Why do articles cover topics I don't offer?

It's a common question, and a completely normal one: "Why is RankYak writing about topics I don't sell or services I don't provide?"

The short answer: Because those topics are the entry points that bring new customers to your website.

Below is the full explanation.


⭐ Why this happens

A common misconception is that your blog should only contain articles directly about your product or service.


But in SEO, especially modern SEO, that's not how discovery works.

People rarely search for exactly what you sell. They search for related problems, comparisons, alternatives, beginner questions, how-tos, and "what is..." queries.

By covering these topics, you open more doors for people who would never have found you otherwise.


🚪 How this helps you

When an article targets a question someone is searching for, two things happen:

  1. You attract visitors who were previously outside your reach (even if the topic is slightly broader than what you offer)

  2. You build authority in your niche, which lifts all your rankings, including the pages about your product

This is why some articles RankYak generates may seem indirectly related at first glance.


šŸ” What if I don't offer this product/service?

That's okay, and intentional.

People often enter through broad, general topics and discover your actual offering afterward. It's similar to someone walking into a bookstore for one title but finding something better on the shelf next to it.

Your website becomes the place where they:

  • Learn

  • Compare

  • Ask questions

  • And eventually notice what you offer

It's not about matching your product catalog, it's about meeting people where their searches begin.


āš–ļø What about competitor mentions?

Mentioning or comparing to competitors isn't harmful.


In fact, it's a huge SEO advantage, because:

  • People constantly search comparison keywords ("X vs Y", "Best tools for...", etc.), representing huge search volumes

  • Those articles bring searchers to your website instead of elsewhere

  • You control how the comparison is framed

  • Google trusts sites that cover the full landscape, not only self-promotion

Mentioning a competitor doesn't send customers away, it brings their potential customers to you.


šŸ“ˆ The big idea

Your blog isn't a brochure. It's a discovery engine, a collection of entry points designed to introduce new customers to your business.

RankYak doesn't just write articles about you. It writes articles that bring people to you.

  • The wider the net, the more visitors you attract

  • The more visitors you attract, the stronger your SEO foundation becomes

  • And the stronger your foundation, the better your product/service pages will rank

This is how organic growth works. Consistently, quietly, and exponentially.



Still need help?

Contact us

FAQ