Everyone tells you to find your niche.
Pick a lane. Stay in it. Become the go-to person for that one specific thing.
But here's what they don't tell you: Your niche becomes your prison.
I've watched creators box themselves into topics they've outgrown. The productivity guru who's tired of talking about morning routines. The fitness coach who wants to write about philosophy. The marketing expert who's secretly fascinated by pottery.
They built an audience for one version of themselves. Now they're stuck performing it.
The alternative isn't chaos. It's not posting random thoughts about everything. It's something more interesting: becoming a niche of one.
Instead of claiming expertise in a topic, you become known for how you think. Your perspective becomes the through-line, not your subject matter.
People follow you for your lens on the world, not your credentials in a category.
This means you can write about business on Monday and creativity on Wednesday. You can share a book recommendation and a half-formed thought about why most advice is terrible. You can evolve without losing your audience.
The goal isn't to be everything to everyone. It's to be unmistakably yourself to the right people.
Your audience doesn't need another expert. They need your particular way of seeing things.
Stop optimizing for the algorithm. Start optimizing for authenticity.
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I liked his idea of being mission-focused. I feel like I've always had a mission or been part of a mission of some kind (Boy Scouts, then Peace Corps, then Unicef, then my hotel). Now as a solopreneur / creator I have to define my own mission.
I saw this video the other day and it feels aligned with what you’re saying here and what I think you and I are trying to create - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NoYWgfYW-I&t=76s