In Episode 18 of the Late Night Internet Marketing podcast, I revealed one of my more unusual affiliate experiments: I built a niche website about a farm tool based on a random keyword suggestion from my friend Josh Spaulding. The site was already generating organic traffic and had earned about $8 at the time of recording. Here is what the experiment taught me and why the underlying strategy still works.

The Experiment

Josh used a keyword research tool to find a low-competition, moderate-search-volume keyword for a product I knew nothing about. I registered the exact-match domain, created a small content site, and started building backlinks through article marketing. Within weeks, the site was getting steady organic traffic from Google.

The point of the experiment was to demonstrate that you do not need passion for or deep expertise in a niche to build a profitable affiliate site. You need keyword research skills, the ability to create useful content, and patience. The farm tool niche had almost zero competition, real commercial intent from searchers, and products available through Amazon Associates.

What Still Works From This Approach

The core principles behind this experiment remain valid in 2026, though the tactics have evolved significantly.

  • Low-competition niches are still goldmines. While everyone fights over keywords in health, finance, and technology, obscure product categories with real buyer intent remain underserved. Kitchen gadgets, specialized tools, hobby equipment, and niche outdoor gear all offer opportunities.
  • Keyword research is still the foundation. The specific tools have changed, but the process of finding keywords with reasonable search volume and low difficulty scores remains the starting point for any niche site.
  • Small sites can generate meaningful passive income. You do not need a massive authority site to make money with affiliate marketing. A focused 10-20 page site targeting a specific product category can generate $100-500 per month with minimal ongoing maintenance.

What Has Changed

Several things from the 2012 playbook no longer work or are no longer advisable.

  • Exact-match domains lost their SEO advantage. Google's EMD update in September 2012 reduced the ranking boost from having your keyword in your domain name. In 2026, a brandable domain with quality content outperforms a keyword-stuffed domain every time.
  • Article marketing for backlinks is dead. The article directories I used for link building in 2012 have mostly shut down or lost all SEO value. Modern link building relies on genuine outreach, creating linkable resources, and earning editorial mentions.
  • Content quality expectations are dramatically higher. A few hundred words of generic product information no longer ranks. Today's successful affiliate sites need detailed product reviews with real photos, comparison tables, buying guides, and genuine firsthand experience.
  • Google's Helpful Content Update targets thin affiliate sites. Sites that exist purely to funnel traffic to affiliate links without providing genuine value are exactly what Google's 2022 and 2024 algorithm updates were designed to suppress.

The Importance of Internet Marketing Friends

The motivational segment of that episode focused on something I still believe strongly: you need friends in your niche. Josh Spaulding suggested this experiment, challenged me with the keyword, and provided accountability. That kind of relationship is invaluable.

Building an online business is often a solitary activity, especially if you are doing it part-time while holding down a day job. Having even one person who understands what you are working on, who can bounce ideas with you and call you out when you are procrastinating, makes an enormous difference. Join a mastermind group, attend a conference, or simply reach out to other bloggers in your space. The connections you build will pay dividends for years.

Pinterest and Affiliate Marketing

I also discussed an article about using Pinterest for affiliate marketing, which was a brand new concept in February 2012. Pinterest has since become one of the most powerful platforms for driving affiliate revenue, particularly in niches like home decor, fashion, food, and crafts. If you are in a visual niche and not using Pinterest in 2026, you are leaving money on the table.

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