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The Truth About What’s Been Going On (And What’s Coming Next for This Blog)

05/21/2025 by Kristin Addis 37 Comments

I didn’t expect to be writing this post, but we need to talk about what’s next.

I’m not sure how you’ll feel about this update — especially those of you who have been here with me from the beginning — but I can’t hold it in anymore, and although it feels scary to share, it’s time.

About six months ago. I promised you guys an update about this blog and the state of things. I backpedaled on that because to be honest, I didn’t want to publicly admit how much my numbers have fallen but it’s no secret anymore.

Blogging is a dying industry.

Many of my peers will point to the rise of AI as the cause — and it certainly plays a part — but the truth is, the unraveling started long before ChatGPT came onto the scene. We traded story for strategy, connection for clicks, and authenticity for algorithms.

So in the spirit of how blogging used to be — a personal story you could cozy up to with a mug of hot tea before bed — this is a post that doesn’t care about SEO. It doesn’t care about Google, or AI, or any of it.

It’s just me. Talking to you. Like we used to.

So without further ado, let’s go back in time a little bit, shall we?

To where the story all began.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • The Relentless Pursuit of Adventure
  • The Halcyon Years
  • The Rise of the Influencer
  • Present Day – Where Will We Go?
  • So, What am I doing now?

The Relentless Pursuit of Adventure

The year was 2010. I was sitting in my grey cubicle in Newport Beach, staring blankly at a spreadsheet when a friend sent me a link to something I didn’t even know existed — travel blogs, written by women, traveling alone. It was a small community back then, a handful of people quietly living the dream that had once felt so out of reach for someone like me. A dream I was too scared to even say out loud.

I didn’t know anyone who had made travel their full-time life without a book deal or a trust fund. But these women were out there, telling their stories, updating from the road, and inviting strangers into their journey. I couldn’t stop reading. I was captivated. And from that day forward, I couldn’t unsee the possibility. The idea had taken root.

Two years later, armed with a brand new URL and a carry-on bag, I stepped onto a one-way flight to Bangkok and decided to see if I could become one of them too.

Grand Palace, Bangkok
On my very first day in Bangkok when this blog started (Sept 2012)

What’s followed since then has been more than a decade of change — of evolution, of reinvention, and of a community that once felt like a tiny family growing into something enormous and, at times, unrecognizable.

Back then, we weren’t in it for fame or fortune. We certainly weren’t in it for the photoshoots in ballgowns on mountaintops. (My fellow backpackers from the early 2010s — can you even imagine watching someone haul a flowy dress up to Doi Suthep for a photoshoot?) No, it was about something else entirely.

It was about the story.

We wrote like we were scribbling in our diaries. Raw. Personal. Unfiltered. The best posts could transport you across oceans. I checked obsessively for updates from my favorite bloggers. I felt like I knew them. Their victories felt like my own. Their heartbreaks hit close to home.

I left a job that made me six figures by age 24 for this dream, but we weren’t chasing money — we were chasing freedom — messy, beautiful, uncertain freedom. We were in pursuit of our own version of Alex Garland’s The Beach, or Jack Kerouac’s Dharma Bums.

Each day on the road and each new sweaty and dirty adventure was a victory. Living off of street food in Southeast Asia, bartering in local markets, learning the firsthand, on-the-ground way how to say “thank you” in seven different languages. We gave up corporate ladders and reliable paychecks for bare feet and sweaty nights in dorm rooms – the kind of fulfillment you can’t put in a LinkedIn bio.

Back in the day when I painted a mural in a hostel in Laos in exchange for room and board

The money came slowly, if at all. I remember being thrilled to get $100 for embedding a hidden link in a blog post — that covered ten nights in a hostel. I churned out freelance articles for $75 a pop – and churn them out I could. Speed writing had been one of my greatest strengths, but it turns out it’s not even a skill anyone wants or needs anymore (but I’m getting ahead of myself here – don’t you know how this story ends?).

hitchhiking in China
Back when I hitchhiked through China, March 2014

It was gritty and exhausting and uncertain, but it was real. I didn’t care if it was sustainable. It was life on my terms.

The Halcyon Years

golden gate park south africa
Taken in 2015 in South Africa, when things started to look a bit more ‘influencery’

And then, around 2015, something shifted.

Brands started to take notice. The audience we had painstakingly grown over years of storytelling suddenly had value. We were no longer just wanderers with a WordPress account — we were “influencers” before that was even a word people said with a straight face. The money was still modest, but we were getting comped and sometimes even paid trips and, for the first time, it felt like this might actually work.

I moved to Berlin where rent was (then) modest. I still traveled for 75% of the year, leaving behind an apartment, and hitchhiked and adventured around the globe. I still cared about the adventure beyond all else, but something else started happening too – I could invest in my IRA again. I could buy my own hotel room and leave the dorms behind. I could have some comforts.

Those, to me, were the golden years — 2015 to 2018 — when the travel blogging world still felt intimate and full of promise. We met up at conferences, partied in random corners of the globe, and cheered each other on. There was still soul in it, still room for vulnerability, and still a hunger for connection.

But slowly, quietly, something else was happening.

SEO became the new currency. The heartfelt stories started to fade, replaced by how-to guides and itineraries. And I was part of that shift. My personal posts didn’t rank on Google, but my “Southeast Asia backpacking checklist” did. It made money. People were searching for it. And that changed everything.

Looking back, I have regrets. I miss those messy, meandering personal stories — both reading and writing them. But most of us pivoted because we had to. We were building businesses. And the storytelling that had once been our heart and soul was no longer the thing that paid the bills.

The Rise of the Influencer

Tulum

By 2019, I started to feel disillusioned. What had once been about discovery and connection had become about aesthetic. The wild, sweaty, real adventures were being replaced by perfectly posed photos in silk dresses at sunrise. Instagram became a highlight reel — not of real life, but of what we wanted people to believe.

I deleted the app for a while and my assistant (OMG, I had an assistant!) had to take over the posting for me. I was sick of the fakeness, the filters, the perfection. Places we loved were being loved to death. The quiet spots we once stumbled upon were now overrun, geotagged into oblivion.

And worst of all? The story was gone. In its place was content — a word we never used back in the early days. Back then it was writing. It was photography. It was a post. Now it was just content to be consumed, ranked, and regurgitated.

Traveling the world with makeup and a tripod

The pandemic accelerated everything. Blogging exploded — not with travelers, but with copycats. People were writing guides about places they’d never even been to. They’d skim existing posts, reword them, slap on some affiliate links, and hit publish. Quantity trumped quality. SEO was king. And it worked.

Even I played the game.

I deleted old storytelling posts that didn’t rank – the vulnerable ones that had built my dedicated audience are now nowhere to be found. I doubled down on search-friendly content. It boosted my traffic. It made me money. But at what cost?

In 2019, I worked on over a dozen press trips

The soul of what we built was quietly disappearing.

Comment pods became the norm — influencers colluding to artificially boost each other’s engagement. If you’ve ever seen ten influencers all comment “OMG, unreal” on each other’s photos, that’s what that is. It was never about you, the reader. It was about the algorithm.

I’m glad I never stooped to joining a comment pod, but in many ways that left me behind.

what to do on moorea
Like really? Who does this?

We weren’t storytellers anymore. We were marketers. And I hated it.

It’s also the time when I made the most money.

Present Day – Where Will We Go?

mt tallac hike

The rise of the influencer wasn’t just a trend I observed — it was when my business exploded. I had employees. I was juggling tours, the blog, YouTube, Instagram — dipping a toe (or diving headfirst) into every opportunity I could. On the outside, it probably looked like success. But the more this industry grew, the more I found myself on a hamster wheel, constantly launching, constantly comparing. Someone else was always making more, growing faster, and it never felt like enough.

Still, that’s the nature of this business. It’s exhilarating, and it’s exhausting.

At one point, we did what so many business owners do when the going is good — we leaned hard into what worked – Google. Over 90% of mine and every other blogger’s traffic came from rankings. Then March 2024 hit. A Google update wiped out years of work for many bloggers overnight. I escaped that one, but the updates that followed — with AI-generated answers taking over the top of search — have hit hard (here’s a blog post by Amanda Williams that does a good job of explaining everything if you want the details). Now, unless someone really wants a personalized take, there’s no reason to click through to a blog post anymore.

My newer site, ParenthoodAdventures.com, and the solo female travel content here are still holding strong — because they’re built on a voice and 13 years of experience that AI can’t quite replicate. But it’s a far cry from the days this blog brought in $20K a month.

I’m one of the lucky ones. I was smart about saving and investing when the money was good. I’m not worried. And more than anything, I understand that this space has always been about change. Back when we were selling links, we all thought that was the model. Then Facebook, Pinterest, Google — each one had its time. And each time the tide shifted, those who didn’t evolve got left behind.

So yes, a lot of bloggers are angry. They feel something was stolen from them. But to be honest, I think the industry was always on borrowed time. It’s just that the changes are coming faster now.

So, What am I doing now?

norway fjords itinerary

Well, I’m still here. And like always, I’ve evolved. I started a new Instagram that outperforms my old one — totally organically, no comment pods, no tricks. I leaned into what I know: sharing the beauty of the world, usefulness, and connection. And I started working as a travel advisor, partnering with incredible hotels and planning trips for families — often while traveling with my own little one who has already been to 17 countries! If this resonates, I’d love to book your trips, too.

Would 26-year-old me approve? Maybe. Maybe she’d be impressed. Maybe she’d think I sold out. But honestly, I’m not sure I can afford to care what she thinks anymore. I’ve changed.

Some days, I think about walking away from it all and just being a mom. But I’ve never been good at having idle hands — I like to build things. Still, I won’t lie: I’m tired. Tired of launching, tired of chasing trends, tired of the game constantly changing. I know that everyone’s feeling the uncertainty — about jobs, the world, the future.

But that’s the truth, isn’t it? We never really know what’s coming. We never did.

And yet here we are. Still standing. Still building, and I’m grateful for it all. I got to live out my dream for over a decade. How could I resent any part of this journey?

Maybe the industry will look completely different again in a year. Maybe something new will rise from the ashes of what once was. I don’t have a crystal ball. But I do have hope — not because everything is perfect, but because I’ve seen what’s possible when you keep showing up, keep evolving, and keep creating from a place of heart.

That’s always been the real secret — and it still is.

So if you’re a blogger reading this, DO something new. Shift like your career depends on it, because it does and it always did. And if you’re a longtime reader, I hope you know how much I love and have valued you over the years. I don’t know what the future holds, but thank you for everything.

I don’t know what it will be, but I do know there’s more to come.

Get the guidebook for solo female travelers!

About Kristin Addis

Kristin Addis is the founder and CEO of Be My Travel Muse, a resource for female travelers all around the world since 2012. She's traveled solo to over 65 countries and has brought over 150 women on her all-female adventure tours from Botswana to the Alaskan tundra.

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Hello There!

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Welcome to Be My Travel Muse, one of the top female travel blogs in the world, welcoming over 5 million readers annually.

I'm Kristin, and my vision of a better world is one where more women are empowered and living out their dreams. Solo traveling is the best method I've found to become the best, bravest version of me. This site is all about how YOU can have the adventure of a lifetime in an easy, fun, approachable way, so that you can feel empowered, too. Want to learn more about me?

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Comments

  1. Sarah Townsend says

    05/21/2025 at 11:33 am

    I’m still here after all these years, still loving your content, your photos, your family and always thinking one day I will go there. Hang on in there!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 12:04 pm

      Thank you so much for this comment. Makes it all feel so much more worthwhile. I appreciate you so much!

      Reply
  2. Kathy Rhodes says

    05/21/2025 at 12:45 pm

    Kristin,
    I’ve known you since you were a little girl coming to Frederick MD with your dad and family. I knew then you were going to go far and do whatever your heart was set on. I’m so proud of your accomplishments
    Keep doing what you are doing. Your son is turning into a little man. His travels with you has taken him far and near. He’s going to take after you.
    Always strive for what you want.
    Kathy

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 2:44 pm

      Aw thanks so much.

      Reply
  3. Jan says

    05/21/2025 at 2:18 pm

    Ava Apollo! What a great treat, something real to read today.

    I loved your early posts. More than your adventures, it was your use of language and writing style that captured me. I remember that Cambodia had you smitten. What a cool word, smitten. I had to go to Cambodia to see it for myself.

    I’ve also been in the blogosphere for a while, and you were one of my biggest inspirations. The internet died when SEO and social media became a necessity. Today, from it’s ashes, arises a new era in which some very creative Gen Z’ers take over being very creative with AI. Let’s give them a chance and enjoy what they come up with.

    Being a parent is another great journey. A new reason to build sand castes and to be curious.

    I’ll keep following you. Hope you keep ‘em coming!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 2:44 pm

      Wow you remember my pen name. You really have been here since day 1 🥹

      That gave me goosebumps that you went to Cambodia too.

      Agreed AI is here to stay and it’s not all bad. I’m not going to waste energy being mad at it. Thanks so much, Jan!

      Reply
  4. Kelly says

    05/21/2025 at 2:21 pm

    I’ve been following you since 2013 and your honest and real posts have helped me have an awesome time all over this planet and given me ideas for future places to check out! It’s been super cool to see you grow and evolve from a 20-something budget backpacker to expanding your business, putting down roots and starting a family while staying true to yourself and continuing down the unconventional path. This post makes me sad but I love its honesty and vulnerability. Keep doing you and I know things will fall into place!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 2:42 pm

      Thank you so much! That’s amazing you’ve been here for 12 years! I’m so honored. The changes have made me sad too, but I’m trusting the process. Thanks for being here.

      Reply
  5. Neeka says

    05/21/2025 at 3:32 pm

    I have been a long time youtube/insta subscriber and have loved all your videos over the years. I mourn for the sterile way we get our info now with the dumb auto answer as the top result…not even realizing the bloggers extinction from AI till reading this…

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 6:31 pm

      Yep, scraped our answers and replaced our rankings. It’s unfortunate but we fed the beast for years.

      Reply
  6. Sarah says

    05/21/2025 at 4:34 pm

    I’ve loved hearing your stories over the years. Thank you for always being an inspiration in women’s travels. I’ve looked up to you and the other women in the travel blogging industry. You encourage us, uplift us and ignite our passions. Maybe blogs aren’t as popular, but in their own way create a third place for connection. I do miss the old story telling and the old Instagram. I’d writing is what you truly love doing, then you should still do it. There will always be people who want to listen.

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 6:30 pm

      Thank you Sarah! The emails, comments, and DMs from writing this post have been so encouraging, and writing this helped me also realize how much I miss storytelling.

      Reply
  7. Jen says

    05/21/2025 at 5:14 pm

    Kristin, I have followed you for years and I hope you continue to keep updating us on all your travels and adventures. I’d hate to see that go away. I know that as long as there are blogs out there that I like, I will follow them. I will always skip over the AI answers that pop up first on Google search and jump right over to click on a blog link that has the answer. People will always need to live vicariously through others and travel adventure blogs allow people to do that. At least until they can get out there and do it themselves. Your blog inspires me and helps me to plan all of my adventures and as long as you are still blogging, I will still be reading. Good luck in your future endeavors.

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 6:30 pm

      I’m not quitting! I agree – I crave real experiences people have had over AI answers. I want to know how it felt to be there, what the nuances are, and the little details that make a blog so valuable. I skip over the AI answers when it comes to travel too, honestly not in an act of solidarity as much as wanting a real answer from a real person.

      Reply
  8. Maranna Yoder says

    05/21/2025 at 5:38 pm

    Thank you so much for sharing! You inspired me to travel solo in 2018-2019 – some of my most treasured memories. Best of luck in whatever the future holds!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 6:29 pm

      That’s such an honor!

      Reply
  9. Kelsey says

    05/21/2025 at 6:55 pm

    I’ve always loved your posts, especially the heartfelt, honest ones. I really do miss those, and hope the internet shifts and moves more towards stories like that again.

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/21/2025 at 7:01 pm

      I hope so, too! I think there will always be room for it with willing readers. Maybe I should do more of it.

      Reply
  10. Alana says

    05/21/2025 at 8:21 pm

    I’ve been a reader of yours since 2014. What always stood out to me is that you kept it real and shared details about your personal experiences traveling, including the hard & messy stuff that others shied away from. I’ve continued to follow you as your blog and business blossomed and I think what stands out is that you continue to be real let your personality shine through in your writing. I loved your honestly and vulnerability in this post. AI may be here to stay but it can’t replicate our unique personalities and lived experiences as human beings. This is what will keep longtime fans like me coming back for more.

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 9:08 am

      Thanks so much for the kind words, Alana. I recognize your name from your past comments and I have so appreciated you and your support after all these years!

      Reply
  11. Kathleen O'Donnell says

    05/21/2025 at 11:05 pm

    I’ve been here for years, and your blog served as my guide and inspo when I quit my job to travel in 2018! I really miss the old unfiltered days of blogging, both writing mine and reading others, but I’m glad you’ve adapted to the changes and can’t wait to see what happens next!!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 9:07 am

      Thanks so much Kathleen!

      Reply
  12. Emily says

    05/21/2025 at 11:08 pm

    Thank you for sharing the reality of life as a business owner! In truth, I started following you for your real stories and stopped following when the real stories became non-existent… it was your stories that led me to changing my life and moving overseas for 2 years on my own. So thank you for the years you poured your heart and soul into sharing your journey with us over the years, because it really did change lives ♥️

    Emily x

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 9:07 am

      Thank you so much!

      Reply
  13. Rich says

    05/21/2025 at 11:25 pm

    This is excellent.

    Things Fall Apart and 100 Years of Solitude come to mind with the inevitable march of progress, but at what cost?!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 7:48 am

      I guess we’ll find out!

      Reply
  14. Sabrina says

    05/22/2025 at 12:14 am

    Well said, I love that article and feel it in my heart. I also had that peak travel blog time 2015-2018 and thought that maybe I could build up a business through it. Times changed and I’m in corporate business, because you know what… It’s simply making money without me working my ass off and having to worry that my blogposts rank or something else. Also in Europe it’s a lot easier to take time off work for trips, get paid when you’re sick or on maternity leave, so it’s just a win situation for me.

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 7:48 am

      Europe is so much better that way! It’s true a travel blog and working for onesself is something you can never really turn off.

      Reply
  15. Alex says

    05/22/2025 at 3:19 am

    I’ve been following you since 2012, you inspired me to go to East Java and Mount bromo instead of just Bali. Your posts were my guidebook!!! I am also an ex investment banker and have always been inspired by you. I read your ebook when I was chronically ill and unable to travel and it gave me hope! Authenticity mightn’t pay as much now but it means more and I’m sure you’ve impacted a lot of lives with your stories 🫶🫶

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 7:47 am

      That’s so cool you also visited Ijen! That was quite an adventure back then. I’m so glad the book was useful to you as well. Thanks for the kind words.

      Reply
  16. Christina says

    05/22/2025 at 5:25 am

    Hi Kristin, I first started reading your blog before my first backpacking trip when I was 18, I’m 29 now and seeing your name pop up always fills me with nostalgia, who knows if I would’ve had the courage to travel solo without blogs like yours. I loved your personal stories and they really inspired me to get out there into the world, it would be a shame to lose this side of the internet. So much admiration for how you have adapted with the times!

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 7:47 am

      That’s such an honor to read, Christina! Encouraging other women was always my goal.

      Reply
  17. Kristin Y says

    05/22/2025 at 8:26 am

    Kristin,

    Your book inspired me to do my own incredible backpacking trip around SE Asia and I am forever grateful for the inspiration you provided me! It was those early vulnerable blog posts you’re talking about here that pushed me to go out and give it a shot. Best wishes on your continued adventures and evolution!

    – A fellow Kristin 🙂

    Reply
    • Kristin Addis says

      05/22/2025 at 9:09 am

      That’s such an honor! So glad you were encouraged to get out there. That was always the goal!

      Reply
  18. Caitlyn says

    05/22/2025 at 8:42 am

    Ahhh this is so amazing! Like the good old days. What an amazing and refreshing real and honest read. Thank you for being so vulnerable with us all again, like you have so many times before. Loved every second of it and excited for whatever stage is next on your journey! Xx

    Reply
  19. Harvey says

    05/22/2025 at 10:06 am

    I think it’s really important to listen to your inner voice then so-called experts all the time. What is your passionate about and what’s your inner voice prompting you to do which helps to keep you young and motivated by the way. I find what kristin is doing is a very good example of all of that. Live the life to its fullest while you can and keep going with what makes you happy. Kudos for being brave, fearless and not worry about making mistakes as no one will ever be perfect. Simple living higher thinking. Congrats to Kristin for achieving tremendous success.

    Harvey

    Reply
  20. Carina Wierda says

    05/22/2025 at 12:04 pm

    Nice post! I am still really happy that I found your blog around 2018/2019 when planning for trips in Asia and Patagonia. To me it was pure and really helpful. And indeed, with some too-flashy photos.. but the story behond it caught me, and made my travel plans and experiences a lot better! Thank tmyou so much!
    Also on your recommendation I bought the Ahnu Montara eVent hiking boots, and absolutely loved them. But they are worn out and aren’t made anymore unfortunately. Would you have a new recommendation of similarly lightweight, waterproof and comfortable hiking boots?
    Thanks once again, and best of luck with finding your new ‘adventure’ as a blogger

    Reply

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