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MenuWhat is the single most important thing when starting a Youtube channel?
I want to rapidly grow my Youtube channel. What are the most important aspects of a successful Youtube channel?
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I have 2 youtube channels and combined I have more than 100M views, my 2nd Channel is growing by 70% month to month and I estimate that this channel by itself will produce 30-50M views per month end of 2016. With that said the single most important stat you should be on the lookout is engagement rate. Try to have videos that have a high engagement rate, preferably anything that is above 50%, if you want further details and other techniques happy to have a call
I'm a consultant for Youtube sponsored channels. Engagement is the key. To get engagement you'll need:
1) Consistency of posting is one of the most important factors, you'll have to keep posting consistently for people to form a bond with your personality (or the personality of your channels characters, etc).
2) In order to be able to consistently post quality videos, you'll need to love what you're doing. You'll need to love making the videos you're making, just for the sake of making them, without even thinking about how many views you're getting. See this video for a good discussion of this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WijPMprRgGo
2) As you feel a bond with your viewers start to form (more views and comments) you'll want to start actively engaging with your viewers, asking for their opinions to be posted in the comments, etc.
If you want to discuss any of this more feel free to give me a call.
Channel: WorkOnYourGa.me 4,600+ videos; new content daily since 2009
1. Differentiation: What are you delivering that no one else is that make you the go-to channel? This creates your brand name and carves out space that you can own. When your the only one delivering what you have, you're not competing with anyone else and you're out of the rat race. There are always more and more joining YT and publishing, so the last thing you want is to be competing against ever-increasing competition.
Feel free to set up a call with any follow-up questions!
Consistency is key. When people subscribe it's because they want to see more of that same type of video, so it's important that your content always fit the brand that you're building for yourself. It's also important to regularly upload content so people know when to come back to see more, so there's always something new for viewers to watch, and so'll get found more often in search.
Doing a mix of evergreen and tent-pole content is a good strategy too. You'll typically do best with videos that relate to topical events around when they're happening as well as ones that would be searched for any time.
I actually did some training with YouTube staff and got a couple lists of their top suggestions that I'd be happy to go over with you if you'd like to request a call!
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Not really. It depends on several factors: how engaged is your audience (how many of your videos do those subscribers watch?), where your videos are watched (US CPMs [the amount you make for every 1,000 views] can be several times of those outside the US), how many of your views are on mobile (a lower percentage of mobile videos are monetized), and how much of your inventory can YouTube sell (YouTube does not usually sell ads on 100% of your views). Aside from advertising (which you split with YouTube), you can also make money through product sponsorships, product placement, show sponsorships (mention a product or wear a particular brand during your shows) - you usually don't have to split these earnings with YouTube. I run a Multi Channel Network on YouTube since 2009. I'm YouTube Certified in Audience Growth and Digital Rights. Feel free to contact me for more info.CG
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Depends on your personality a good bit. 1) Work. You can just work hard. Speak at Meetup Groups, WordCamp (or similar), Trade Shows, Niche Conferences. Speak to many people who are interested in your topic + plug your YouTube channel during your talks. Or better plug your Website with an optin device + publish content on YouTube + many other venues. 2) Create controversy. This is niche independent. This works whether you're a militant Vegan, Trump supporter, Liberal troublemaker. 3) Run paid traffic directly to video. This depends on traffic source + their content guidelines, which seem to change daily. Likely you'll have to embed your video on your site, wrapped in content + run traffic to your site page. Likely many people will click to play your video on YouTube. 4) Most importantly, give people a good reason to subscribe + tell them to subscribe + what benefit they'll receive by subscribing.DF
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