Published: April 11, 2026 β’ Last Updated: April 11, 2026 β’ 17 min read π΅π°
"Bhai, main bhi tech blog start karna chahta hoon, but kahan se shuru karoon?" β I get this message almost every week. Last month, a 19-year-old computer science student from Faisalabad messaged me exactly this. He had so many questions: Which niche? Which hosting? How to write? How to make money blogging?
I remember my own journey. Back in 2021, I started my first tech blog with zero knowledge. I bought a domain that was too long, picked a niche that was too broad, and wrote posts that nobody read for three months. I almost quit. But then something changed. I learned the right way. And within a year, my blog was getting 50,000+ monthly visitors.
This guide is everything I wish someone had told me on day one. If you're a Pakistani student, fresh graduate, or developer who wants to start a tech blog in 2026 β this is for you. No fluff. No "get rich quick" nonsense. Just honest, step-by-step advice that actually works.
And if you ever get stuck with content ideas or SEO, remember the EduTech AI assistant can help you brainstorm topics, outline posts, and even check your grammar. Let's dive in! βοΈ
Three months into my blogging journey, I was ready to give up. I had written 15 articles. Total views? Maybe 200. Comments? Zero. Money? Negative (I had paid for hosting).
I remember sitting on my bed in Lahore, staring at my laptop screen, thinking: "Maybe I'm not cut out for this." But then I took a hard look at my blog. My niche was "technology" β everything from AI to gaming to smartphone reviews. Who was my audience? "Everyone." That was the problem.
I deleted everything. Started over with a super-specific niche: "Python tutorials for absolute beginners." Within two months, I had 5,000 monthly visitors. Within six months, I was making my first affiliate sales.
The lesson? Start a tech blog with ONE person in mind. Serve them exceptionally well. Then grow from there.
You might think: "Aren't there already millions of tech blogs?" Yes. But here's what most people don't realize:
If you can explain complex tech topics in simple Urdu/English, or focus on Pakistani developers' specific problems, you have a HUGE opportunity.
I cannot stress this enough: Your niche determines everything β your audience, your content, your income, your motivation. Don't mess this up.
Here's how to choose a niche that works for YOU:
Winning tech blog niches for 2026:
Pro tip: Don't pick "AI" as a niche β it's too broad. Pick "AI for content creators" or "AI for Pakistani freelancers." Specificity wins.
Your domain is your blog's address (like edutechpk.online). Your hosting is where your blog lives on the internet.
Domain tips:
Hosting for beginners (Pakistani-friendly):
Start with the cheapest plan. You can upgrade when you get traffic. Don't overcomplicate this.
You have options, but for tech blogging for beginners, I strongly recommend WordPress.org (not WordPress.com β the free one has limits).
Why WordPress?
Most hosting providers offer "one-click WordPress install." Click a button, wait 2 minutes, and you have a blog. That simple.
Your readers come for CONTENT, not fancy animations. Here's what matters:
Free WordPress themes I recommend: Astra, GeneratePress, Kadence. All are fast, customizable, and beginner-friendly.
Most beginners fail because they write about whatever comes to mind. That's a mistake. You need a STRATEGY.
Start with these 5 content types:
Content planning tip: Spend 30 minutes every Sunday planning next week's post. Use the EduTech AI assistant to brainstorm 10 topic ideas in seconds. Then pick the best one.
Tech readers are busy. They want answers FAST. Here's how to write for them:
Personal advice: Write like you're teaching a friend. Use "you" and "I." Share your mistakes. Tech readers appreciate honesty, not perfection.
SEO sounds scary, but how to start a tech blog without SEO is like opening a shop in the desert. Here's the simple version:
Free SEO tools for beginners: Rank Math (WordPress plugin), Google Keyword Planner, Ubersuggest. That's enough to start.
Publishing a post = 10% of the work. Promoting it = 90%. Here's where to share:
The golden rule: Give 10x more value than you ask for. Answer questions. Help people. Then occasionally share your blog. That's how you build trust.
Don't think about money for the first 3-6 months. Focus on VALUE and TRAFFIC first. Then try these:
Real talk: Most tech bloggers don't make significant money until 12-18 months. Be patient. Treat it as a long-term asset, not a get-rich-quick scheme.
I've seen brilliant bloggers fail because they quit after 3 months. I've seen average bloggers succeed because they stuck with it for 2 years.
Consistency tips that work:
Remember: Most people quit. That's why consistency is your competitive advantage.
Look, how to start a tech blog isn't complicated. Pick a niche β buy domain + hosting β install WordPress β write helpful content β promote it β repeat for 12 months.
The hard part isn't the technical setup. The hard part is showing up every week when nobody is reading. But I promise you this: if you stick with it, if you genuinely help people, if you keep learning and improving β your blog WILL grow.
And when you look back a year from now, you'll be glad you started today instead of "someday."
So here's your first step: Open a notebook (or Google Docs) and write down ONE niche you'll focus on. Just one. Do it now. Then tomorrow, buy your domain. And the day after, write your first post.
You've got this. And whenever you feel stuck, the EduTech AI assistant is here to help β with content ideas, outlines, SEO tips, and motivation. We're rooting for you. π΅π°
You can start for as little as PKR 5,000-8,000 per year: domain (PKR 2,000-3,000) + basic hosting (PKR 3,000-5,000). WordPress theme and plugins are free. That's it. You don't need expensive tools or courses.
No! Some of the best tech blogs are written by people who are 6-12 months AHEAD of their readers. You don't need 10 years of experience. You just need to be honest about your level and share what you're learning.
Realistically: 6-12 months of consistent posting (1-2 posts/week) before seeing significant income. Some bloggers monetize earlier with affiliate marketing. Focus on value first; money follows.
Technically yes (Medium, Blogger, WordPress.com), but I don't recommend it. Free platforms limit your monetization, own your content, and look less professional. Investing PKR 5,000/year is worth it for ownership and credibility.
Three channels: SEO (Google search takes 3-6 months), social media (Twitter/LinkedIn works faster), and community engagement (answer questions on Reddit, Facebook groups, Stack Overflow). Do all three consistently, and traffic will grow.
Stop overthinking. Start doing. Use the EduTech AI Assistant to brainstorm your first 10 blog topics, outline your posts, and optimize for SEO β all for free.
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