<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">
  <channel>
    <title>DEV Community: Luis Reginaldo Medilo</title>
    <description>The latest articles on DEV Community by Luis Reginaldo Medilo (@loythegreat).</description>
    <link>https://dev.to/loythegreat</link>
    <image>
      <url>https://media2.dev.to/dynamic/image/width=90,height=90,fit=cover,gravity=auto,format=auto/https:%2F%2Fdev-to-uploads.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fuser%2Fprofile_image%2F3945140%2F243babea-ee63-4ff3-90c2-267715da36c8.png</url>
      <title>DEV Community: Luis Reginaldo Medilo</title>
      <link>https://dev.to/loythegreat</link>
    </image>
    <atom:link rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" href="https://dev.to/feed/loythegreat"/>
    <language>en</language>
    <item>
      <title>How I Built a Philippine Tech Blog to 1 Million Monthly Readers (And Then Watched Google Destroy It)</title>
      <dc:creator>Luis Reginaldo Medilo</dc:creator>
      <pubDate>Fri, 22 May 2026 04:11:04 +0000</pubDate>
      <link>https://dev.to/loythegreat/how-i-built-a-philippine-tech-blog-to-1-million-monthly-readers-and-then-watched-google-destroy-it-o57</link>
      <guid>https://dev.to/loythegreat/how-i-built-a-philippine-tech-blog-to-1-million-monthly-readers-and-then-watched-google-destroy-it-o57</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;I started Tech Pilipinas in a bedroom in the Philippines more than 8 years ago. No funding, no team, no strategy beyond "I know tech and Filipinos need someone to explain it clearly." At the peak, we hit over a million monthly readers. Then Google ran an update and we lost 98% of our search traffic in a matter of months.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;This is that story. Both halves of it.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;
  
  
  The Early Years Were Ugly
&lt;/h2&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The first few years were slow in a way that would have killed most people's motivation. I published constantly — product reviews, buying guides, how-to articles for Windows and Android — and for a long time the traffic just wasn't there. Not because the content was bad, but because no one knew we existed.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;What changed things wasn't a clever growth hack. It was patience and local specificity. Most tech blogs covering the Philippine market were either written by foreigners who didn't know the context, or local writers copying international articles without adapting anything. I was writing for a Filipino reading a tech article, comparing phones in Philippine pesos, wondering if a product was available on Lazada or which telco network it worked best on. That specificity started earning real search traffic because nobody else was doing it properly.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;By year three, we were pulling consistent numbers from Google. By year five, the site had become what I'd describe as the closest thing the Philippines had to a proper tech publication built for everyday Filipinos rather than enthusiasts.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;
  
  
  What Actually Drove 1 Million Monthly Readers
&lt;/h2&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The smartphone boom in the Philippines hit hard in the late 2010s. Filipinos were buying their first Android devices in massive numbers and they had questions — basic ones, like how to set up mobile data, how to transfer files, how to use GCash. We had the answers, written in plain English with actual Philippine context baked in.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;I was writing 2 to 3 articles a day at peak production. Not all of them were good. Plenty were thin. But the volume, combined with the local angle, meant we ranked for thousands of long-tail queries that bigger international publications had no reason to pursue. "How to load Globe data promo" is not a query that a US tech blog cares about. It was ours by default.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Facebook was also a real traffic channel, not just a vanity metric. Filipinos are extremely online and extremely Facebook-first. A well-framed post with a relatable hook would get shared inside Pinoy tech Facebook groups and generate real reading sessions, not just bounce-and-leave visits.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;
  
  
  The Peak
&lt;/h2&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Crossing a million monthly sessions felt different from every other milestone. It was the first time the site stopped feeling like a project and started feeling like a publication.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The team was still tiny. It was mostly me, occasionally a contributor. The ad revenue wasn't life-changing but it was consistent. Brands started approaching for product coverage. Sponsored content requests came in. For the first time, the business side of the publication actually felt like a business.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;
  
  
  Then Google Did What Google Does
&lt;/h2&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In late 2023, Google's Helpful Content Update (HCU) hit the site. Within weeks, search traffic collapsed — from close to a million monthly Google visitors to under 20,000. That's not a rounding error. That's a site-level decision by Google's algorithm that content like ours, however useful to actual Filipino readers, wasn't what they wanted to serve anymore.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Years of work, indexed, ranked, read by real people — and then effectively invisible overnight. I'm still a bit bitter about it, honestly.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The honest truth is that the HCU rewarded a certain type of content authority that smaller, solo-operated publications struggle to signal. It wasn't purely about content quality. It was about site structure, author expertise markup, editorial depth, and dozens of other factors that favor publications with real editorial infrastructure. We had the content. We lacked the scaffolding Google now demands to prove it.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;
  
  
  Where We Are Now
&lt;/h2&gt;

&lt;p&gt;We didn't fold. We rebuilt the traffic strategy around Bing and Yahoo, which still send us six-figure monthly visitors without the same volatility. We're growing on Facebook again, building push notification subscribers, and leaning into content that travels well without Google — explainers, government guides, news for the Filipino market.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The million-reader milestone is still there in the history. I'm not chasing that number back through Google anymore. We're building something that doesn't hinge on a single algorithm's opinion.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;If you're building a content site outside the US market: local specificity is real protection. No international publication is going to compete seriously for "how to load Globe data promo." Those queries are yours. There are thousands of them. Build around them before someone else figures that out.&lt;/p&gt;




&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;Luis Reginaldo Medilo is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of &lt;a href="https://techpilipinas.com" rel="noopener noreferrer"&gt;Tech Pilipinas&lt;/a&gt;, a Philippine tech publication based in Cebu City.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

</description>
      <category>blogging</category>
      <category>seo</category>
    </item>
  </channel>
</rss>
