I wrote 47 blog posts for my startup. Google Search Console says I get about 45 impressions per month, not clicks, impressions. One impression per post per month, which is basically the same as not existing.
I was doing a monthly review, spreadsheet open, ready to log wins. The impressions column said 38 for the whole month, for 47 posts. I closed the laptop and went for a walk.
I did everything the guides said
I'm building IFS Space, an AI companion for Internal Family Systems self-therapy. Solo founder, bootstrapped. When I launched, I followed the playbook: blog, long-tail keywords, publish consistently.
So I did, 47 times. I had the spreadsheet, the content calendar, the conviction that volume wins.
One post was targeting "IFS therapy exercises." I'd done the keyword research, decent volume, low competition. Still ranks nowhere.
Ahrefs found that 96.55% of all pages get zero traffic from Google. I knew that stat when I started. Didn't really understand it until I became it.
The irony
I'm building an AI tool for therapy, and my content read like AI wrote it.
Not literally. But I was following a formula so rigid that the output was indistinguishable from prompting ChatGPT with "write a blog post about IFS parts work." Every post started with keyword research. Find something like "IFS therapy exercises." Write 1,200 words around it. Technically accurate, covered the topic, answered the question, and read like every other SEO blog post you've ever skimmed and immediately forgotten.
Someone searching "how to do IFS therapy on your own" isn't looking for an explainer with H2s and a table of contents. They're scared, curious, and they want to know if this is actually possible. I answered the literal question without addressing the person asking it.
I sent a post to a friend who knows nothing about IFS to see if it made sense. She said: "I get what it's explaining but I don't feel anything." Yeah.
Health niches are a different game
Nobody told me this part. Google's E-E-A-T framework, Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trust, is the dominant ranking factor for health-adjacent content. Mental health sits squarely in YMYL territory.
My blog had none of the trust signals. No author bio with credentials, no first-person experience woven in, no backlinks from authoritative sources. I was publishing into a void expecting Google to care.
| What I had | What Google wanted |
|---|---|
| 47 keyword-targeted posts | 5 posts with genuine expertise |
| Content calendar consistency | E-E-A-T trust signals |
| ~120 hours invested | Backlinks from authoritative sources |
| Zero domain authority | Credentials, citations, real experience |
A solo founder's blog with no credentials and no backlinks is starting from a massive disadvantage in health topics. Trust comes before keyword density.
What quantity-first actually costs you
There's a popular idea in indie hacker circles: publish frequently, let the winners emerge. Sounds logical, but it's bad advice for a new domain with no authority.
Every mediocre post I published diluted whatever signal my domain had. I wasn't building a content library, I was building a graveyard, and Google noticed.
The real cost wasn't just time, it was false confidence. I felt like I was doing marketing because I was producing things. Activity felt like progress. Meanwhile I had zero conversations with actual IFS practitioners while writing 47 posts about IFS. That time could've been user interviews.
What I'm doing now
I rebuilt the whole approach around fewer posts that are actually good.
I built a multi-agent content pipeline where research, writing, fact-checking, and SEO optimization are separate stages. The research agent pulls real stats and competitor gaps, the writing agent has strict voice rules, and the fact-checker verifies claims. Basically content review, but automated.
Cross-posting to Dev.to and Hashnode with canonical URLs instead of publishing exclusively on my zero-authority blog, which means meeting audiences where they already are. Two to four posts a month instead of eight to ten, and each one gets real research and real numbers.
And building in public. This post is that.
The thing nobody says out loud
Volume is a hiding place. I published 47 times instead of figuring out why the first 5 didn't work.
I'm building IFS Space, an AI companion for IFS self-therapy.
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