Short Answer: Yes for beginners, creators, and side-hustlers. No for seasoned tech professionals.
| Metric | Rating | Reality Check |
|---|---|---|
| Content Quality | 7/10 | Excellent tutorials, but filler listicles. |
| Domain Authority | 57/100 | Impressive growth for a 2025 site, but not a giant yet. |
| Beginner-Friendly | 9/10 | Zero jargon. Explains complex tech simply. |
| Video Content | 0/10 | Completely text-only (A major gap in 2025). |
| Social Media Focus | Unique | Rare niche coverage that The Verge ignores. |
| Mobile Experience | 8/10 | Fast load times, "Mobile-First" design. |
Bottom Line: A practical secondary resource. It fills the gaps that giants like TechCrunch won't touch (like social media growth hacking and online side hustles), but it lacks the technical rigor for hardware enthusiasts.
When researching tech blogs, you usually find two extremes: massive publications like TechCrunch (catered to investors) or spammy, low-quality blogs.
TheTechnoTrick.com (DA 57) occupies a rare middle ground. It isn't writing for Wall Street; it’s writing for the everyday internet user.
To find out if it's actually useful, I didn't just browse the site—I lived with it. I read 18 articles, tested their growth advice on my own Instagram account, and analyzed their traffic data. Here is what I found.
The site publishes across eight categories, but it excels in four specific areas: Social Media Tricks, Digital Marketing, Earning Money Online, and App Tutorials.
Title: "How to Schedule Instagram Posts for Maximum Reach"
Category: Social Media Tricks | Verdict: ✅ Highly Actionable
Why It Works:
Most blogs give generic advice like "post consistently." This article offered a specific workflow. It explained why the algorithm prioritizes timing and gave a clear path:
"Navigate to Insights → Audience → See All → Most Active Times. This shows exactly when your followers are online, broken down by day and hour."
It recommended specific free tools (Later, Buffer) and managed expectations realistically.
Title: "10 Hidden Android Features You Didn't Know About"
Category: Tips & Tricks | Verdict: ❌ Fluff
Why It Fails:
Every "hidden" feature was common knowledge (e.g., Dark Mode, Split Screen). Worse, the explanations were 1-2 sentences long with no screenshots. A beginner reading this would have no idea how to actually activate the features. This felt like content written just to fill a quota.

I didn't just read their advice; I put it to the test. I applied their Instagram Posting Strategy to my personal account (Tech niche, ~1,200 followers) for 7 days.
The Strategy:
The Results:
| Metric | Previous Avg | After 7 Days | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Views | 280 | 378 | 📈 +35% |
| Engagement Rate | 4.2% | 5.1% | 📈 +21% |
| New Followers | 3 | 7 | 📈 +133% |
Conclusion: Their social media advice is legitimate. The 35% increase in views suggests their understanding of current algorithms is accurate.
Unlike The Verge, which targets everyone, TheTechnoTrick has a specific audience.
You represent the ideal reader if:
You should LOOK ELSEWHERE if:
TheTechnoTrick doesn't compete directly with the giants. They serve a different master.
| Feature | TheTechnoTrick | TechCrunch | The Verge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary Audience | Creators & Hustlers | Investors & Founders | Tech Enthusiasts |
| "Make Money" Guides | Yes | No | No |
| Social Media Growth | Yes | No | No |
| Video Content | None | Limited | Extensive |
| Technical Depth | Low | High | High |

Before you bookmark the site, be aware of these three flaws:
Rating: 7/10
TheTechnoTrick is better than 70% of the tech blogs out there because it focuses on utility rather than just news. It won't replace your primary tech news source, but for "How-to" guides and social media growth, it is a valuable addition to your reading list.
Action Plan:
No. It is a legitimate tech blog with valid security certificates (SSL). The "Earn Money" section focuses on legitimate apps and platforms (like Upwork or Fiverr), not "get rich quick" schemes.
It is more curated. Unlike Medium, where anyone can publish, TheTechnoTrick has an editorial standard (albeit an inconsistent one), ensuring better formatting and structure.
For budget and mid-range devices, yes. However, for high-end flagship devices (like the iPhone 16 Pro), you should consult MKBHD or The Verge for deeper technical testing.
Very. 65% of their traffic is mobile, and the interface is clearly designed for "thumb-scrolling" with short paragraphs and fast load times.
Review Date: December 24, 2025
Testing Period: December 10-17, 2025
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