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JD Arney has a great post over at Performancing that talks about the common blogger advice to "write what you know." While that line is often fed to both businesses and individuals looking to break into the blog world, the reality is that blogging is now a mature enough realm that you can't simply throw up any old blog and make a go of it. Sure, what you know comes into play, but there's more to it than that.

JD makes a great point about the fact that pretty much every mainstream topic has thousands or even tens of thousands of competing blogs. You can't just put up a blog about football or cars or parenting and expect it to succeed.

He writes:

Five years ago anyone could have started a site on pretty much any topic and been a success, as long as they had a little writing talent and some ability to self-promote. Today it's a different story. Back to Joe, if he picks a topic based on his favorite interests he'll be competing against sites with multiple writers that can pump out a dozen (or more) stories a day. Could he still build an audience? Sure. Can he make a little money? Of course. But the odds of anyone becoming a leading source in a competitive industry are slim unless they're able to hire writers and post nearly around the clock to keep up.

So what should someone like Joe do at this point? There are two options:

1. Go Narrow - With regards to Joe's interests, he could start a blog on Apple's iPhone, the Super Bowl, or action movies instead of the broader interests listed above. There are many competitive niches with sub-niches that could be owned simply by posting consistently. Drill down into a category as deeply as you can and you'll often find gold.

These are excellent points. When I began the Zero Dollars experiment a year and a half a go, a blog became a natural extension of the t-shirt shop that I set up. Initially, I started off simply writing commentary on the latest topical news. While my traffic grew slowly and steadily, it wasn't until more than a year later when I really started expanding into my own personal experiences and exploring new niches that seemed to strike my reader's interests that I really started to see strong traffic growth. It wasn't enough to be "just another blog" about a particular topic. I had to find my voice and my style and learn how to go with the flow based on reader feedback.

The thing about blogging is that it rarely works out exactly how you expect it to. Thus, to be a successful blogger (or to include a success blog in your business) you need to be flexible. Finding out how to present information in a new and interesting way (or simply finding new and interesting information) will go a long way toward helping you stand out in the crowd.

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Jennifer Laycock is the Editor of Search Engine Guide, an educational web site aimed at translating the search marketing world into something that small business owners can understand. Jennifer specializes in common sense search engine marketing, viral marketing and customer outreach via social media and blogs. A former search marketing consultant and in-house trainer, Jennifer’s clients have included companies like Verizon, American Greetings and Highlights for Children. Her primary clients now are a little girl named Elnora and a little boy named Emmitt.