But I, I miss how, uh, like fair it seemed. It was almost like the amount of work you put in, your earnings kind of correlated with that. You know, there was, there was very much, it was almost like a linear thing in a weird kind of way. And I just mean fair, like, Hey, like if you put out the right content, it will get seen and you’ll grow in that, in that way that you should.
Um, but you know, things don’t always stay permanently. So now SEO, I couldn’t tell you the first thing about it. Although I’m convinced that if I started a site from scratch and ran it the exact same way that I started back then, it would do just fine. SEO wise. It’s just because all the sites I have right now, there’s so many articles put up.
I could never, I can never fix them.
Jared: Yeah,
Nat: if there is, if there is even fixing to be done.
Jared: Now, let me ask you about those current sites. A lot of people who had themselves in similar situations are trying to find different traffic sources for this content. Right? So, um, you pivoted and went with a LinkedIn and business community approach.
Uh, just curious why. And again, a lot of people listening are struggling to know what the right decision is for themselves in terms of. Their online journey and where they, where they go next, not only this year, but you know, a big picture.
Nat: I just found something. I found that the model of how I grew the websites was very, very similar on LinkedIn, which was basically growing a community.
So, and I also noticed this was back in 2019. The organic reach was on LinkedIn was insane. It was nuts. And I actually missed two years of even bigger organic reach was like 17 and 18. That was like early days of TikTok on LinkedIn. It was, it was nuts. I actually missed those two years. Um, I kind of came in at the tail end of, of when organic reach was really, really being pushed on LinkedIn.