I Published 53 Blog Posts But Google Still Doesn’t Trust Me — Here’s What I Learned

I Published 53 Blog Posts But Google Still Doesn’t Trust Me — Here’s What I Learned

Written by Teju Harpal, Founder of Akash Earning Hub

Every blogger reaches a moment of silent frustration.

You research keywords, write long articles, fix grammar, improve structure, and follow every SEO rule you know. Still, your pages struggle to rank while simpler content moves ahead.

This creates doubt and a painful realization:

good content alone is no longer enough.

I reached this moment after publishing my 53rd blog post.

No traffic spike. No sudden visibility. Just silence.

This article is not a complaint. It is an honest explanation of what Google trust actually means in 2026.

Table of Contents

My Blogging Context

I run a blogging website called Akash Earning Hub, where I write about blogging, SEO, Google updates, and real experiences from my own publishing journey.

Over the past few months, I published 53 original blog posts. No copied content. No shortcuts. No fake promises.

Yet growth remained slow.

At first, I blamed SEO. Then I blamed competition. Eventually, I realized the real issue was expectation.

What Changed in Google Search After 2024

Google’s biggest challenge today is not finding information. It is filtering unreliable information.

Millions of pages are published every day, many without real experience behind them.

To protect search quality, Google changed how it evaluates content.

Google now studies behavior patterns, not single articles.

This means consistency matters more than speed.

How Google Trust Really Works

Google does not trust websites overnight.

It watches whether you keep publishing when results are slow.

It observes topic focus, writing consistency, and author stability.

Trust is built over time, not per post.

What 53 Blog Posts Taught Me

Publishing 53 posts taught me patience.

Writing is easy. Waiting is hard.

Google rewards reliability, not excitement.

Most bloggers quit before Google finishes evaluating them.

Why Google Is Slow on Purpose

Google’s delay is intentional.

It filters out publishers chasing quick success.

Those who stay eventually stand out.

Slow trust creates strong authority.

Authority Niches and Delayed Trust

Blogging and SEO fall under high-authority niches.

Google applies stricter evaluation here.

That is why new blogs are tested longer.

Authority is slow to build but hard to lose.

The Mental Side of Blogging

The hardest part of blogging is not writing.

It is continuing when progress feels invisible.

Silence often feels like failure.

In reality, silence means evaluation.

My Long-Term View

I am still publishing.

Not because Google promised rankings, but because quitting would waste everything I built.

Trust compounds slowly, but when it does, growth becomes stable.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this kind of post safe to publish?

Yes. Honest experience builds credibility.

Does Google punish reflective content?

No. Google values transparency.

How long does Google trust usually take?

For clean blogs, around 8–12 months.

Should new bloggers write experience-based posts?

Yes, if the intent is learning.

About the author: Teju Harpal is the founder of Akash Earning Hub, sharing practical blogging and SEO insights based on real experience.

Post a Comment

Share your experience or tips in the comments below to help other readers benefit as well."

Previous Post Next Post