and that has a fairly large number of people either living in it or traveling to it.
Give some serious thought to how large an area you want to cover because that is going to be key to how many businesses and advertisers will be interested.
In some areas – such as Austin – that will be a simple decision. In others such as the Dallas / Ft. Worth metroplex you will have to decide whether to target DFW or just Dallas or Dallas Metro or only Ft. Worth or Ft. Worth Metro, or maybe rural Dallas or surrounding areas outside a particular direction from Dallas.
Ask around and see what other people call where you want to target the most. Do a little research – maybe check to see how CraigsList has your area sectioned off. They have Dallas/Ft Worth separated into Dallas, Ft. Worth, DFW Mid-Cities, North DFW and South DFW.
A larger area is probably going to be better than a very narrowly focused one because the more people you can reach for a specific business the more valuable your site will be to them. This is going to vary greatly depending on whether you are in a large city or a small one.
Before you decide on the area you will cover, be sure to think about what kind of topics you want to write about and what businesses are involved.
Why target only Santa Rosa Beach or only Pensacola if you can just as easily target the entire Florida Panhandle or even all of Florida?
The reason you want to do that is so that you can reach a potentially larger audience and more businesses will be interested. A lumber mill like Good Millwork would be much better off working with a blog that covers Florida than any one city in Florida.
In their case, blogs or forums about home improvement or interior design might be an even better fit. If you’re really into DIY (do it yourself) home renovations or have a flair for interior design or love architecture consider those niches instead of or in addition to a geo-local blog.
You need to cover an area you know well because you will know how far people customarily travel to shop or on vacation or for entertainment in YOUR area. This can vary greatly from state to state and even city to city.
While city dwellers may rarely drive outside their own city, those who live in smaller cities (populations under 80,000-100,000) usually do travel into the closest large city and those who live in small towns may drive 60+ miles to make major purchases or have a night out on the town.
Do NOT target only the metro area. Remember that those who live outside of it drive into the city because there may be no other choice for them. Whenever possible you want your site to appeal to those in surrounding communities too – and this is why:
You want to target the audience that businesses need to reach.
Different businesses are interested in reaching different geographic locations. There is a hole in sites like Yahoo! Local and Google Maps for some businesses that you can fill.
Those sites usually target only locations within 25 or 50 miles which can be detrimental to manufacturing businesses that are centrally located between major geo-metros. Here is an example.
Golden Rule Gazebo is a gazebo manufacturer which delivers all over Texas and to surrounding states. They are located right in the middle of Texas – perfect for delivering gazebos across the state but bad for getting any kind of visibility on Local Search Directories because all of the major cities are just beyond 50 mile distance limit from them.
That means they can’t show up for searches for gazebos from Austin (just over 100 miles) Dallas (124 miles), Ft. Worth (112 miles), Houston (163 miles), San Antonio (173 miles).
Being featured on and advertising on blogs with large audiences in major Texas metros, blogs that write about Texas in general, or blogs where the audiences might want a gazebo are the perfect solution.
Good target audiences that immediately come to mind for gazebos are people interested in landscaping, wedding planning blogs or blogs catering to Bed and Breakfasts. Think about what audiences you can reach that businesses need.
Geo-targeted and niche blogs can fill the void for businesses like them. And sharp bloggers can create collaborations to push their local location blogs and niche-specific blogs to the top of Google search.
You can offer advertising packages across blogs for the specific other cities and metros businesses want to reach in the same way free printed classifieds like The Penny Saver and Thrify Nickel (now called American Classifieds) do.
Exactly what geographic area you cover is up to you. It could be anywhere and of whatever size you feel is best for what you want to write about and what kind of businesses you plan to attract as advertisers. You could even partner with an existing site.
There is ample interesting content that can be developed:
- What to do in that area
- Local attractions
- Local events
- Restaurant reviews
- Local musicians
- Other bloggers who write about your area
By reaching a local audience, your blog can become a focal point that any business local to that area can use to reach their potential customers and clients. That is where the money will be.
It makes more sense for people to “hang out” on a site where others where they live are instead of Facebook or Twitter and that ability may be coming later this year. (More on that in the next month or so.)
You could either have just a blog and use this new Social Network we will be alpha testing OR create a blog that has a live aspect to it similar to how BloggerLuv works. What you want to do is become “the” site – or at least one of “the” sites – that everyone wants to share locally.
If you’re sold on the idea of starting a local site you may be interested in becoming an authorized Local Proud reseller. This very short video explains what they offer:
Have questions? Want to take your blog to the next level or start a new one? Join us in at BloggerLuv, add CommentLuv to your blog, or inquire about being invited into our private blog collaboration.
Just leave a comment in this post or use our contact information.










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So can you do a combined geographic AND niche blog effectively? For example, what if I wanted to do an Iowa-based blog targeting runners? Or maybe a Midwest running blog?
Twitter: GrowMap
August 9, 2011 at 12:31 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Andrea,
Yes, definitely! Think about it this way. If I’m a runner I know other runners but there are lots of generic running blogs so do I recommend them? Probably not. But suppose I’m a runner based in Iowa or the midwest and there is a blog that writes about runs local to me.
Now do I share that blog with all my running buddies and friends? Absolutely! What you write is still of interest nationally or internationally so you don’t lose anything – and because you have a local component you GAIN local readers.
Once you have those local businesses who sell products or services runners use benefit from advertising with you or having you feature their products! Now you have viable income opportunities that ADD to your blog and advertising and content that is interesting to your readers instead of taking away from them.
Twitter: simplisticj
March 17, 2011 at 8:40 am
Twitter: @simplisticj
Great post. I think it’s super strong to have a great following geographically, whether online or otherwise. The sense of community is great for anyone and will help in many aspects of life. I just fired up a new blog that will definitely fit a certain geographical demographic, so this article has some awesome food for thought. Thanks!
Jody Elliott would love you to read ..Our New Journey- How to Live your Passion
Twitter: GrowMap
August 9, 2011 at 12:32 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Jody and welcome to GrowMap,
Great to have someone here who has vision. We have much in common.
Twitter: darkslk2300
March 8, 2011 at 3:41 am
Twitter: @darkslk2300
You are so right! In my begining as a blogger I targeted the wrong audience for about 4 months and I was asking myself everyday why I can’t make some money. But I opened my eyes and saw the mistakes that I made
Twitter: asuperaffiliate
February 17, 2011 at 11:39 am
Twitter: @asuperaffiliate
Very interesting post.
Research is definitely key whether you have an offline or online business. If you do have a local market, I can see how narrowing that down to specific areas would be pretty important.
No matter what you do offer your target audience, it is going to take time to build your business up. No one is going to make money overnight but the journey is so worth it.
Thanks again,
Adrienne
Adrienne would love you to read ..Blog Commenting- My New Favorite Thing
Interesting post. I think a lot of bloggers think they can start up and start making money right away. It is possible but not very likely. I think if you really want to be successful you need to blog for the right reasons. Do it because it is something you enjoy and you will be rewarded in one way or another.
Brandon
Twitter: Kerry_L_Russell
February 13, 2011 at 5:01 am
Twitter: @Kerry_L_Russell
Hey Gail
Research is definitely the key to attracting the right audience without a doubt. Getting it wrong from the offset is pretty much like having a massive list interested in everything else except what you offer. As they say the money is the list right…but only if your list is niche targeted!!! and the same rule applies for your audience/traffic.
Kerry Russell
Kerry Russell would love you to read ..Don’t Pay For Traffic – With A Little Time And Effort You Can Get FREE Targeted Traffic – Part Two
Twitter: IM_RobSimpson
February 9, 2011 at 10:11 am
Twitter: @IM_RobSimpson
Very Interesting post!
I have to watch what I say here as my blog is not specific in area nor niche market…
I have created my blog as a central hub to share future products or promotions in the area of Internet and affiliate marketing which is massive and covers a wide variety of sub niches.
I’ll more than likely narrow it down to a training blog for Internet and affiliate marketers but even then it will still not be specific in nature to what I sell or promote.
What is you view on this?
Cheers,
Robert

Robert Simpson would love you to read ..Testing! Testing! Testing!
Twitter: GrowMap
February 9, 2011 at 7:58 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Robert,
Geotrageting is really more important for reaching local audiences so you can benefit local businesses who will then support your efforts financially.
Your site as you describe it IS in a niche: Internet and Affiliate Marketing which is both a huge niche and a very saturated one. While that can be valuable there are only so many blogs about the same thing that any one person is going to frequent on a regular basis.
What I hope experienced bloggers will start to see is that first we share skills on sites like yours and mine, but then we need to move on and create sites that connect our local communities with locally obtained physical products and services.
Anything that exists solely for the sake of making money is like breeding horses solely for the sake of breeding more horses. They are like pyramid schemes that are self-limiting because indefinitely growing demand is impossible.
As we make decisions in our lives I believe we should focus on what is sustainable and good for all. Selling get-rich-quick ideas to the same target audience over and over that don’t work for 99% of the people who buy them only benefits the seller and is therefore not creating a better world for all (except to the extent that it gives you more money to spend).
A more ethical offering is to do something with your time and talents that benefits many and improves the overall economy, raising the standard of living for many instead of just one.
growmap would love you to read ..Why the Economy is In Decline and What We Can Do to Improve It
Twitter: RyanRenfrew
February 8, 2011 at 1:18 pm
Twitter: @RyanRenfrew
What uuuup?
Thanks for great post, I gues having a geo specific blogging community will evidently lead to greater loyalty and form tighter bonds. I am a huge believer of creating a strong community over a large community. Thanks for the food for thought.
Twitter: GrowMap
February 8, 2011 at 4:55 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
The problem with existing communities of bloggers is that they are too general. That is fine for leading and learning but not effective for making a living or benefiting the economy and small business or creating a better world.
If the “niche” is blogging there are millions of fish in a huge ocean. None get traction. Change that niche into “blogging tips for restaurants” or “Best of Chicago” or “home improvement Dallas” and NOW you have a viable audience.
Can a blogger rank as the best blogging-tips blog? How many blogging-tips blogs do you suppose there are?
Can that same blogger have one of the top three best blogs about home improvements in a specific metro location? ABSOLUTELY! All they need is “a little from their friends” (Other bloggers in their niche and out of it willing to lend a hand.)
growmap would love you to read ..PostRank Connect Identifies Social Media Influencers
Twitter: rileyhar
February 8, 2011 at 10:50 am
Twitter: @rileyhar
I think you absolutely correct. There is something to be said for the ready-aim-fire model vs. the ready-fire-aim model. Too many start a business without knowing whether there is a market for their product and the demographics as to who to target. Thanks for a good post!
Riley Harrison would love you to read ..WHAT CAN I DO DIFFERENTLY
Twitter: SteveYoungs
February 8, 2011 at 2:23 am
Twitter: @SteveYoungs
I guess it all depends on what products and/or services you wish to sell, there probably are times where a narrow geographical audience would be better. But having an online business should mean that geography is irrelevant.
Steve Youngs would love you to read ..Men Of Honour
Twitter: GrowMap
February 8, 2011 at 11:20 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Steve,
When geography is irrelevant you have to compete with the multi-national corporations who control almost all traditional media plus Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc. We’ve been unwittingly playing their game for years!
Here is just one example: every search engine that ever existed COULD have asked for a location when someone searched for – for example – “Dallas video store” but they never did. WHY DIDN’T THEY?
Because if they don’t most people will never find out that besides Blockbuster there are small independent video stores!
Google is finally willing to offer local listings but those will favor Big Brands. (Much more about that in the post I’ll put in CommentLuv in this reply.) Speaking of them, read the comments in that post and you’ll see many automatically assume they are the “best” search engine – even if they never used any others. One commentator even thought they were the ONLY company that figured out how to index the Internet.
When you target a specific geographic location you can reach a new and growing segment of shoppers: those who understand why shopping locally and suppporting small businesses creates improved economic conditions for their communities.
growmap would love you to read ..Google Monopoly- The Google Guillotine
Twitter: DanielleMcGaw
February 7, 2011 at 7:42 pm
Twitter: @DanielleMcGaw
Great advice for those who have a local appeal. Knowing who your audience is and knowing as much about them as possible can give your location focused blog a big step up towards getting more readers.
Danielle McGaw would love you to read ..“If You Build It They Will Come” – 6 Ways to Make Sure They Do
Your post has inspired me to give more attention to my local blog than to global-audience revenue sharing sites which I’ve been writing for. Hopefully, local advertisers can notice my site if I can increase my readership. Thanks.
Naya would love you to read ..Philhealth Maternity Benefits
Twitter: dennisyu
January 9, 2011 at 3:12 pm
Twitter: @dennisyu
Gail,
Great insight! The local markets are a natural progression from the larger enterprise blogs. It’s only a matter of time before there are the equivalent of local news sites that are run by bloggers. These will replace TV stations, magazines, and traditional media. And I predict massive employment shifts, mostly in the favor of the little bloggers.
Dennis
Dennis Yu would love you to read ..Groupon for a Denver Cosmetic Surgeon
Thanks for this post. I now know that i can make money by local blogging. At first, i was hesitant to blog because i find it a waste of time but because of what you have shared with us, i now know that i can now gain money by just blogging.
lawyers in Tampa would love you to read ..Florida DUI Trial – DUI Manslaughter Trial Of Former Yankee Star Starting Poorly For Prosecution
Twitter: GrowMap
December 5, 2010 at 7:22 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Tampa,
Think of what type of content people in Tampa are interested in that would also be a perfect fit for lawyers and other businesses who want to reach that audience. I am firmly convinced that combining a niche with a location is THE key to having an influential blog that makes money.
Many combinations will not have any strong sites right now, but if they do that is not a bad thing IF you can interest them in collaborating. There is room for more than one top content site in ANY niche and having others to collaborate with makes it that much easier to succeed.
growmap would love you to read ..Stop Competing – Start Collaborating!
Twitter: apartrental.com
October 4, 2010 at 1:12 am
Twitter: @apartrental.com
this is a good article to talk about this, I do not believe that local blogger will provide an opportunity like this. I think it not only provides jobs for every blogger, but it also provides the ability to express one’s opinion or we can say to comment on a certain issue. you’re doing a great job, continue to provide you updated information for our readers.
Paris Accommodation would love you to read ..Charming small little house near Bastille in Paris
Great points.. many people overlook creating a blog that targets a local area. I personally know someone who has a blog about Waikiki tourist deals and special events, and advertisers want to advertise on the blog like crazy even though it barely gets a few hundred visitors a day… the more targeted your blog is, and the more “money” related it is, the higher chance of earning money from it.
Henway would love you to read ..Motivation to lose weight
Twitter: GrowMap
March 3, 2011 at 12:02 am
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Henway,
That is an excellent point – that if you can reach a strong market you do NOT have to have huge amounts of traffic.
growmap would love you to read ..Google Farmer Update Slaps Google Shopping and Google Maps Competitors
Twitter: briangelliott
September 18, 2010 at 9:01 am
Twitter: @briangelliott
This is a welcome blog post as I was wondering if I should target my new blog to my geographical area or make the posts more universally appealing.
Brian Talk would love you to read ..The Apple Ipad is signalling the end of the laptop era
Twitter: GrowMap
September 20, 2010 at 4:52 am
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Brian,
I am glad the timing is fortuitous. You will definitely want to have a specific audience in mind and to select a niche that has a significant number of people. Choosing a niche is a little like doing keyword research. You want to target an existing demand without targeting what you are unlikely to be able to master.
growmap would love you to read ..Building Traffic Using Anchor Text
Twitter: plantspages
September 15, 2010 at 9:13 pm
Twitter: @plantspages
Many of my blogs are not making any money, but some are . Now I think, it may be because the right audience is coming to those blogs from which I am getting money.
Twitter: ivanwalsh
September 15, 2010 at 3:21 pm
Twitter: @ivanwalsh
Glenn over on Viper Chill wrote an article about this a while back. His take was to look at large up-coming events, eg World Cup as an extreme example, and then laser in on this.
Also, re local… just because you don’t live in, for example, LA, doesnt mean you cant blog about it. Just do the research first!
Ivan
Twitter: GrowMap
September 30, 2010 at 12:30 pm
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Ivan,
Positioning yourself in front of any traffic spike – whether that is a huge event, or holiday shopping, or tourism or any other idea – will work. I don’t believe any of them are as powerful though as having a super-popular site connected to a major geo-targeted area.
If you already had a blog like that, when something major comes to town you already have the audience.
While you can write about an area where you do not live, those who have personal knowledge of a location – and ideally recent knowledge – do have the advantage.
I never thought local blogging will give me an opportunity like this. It doesn’t only provide job for me but it also give me the capability of voicing out my opinion or may i say comment about a certain matter.
Twitter: GrowMap
March 3, 2011 at 12:01 am
Twitter: @GrowMap
Hi Delaila,
There are many small businesses that could benefit from an auto related geotargeted blog from window lettering businesses to auto-body shops to car parts houses to wrecking yards. This idea needs to take off as soon as possible.
growmap would love you to read ..Local Search Directory Listings
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