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Finding an Audience

Niche not numbers

By Rachel RobbinsPublished 8 months ago 4 min read
Top Story - May 2025
Photo by Anthony DELANOIX on Unsplash

I write because I have things I want to say. I want to be read. My words might soothe. They might articulate the complex. They might provide escapism into other’s lives. They might have an emotional truth. They might make people laugh.

I need an audience.

But how do I find one?

Do I just put out words and hope people will find them?

I am a cynic. Or at least I have a cynical side. When I was engaged with academic writing, I had goals to reach, journals with ‘impact’ to aim for. But I wondered if those words were ever really read or did they just get thumbed through, cursorily referenced by another academic, never really troubling the world outside. Reach and impact became meaningless metrics. Systems to be gamed.

But I still wanted my words to be read.

And who do I want to read my words? Who is my audience?

Is it versions of me? Middle-aged women struggling to be seen or believed? Am I providing cautionary tales for others? Or am I an oddity? A niche?

Can I be all these things?

I don’t want my writing to be some sort of narcissistic black hole. Some way of fooling myself that if only the world had listened to me we would all be better off. I just want it to be read and considered alongside others.

I’m writing these thoughts because recently I’ve been in audiences where I wasn’t the ‘target demographic’, and yet I still found pleasure in the events.

Death of a Unicorn – a comedy horror with a message that points out the perils of out-of-touch wealth and how nobody listens to the smart, teenage girl. No quibbles from me about that moral. It is a well-crafted film with excellent performances. However, with a unicorn at the centre of its thesis, I couldn’t help feeling it wasn’t for me.

The Quatermass Experiment by Toby Hadoke - available now

A book launch about the seminal British sci-fi TV show – The Quatermass Experiment. I had to read up on it before I attended, because it was outside of my area of interest or expertise. The good friends with whom I attended the event knew it and cared about it. The event was for them. But I got something from it too (besides their excellent company). I got something from listening to research and detail and passion. How Nigel Kneale wrote science fiction using the elements of a ghost story. And this let me think about genre and how haunting infuses my work (without ghosts or spirits) but as a proxy for trauma.

I have also watched films where I was surely the demographic. Mr Burton – a bio pic of Richard Burton’s formative years and the relationship with his English and Drama teacher. A film about British theatre and teaching is a sweet spot for this Drama graduate bought up by teachers. I liked the film and how it refused to prettify poverty. But I’m not sure I learnt anything.

The Penguin Lessons – a gentle comedy about grief and love manifested as a penguin. Steve Coogan was excellent at playing with the edges of obnoxious grumpiness. I laughed and cried. But the film offered few surprises.

In all of the above cases, I was happy to be ‘audience’. I was glad for the experience.

But still who is my audience? How do I capture their attention in a busy world?

And in a world of fake audiences, bought followers, robot responders, can I be sure that my words make any difference? That they are being read by humans?

I know I can’t be passive in the search for an audience. I need to use social media and I’ve learnt to target some of my posts to specialist pages when I write about Classic Hollywood. But I also find the idea of marketing myself, well, ick… But it is part of my job as a writer. It would just be nice to move past the point of saying ‘this is cringe’ to ‘I’m talking to people who get me’.

I want an audience. And I want it to be a genuine human populated audience. I will take small numbers of genuine engagement over bloated robot numbers.

I don’t know who my audience may be. But does that matter? Audiences aren’t static. My writing doesn’t have to target a demographic. Even though sometimes I think it would be easier if it did. If I could say, this is for you – this is for your niche. Read me – our values align perfectly.

But we all stumble into things that are not designed with us in mind and love them anyway.

If I only watched, read things that reflect me I would become bored. I would lose the part of me that seeks an emotional truth outside of my own experience. And then I would struggle to make connections within my life and to articulate the difficult, complex and funny to others.

So for now, I’ll keep writing. I’ll keep putting in the work to find my audience. Any tips you have on how you have found yours would be gratefully received.

In the meantime, tonight, I’m going to watch a vampire, horror blues-musical movie. I am sure the writers of it never thought of a middle-aged, white women living in the North of England, who loves Doris Day as their target demographic. But I’m willing to surprise them and I hope they surprise me.

AdviceStream of Consciousness

About the Creator

Rachel Robbins

Writer-Performer based in the North of England. A joyous, flawed mess.

Please read my stories and enjoy. And if you can, please leave a tip. Money raised will be used towards funding a one-woman story-telling, comedy show.

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insight

  1. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

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Comments (21)

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  • Raymond G. Taylor26 days ago

    Oh to find an audience. When I was a writer and editor for a magazine publishing company, the audience was provided. We just had to try to keep their interest and build the audience either further, or to more specific groups of people. I also wrote for some of the national and regional newspapers, again with an existing audience. This was all non fiction so that when I began to write fiction in earnest, and about things like art, I have no audience to start with and have to try to generate interest. The problem with Vocal, for me, is that it does not encourage a repeat audience outside of its own communities. This is I think the thing that we need to focus on. Getting out into the wider audience. Great thought-provoking piece Rachel.

  • Lana V Lynx26 days ago

    So much of this resonates with me, Rachel. Seems we have a lot in common - academic background, passion for writing and movies, and doubts about the impact. I am content with the fact that there is a group of people here on Vocal who read me regularly and my son.

  • Abubakkar khan7 months ago

    very nice😍

  • WilliamRose8 months ago

    I get your struggle to find an audience. I've been there with my technical work. Sometimes, it feels like we're just putting stuff out there, hoping someone will notice. But like you, I want my words to be read and considered. Do you think it's better to target a specific audience or just write for the love of it? Also, your example about not being the target demographic for a film is relatable. I've had similar experiences. It makes me wonder if we should broaden our horizons and be open to different types of content, even if it's not our usual cup of tea. What do you think?

  • Sun-Jinwo8 months ago

    Awesome 😱

  • Jasmine Aguilar8 months ago

    One thing that has always inspired me is that even if your story positively impacts one person or if only one person relates to it, then it has been well worth sharing!

  • Writing’s all about growing your audience—good luck on your journey! Also, love that you're into horror, me too! 🙂

  • Emy Quinn8 months ago

    When it comes to writing, it's all about building up your audience. I wish you luck on your writing journey. And I think it's awesome you are a horror fan, I love watching horror films. 🙂

  • great question to ask. Finding the method of delivering a message depends on the audience- einstein suggested making it simple enough for a 5 year old to understand..not easy

  • Marie381Uk 8 months ago

    Fabulous 🌻🌻🌻

  • WrittenWritRalf8 months ago

    It’s funny I am barely ever thinking about my audience. Heck I hate the whole marketing aspect of what we do so I try to avoid it. Hence it means I don’t chase publishing cause dude I could be writing. Sometimes I do get opportunities that lead me to sharing my writing and it’s always interesting to see how others react to it. How these things written for me are absorbed by those who come across it. I must say very well thought out piece I was there for the whole ride. Talking writing is always a boost for ourselves and others.

  • Naeem Mridha8 months ago

    Great

  • Logan Bennett8 months ago

    That's great!

  • Cadma8 months ago

    Congrats on top story but also this the struggle of writing. But they say, just write and your people (audience) will find you like a moth to a flame. Keep writing

  • Tim Carmichael8 months ago

    You’ve captured that tension between wanting to be heard and not wanting to shout into a void—or worse, to bots. Congratulations on your top story!

  • Nomi8 months ago

    great

  • shining Couple8 months ago

    That's great

  • I'd give you tips, but I don't think I have an audience. But I appreciate the article anyway, particularly with all the cinematic references. Whenever you do that, I become part of your audience.

  • Aspen Marie 8 months ago

    You’ve articulated well why an echo chamber is boring and unfulfilling. Reading and experiencing things outside of our usual sphere is what creates memories. We need novel experiences to punctuate our everyday landscape 🙌🏽

  • Rachel Deeming8 months ago

    Looking forward to hearing about the movie. I love Doris Day too. And self-promotion is what it's all about! I find it tedious too and I wish I had more time to read. So much more time. Sigh.

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