
The Beginner’s Dilemma
Let’s start with a confession: picking a content niche is harder than picking a Netflix show on a Friday night. And unlike Netflix, you can’t just bail halfway through and pretend you didn’t waste an hour.
The word “niche” gets thrown around so much it’s lost its shape. Gurus scream “Find your niche!” like it’s a golden ticket. But what they rarely tell you is this: choosing a niche isn’t about locking yourself into a box—it’s about finding a lane you can drive in without crashing.
First Things First: What Even Is a Niche?
A niche is a specific corner of the internet where your content lives and thrives. It’s narrower than “fitness” but broader than “leg day workouts for left-handed people who only have dumbbells.”
Think of it like cuisine. “Food” is too broad. “Vegan street food recipes” is a niche. “Vegan street food recipes that only use chickpeas” might be a little too niche.
Your goal: find that sweet spot where there are enough people who care, but not so many creators that you’re drowned out before you start.
Why Picking a Niche Matters
Here’s the truth: you can’t talk about everything. Not if you want to grow. Audiences like predictability—when they follow you for Here’s the truth: you can’t talk about everything. Not if you want to grow. Audiences like predictability—when they follow you for budget travel tips, they don’t want you suddenly reviewing lawnmowers (unless, of course, you’re budget traveling with a lawnmower, which I’d watch).
A niche gives you:
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Clarity: You know what to post.
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Audience trust: People know what they’ll get from you.
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Algorithm love: Platforms push consistent creators more often.
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Room to grow: Master one thing, then expand later.
Without a niche, you’re like a band that plays jazz one night, heavy metal the next, and children’s lullabies on the weekend. Charming, maybe—but impossible to build a loyal fanbase.
Step 1: Ask Yourself the Boring Questions
Grab a notebook (or your Notes app) and answer these:
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What do I actually enjoy talking about?
If you hate the topic, you’ll quit faster than a New Year’s gym membership. -
What do people already ask me about?
Your coworkers constantly bug you about productivity hacks? That’s a clue. -
What am I curious enough to learn publicly?
You don’t have to be the expert—you can be the student who shares the journey.
Step 2: Check the Market (a.k.a. Stalk a Little)
Search your potential niche on YouTube, TikTok, or Google. See who’s crushing it. This isn’t to scare you off—it’s to figure out:
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Is there demand? (lots of people posting, lots of engagement)
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Is there space for your voice? (maybe no one’s covering it your way)
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Can you spot a gap? (people ask questions in comments that aren’t answered)
For example: The fitness niche is huge. But “fitness for busy parents who only have 20 minutes a day”? That’s a sub-niche with hungry viewers.
Step 3: Marry Passion with Profit
Here’s the elephant in the room: some niches pay better than others. Finance, health, and tech often attract more ad dollars than, say, knitting sweaters for cats.
That doesn’t mean you should chase money and ignore passion (burnout is real). But it does mean asking: Can this niche eventually support me if I want it to?
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Passion only: Great hobby, but maybe not sustainable.
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Profit only: You’ll hate your life after 50 posts.
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Passion + Profit: That’s the magic middle.
Step 4: Test Before You Marry
Picking a niche isn’t a wedding vow. Think of it like dating—you don’t commit on the first swipe.
Run small experiments:
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Post 5 TikToks on different topics and see which gets traction.
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Write 3 blogs on different niches and check the analytics.
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Poll your audience (even if it’s just friends at first).
The internet will tell you what sticks. Listen to it.
Step 5: Niche Down… But Don’t Suffocate
Here’s where most people get stuck: they niche down so hard they leave themselves no wiggle room.
Example: If your niche is “coffee reviews,” cool. But what happens when you want to expand into cafés, gear, or even productivity hacks tied to caffeine? That’s still coherent.
Think of your niche like a tree. The trunk is your main topic. The branches are sub-topics that keep it fresh. If the trunk is too narrow, the tree dies.
The Biggest Myths About Picking a Niche
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“You must have expertise.” Nope. You can share the journey as you learn.
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“Once you pick, you can’t change.” Wrong. Many big creators evolved over time.
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“Broad is better because it attracts more people.” Actually, broad is worse. Specific attracts loyal fans.
Real-World Examples
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MrBeast: Started with gaming, then stunts, now a global brand.
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Ali Abdaal: Began with med school productivity, then expanded into entrepreneurship and life advice.
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Emma Chamberlain: Started in quirky teen lifestyle, now runs a coffee empire.
They all started in one lane before branching out.
FAQs
Q1: Can I have more than one niche?
At first, no. Master one. Once you grow, you can expand.
Q2: What if my niche feels too small?
As long as people are searching for it, small is actually good—you’ll stand out faster.
Q3: How long should I stick to a niche before pivoting?
Give it at least 3–6 months of consistent posting before judging.
Final Takeaway
Picking a content niche isn’t about finding the “perfect” one—it’s about finding a starting point. Start with something you can talk about endlessly, test it, refine it, and let your niche evolve with you.
The internet loves specialists, but it also rewards creators who stay human, curious, and adaptable.
So, don’t overthink it. Pick a lane, hit publish, and remember: the niche doesn’t make the creator. The creator makes the niche.
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