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The graveyard of the internet is filled with niche sites that never made a dollar. They were built on passion, a hunch, or a trending keyword—without validation. Months of writing, designing, and promoting led to silence. The failure wasn’t in execution; it was in the foundation.

We’ve launched profitable sites and shut down losers fast. The difference is a ruthless validation process we complete before registering a domain or opening a WordPress install. This one-page guide contains the seven non-negotiable questions we answer. If you can’t answer “yes” or provide a strong, data-backed “maybe” to all seven, walk away. Your future self will thank you.

A white man with a striped sweater looks at a tack board filled with different documents

The Mindset: You Are a Venture Capitalist

You are about to invest your most valuable assets: time and focus. Treat this like a VC doing due diligence on a startup. Your niche is the market, your site is the product. Demand evidence, not excitement.

Question 1: Is There Proven, Existing Commercial Intent?

What to Look For: Evidence that people are already searching with the intent to spend money.

  • Tool & Process: Use Ahrefs or Semrush. Search for your core niche idea (e.g., “home brewing”).
  • Validate With Data: Look for keywords with clear commercial modifiers in the top 20 results:
    • “Best [product]”
    • “[Product] review”
    • “[Product A] vs [Product B]”
    • “Buy [product]”
    • “Deal/discount/coupon for [product]”
  • Red Flag: If the top results are only Wikipedia, forum discussions, and “how-to” guides without product mentions, it’s a hobby niche, not a commercial one.
  • Our Rule: We need to see at least 5-10 commercial intent keywords with a combined search volume of 2,000+ per month.

Question 2: Can You Compete in the SERPs Today?

What to Look For: Who currently ranks for those commercial keywords, and can you realistically outmaneuver them?

  • Process: Manually examine the top 5 results for your top 3 commercial keywords.
  • Analyze the Competitors:
    • Authority: Check their Domain Rating (DR) in Ahrefs. A SERP full of DR 70+ sites (Wirecutter, CNN, Forbes) is a near-impossible wall.
    • Content Quality: Is the content thin, outdated, or templated? Or is it deeply detailed with original media and strong E-E-A-T?
    • Content Type: Are they all listicles (“10 best…”)? This might leave room for an in-depth, single-product “review hub.”
  • Our Rule: We need to see at least one ranking page we are confident we can create a definitively better version of within 6 months. Look for the “weakest player” in the top 10.

Question 3: Is There a Viable Affiliate Ecosystem?

What to Look For: Multiple ways to monetize beyond a single, low-commission program.

  • Process: Spend 30 minutes searching for affiliate programs.
    1. Amazon Associates: Are the relevant products even eligible (many electronics are not)? What’s the commission rate? (Often 1-3%).
    2. Merchant Direct Programs: Google “[Product Category] affiliate program.” Look for brands on networks like Awin, CJ Affiliate, or Impact.
    3. Digital Products/SaaS: For some niches (productivity, business), a high-ticket SaaS tool with recurring commissions is the gold standard.
  • Our Rule: We need to identify at least two distinct, reputable affiliate partners offering a minimum commission of 8%. Relying solely on Amazon is a fragile business model.

Question 4: Is the Audience Capable of Making a Purchase?

What to Look For: Signs the target audience has disposable income for this category.

  • Process: This is part demographic sleuthing, part common sense.
    • Price Point: Are the products in this niche typically $50, $500, or $5,000? A niche around “$500 espresso machines” suggests a more committed audience than “$5 phone cases.”
    • Audience Indicators: Look at the communities (subreddits, Facebook groups). Are members discussing specific models, upgrades, and accessories? That’s purchase-focused. Are they only discussing free techniques or DIY solutions? That’s a red flag.
  • Our Rule: The products/services should require a considered purchase, not an impulse buy. This indicates higher intent and loyalty.

Question 5: Do You Have a Unique Angle or “Right to Win”?

What to Look For: A compelling reason why you can succeed where others exist.

  • Process: Brainstorm against the competitors you found in Q2.
    • Experience: Do you have hands-on, professional, or extensive personal experience they lack?
    • Depth: Can you commit to creating more detailed, data-driven content (e.g., actual performance tests)?
    • Format: Can you leverage a medium they ignore (e.g., detailed video tutorials, interactive tools)?
    • Access: Do you have connections to industry insiders or early products?
  • Our Rule: “I’ll write better articles” is not an angle. “I am a former barista who will publish video tear-downs of every grinder I review” is an angle. Your angle must be concrete and defensible.

Question 6: Is the Niche Sufficiently “Evergreen” or Growing?

What to Look For: Stable or increasing demand, not a fleeting trend.

  • Process: Use Google Trends for the past 5 years. Look for the core topic and key product terms.
    • Ideal: A steady or slowly upward-trending line.
    • Caution: A sharp spike and decline indicates a fad.
    • Consider Futures: Is this niche susceptible to technological disruption or regulation? (e.g., “best DVD players” was once evergreen).
  • Our Rule: We prefer niches with a 5-year history of stable interest. For newer niches (e.g., “AI productivity tools”), we require overwhelming evidence of commercial intent (Q1) and a low-competition window (Q2).

Question 7: Do You Have a Realistic Path to Initial Traffic?

What to Look For: A clear, non-paid strategy to get the first 1,000 visitors.

  • Process: Map out your “Day 1” to “Day 90” traffic plan.
    • SEO: Are there low-competition informational keywords you can target quickly to start building topical authority? Use Ahrefs‘ Keyword Difficulty filter set to “0-15”.
    • Community: Are there active, relevant forums or subreddits where you can provide value (without spamming) to earn referral clicks?
    • Content Formats: Can you create Pinterest-friendly infographics or short YouTube answer videos to capture alternative search traffic?
  • Our Rule: “I’ll just write and hope Google finds me” is not a plan. We must identify one non-paid traffic channel we can execute on immediately.

The Go/No-Go Decision

Print this page. Write your answers. Be brutally honest.

  • 7 Strong “Yes” Answers: Proceed. You have a validated foundation.
  • 5-6 “Yes/Mixed” Answers: Proceed with caution. The weak points are your biggest risks. Can you mitigate them?
  • <5 “Yes” Answers: Stop. This idea is not viable. The time you save by walking away now is your first profit.

Validation is the highest-ROI work you will ever do in affiliate marketing. It turns speculation into strategy. Answer these seven questions, and you won’t just be starting a niche site—you’ll be launching a business with a map.

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