Forum Moderators: phranque
But a few months ago, a large company "expanded" into his niche and launched a multimillion site.
This virtually destroyed his niche because there was no way he (or any other webmaster) could keep up with a full staff creating new sections and features.
Has this happened to anyone else here?
This really is just the beginning of the internet. We're like the first ones out to California. Now look at the place. :)
Just another reason to diversify your sites.
Right now my site does well, along with the site of a bestselling author who writes on the same subject. Both of us could be left out in the cold if some big corporation gets in on the action, but, hm...I don't know how likely that is. Right now I'm thinking, not terribly likely. But--I guess anything could happen.
Edited to add: I suppose no "niche" subject is immune from a "Walmart-ization," but I think some niches are well represented with a "personal touch," and wouldn't necessarily be better with 20 different people writing about it.
I have a hard time imagining a big corporation offering the same experience in their site as this best-selling author, me, and other people who write about this same niche do. I guess a big corporation could make a dent, but having 20 different people writing content sounds like it would be too scattered, and too expensive. This niche is something that not *anyone* can write about. It takes years of experience to be able to understand this niche well enough to write about it with any credibility.
It's not all doom and gloom for the little guy - for all the marketing budgets and resources of large companies, they don't have *that* large an advantage in the SERPs. Plus many ignore SEO simply because they can generate a lot more traffic from traditional media marketing.
For the past while I've been slowly creaping up on the market leader in my area to the point I just knocked them off of no.1 on MSN for my (main) term and I'm not far behind in Google and Yahoo as well. If I (with no budget) can do that to a multi-billion dollar advertising agency, then anyone can.
At the end of the day, the big guys still have exposure and traffic at levels the little guy can only dream of, but you can still win minor victories in niche markets - you just need to step up the level of your game. Chances are they won't bat an eyelid - it's the little guys you need to watch out for! ;)
Scott
Companies have very short attention spans. Most of those people will probaby be doing something very different next year, while their links break and their content ages and their site gradually becomes superfluous.
A forum with a few hundred active members will outgrow even the largest commercial site, and the unbiased nature of a community site within a niche gives it a key advantage (you're not trying to sell anything of your own).
Online vendors on the other hand always have this risk present. It's really no different to bricks and mortar business.
TJ