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How to Start a YouTube Channel

Want to start a YouTube channel but you keep stalling at the “Create channel” button? Good. That hesitation is the most common reason channels never get off the ground — and the easiest one to fix. I’ve spent more than 20 years on YouTube, I’m a YouTube Certified Expert, and six of the channels I’ve worked with have earned a Silver Play Button (100,000 subscribers). Below is the exact playbook I walk every new client through when they ask me how to start a YouTube channel from scratch in 2026.

No fluff. No “just be yourself.” A real, ordered checklist — from picking your niche to your first 1,000 subscribers — with the tools and gear I actually use, and the things I’d skip if I were starting over today.

Prefer a 1:1 walkthrough? Book a free discovery call with me here. Otherwise, grab a coffee — this is the long version.

Is It Worth Starting a YouTube Channel in 2026?

Short answer: yes, and probably more than it’s ever been.

YouTube has over 2 billion logged-in monthly viewers, the Partner Program now opens at 500 subscribers instead of 1,000, Shorts have given new channels a discovery shortcut that didn’t exist five years ago, and the algorithm now rewards viewer satisfaction over channel age. Translation: a brand-new channel that nails a specific topic can outperform a channel ten times its size.

I get the doubts though. I hear the same three every week on consulting calls. Let’s knock them out before we go any further.

“Am I too late?”

No. Niche channels under 10,000 subscribers are growing faster than they were three years ago, partly because the algorithm has shifted to satisfaction-weighted recommendations and partly because Shorts gives you a way to be discovered without years of accumulated authority. People said it was “too late” in 2014. They said it again in 2018. They were wrong both times.

“I’m too shy / I don’t want to be on camera”

You don’t need to be. Faceless channels (tutorials, screen recordings, gameplay, voiceover, AI-narrated, stock-footage compilations) are some of the fastest growing formats on the platform right now. I’ve broken down the full playbook in my guide on how to make YouTube videos without showing your face, plus a deeper look at why faceless channels are so profitable right now.

“My topic is too niche”

Niche is the goal, not the problem. A laser-focused channel is easier to grow because the algorithm understands what it is and serves it to the right people faster. The classic mistake is going broad to “reach more people” — the algorithm punishes that, hard. I cover the trade-off in detail in Jack of All Trades vs Master of One and the head-to-head niche vs broad channel breakdown.

Right — on with the steps.

How YouTube Actually Works in 2026 (The 5-Minute Primer Every New Creator Needs)

Before you spend a single hour making a video, spend five minutes understanding what you’re publishing into. This is the bit most beginner guides skip, and it’s why most beginner channels stall.

YouTube is not one product. It’s four overlapping recommendation engines glued together:

  • Search. When someone types a query into YouTube, the platform serves them videos. This is where titles, descriptions, keywords, and transcripts matter most. Search rewards specific answers to specific questions.
  • Browse / Home feed. The infinite feed YouTube shows you when you open the app or homepage. Driven by your watch history, your subscriptions, and what people similar to you are watching. Browse rewards clickable thumbnails and strong opening retention.
  • Suggested videos. The sidebar (or “Up Next”) that appears while you’re watching something. Driven by what people who watched the current video tend to watch next. Suggested rewards topical relevance and similar audiences.
  • Shorts feed. Since late 2025, the Shorts recommendation engine has been formally separated from long-form. Shorts gets its own discovery, its own watch-loop signals, and its own subscriber pipeline. Shorts rewards the first 2 seconds, looping, and shares.

Each of those engines wants something slightly different from you. A great search video can be a terrible Browse video and vice-versa. As a new creator the smart play is to lean into Search first — it’s the easiest engine to win without an audience, because YouTube has to serve somebody’s video when a viewer types a query, and there’s no “authority bias” in search the way there is in the Browse feed.

Then, in 2025–2026, YouTube changed the deeper objective the algorithm optimises for. Where it used to maximise watch time, it now optimises for viewer satisfaction — whether viewers felt the time was well spent. That’s measured through repeat views, shares, post-view survey responses, and how often viewers come back to the platform. A 3-minute video that gets shared and re-watched will now beat a 20-minute video that gets abandoned at the 8-minute mark.

Practically, that means as a new creator your priorities are: pick the right niche, write a tight title that promises one specific thing, deliver on the promise quickly, and don’t pad. Every “watch time hack” you read from a 2021 blog post is now actively bad advice.

I’ve written the full plain-English version of how the YouTube algorithm works in 2026, but the four-engine model above is enough to launch with.

What You Actually Need Before You Start a YouTube Channel

The barrier to entry is laughably low. To create a channel and upload your first video, you need:

  • A Google account (free)
  • An internet connection
  • A device that can record video — your phone is fine
  • Free editing software (DaVinci Resolve, CapCut, or your phone’s built-in editor)
  • A topic you can talk about every week for 12 months without getting bored

That’s it. The total cost to start can be £0. People will tell you that you need a £900 camera and a £400 microphone before you upload your first video. Those people are usually selling you the camera. I cover the realistic numbers in my full Creator Equipment Guide 2026, and I’ll give you the priority order further down this post.

What you actually need before you press “Create channel” is the four decisions in the next four steps: your niche, your audience, your name, and your value proposition. Get those wrong and no amount of gear will save you.

Step 1: Pick a Niche You Can Stick With for 12 Months

Your niche is the single biggest predictor of whether your channel will grow. Pick well and the algorithm does a lot of the heavy lifting. Pick badly and you’ll burn out at video 14.

A good YouTube niche has three properties:

  1. It’s specific. “Fitness” is not a niche. “Calisthenics for desk workers over 40” is a niche. The narrower you go, the easier it is to rank, to write thumbnails, and to be remembered.
  2. It has search demand or watch-time demand. People are either actively searching the topic, or they’ll happily binge it in their feed. Use YouTube keyword research to confirm this before you commit.
  3. You can stick with it. If you can’t make 50 videos on the topic without feeling sick, it’s the wrong niche.

Don’t pick a niche based on CPM alone (the “finance pays more so I’ll start a finance channel” trap). High CPM is meaningless if you have nothing original to say. Knowing the rough pay rate of each niche still helps you make an informed choice though — my CPM by niche breakdown shows the realistic numbers.

Stuck for ideas? I’ve listed 100 unique YouTube channel ideas, plus 10 ideas for introverts, and 10 weird niches you didn’t know existed. If you’re still torn between two ideas, that’s usually a signal — pick the one you talk about more often without prompting.

Step 2: Define Your Audience and Your Value Proposition

Once you have a niche, write down two things before you do anything else.

Your audience in one sentence. Not “everyone who likes cars.” Try “UK car enthusiasts in their 20s who want to learn how to maintain their first project car without paying a mechanic.” That sentence will sharpen every title, thumbnail, and video you make. If you can’t picture one specific person watching, you’re too broad.

Your value proposition in one sentence. A value proposition is a promise to the viewer. Mine is “Actionable YouTube growth advice from a Certified Expert who’s been on the platform 20+ years.” Yours could be “Honest first-impressions on every new mid-range Android phone, in under 8 minutes.” Boring? Maybe. Memorable? Yes. That’s the job.

Write these two sentences and pin them above your desk. Every video that doesn’t serve them is a video that hurts your channel.

Step 3: Create a Google Account and Your YouTube Channel

Now the mechanical bit. This part takes about three minutes.

  1. Go to accounts.google.com/signup and create a new Google account. Don’t use your personal Gmail unless you’re comfortable mixing the two. Create a fresh one with your channel/brand name.
  2. Once logged in, head to YouTube.com and click your profile picture in the top right.
  3. Choose Create a channel. Enter your channel name and handle (more on naming in the next section).
  4. Add a placeholder profile picture (you can replace this any time) and click Create channel.
  5. Go to YouTube Studio → Settings → Channel → Feature eligibility and verify your phone number. This switches on uploads over 15 minutes, custom thumbnails, and live streaming.
  6. Turn on 2-Step Verification on the underlying Google account. Account takeover is the single biggest avoidable disaster for new creators — do this on day one.

If you want a step-by-step walkthrough with screenshots, my 2026 Channel Setup Guide covers every settings page in detail, including the bits YouTube buries.

Personal channel vs Brand Account

You’ll see two channel types: a default personal channel tied to your Google account, and a Brand Account. Use a Brand Account if there’s any chance you’ll bring in collaborators, hand the channel to a team, or run multiple channels from one Google login. You can convert later, but it’s less painful to start that way.

Step 4: Choose a YouTube Channel Name (and Handle)

Your channel name is one of the few things that’s genuinely hard to change later, so don’t rush it — but don’t let “perfect” stop you launching either.

Three naming approaches that work:

  • Your real name. Best if you’re building a personal brand and you’ll always be the face of the channel. Hard to scale into a team channel later (try selling “Alan Spicer” without Alan).
  • A descriptive brand name. “Project Farm,” “Smarter Every Day,” “Practical Engineering.” Easy to remember, hints at the content, easier to hand off, and easier to extend into merch and a website.
  • A coined/made-up word. “MKBHD,” “Veritasium,” “LinusTechTips.” Unique and brandable, but harder to find by search and harder to spell.

Whichever you pick, check three things:

  1. The handle is available on YouTube (handles are unique, so “@yourname” might already be gone).
  2. The .com or .co.uk domain is available — or at least a clean variant.
  3. It’s available on Instagram and TikTok. You’ll want those eventually.

Avoid: numbers in the name, hyphens, “official” or “TV” suffixes, anything trademark-adjacent, anything that’ll embarrass you in five years. Avoid the year (“TechReviews2026” ages instantly).

Step 5: Customise and Brand Your Channel

You don’t need a £500 designer. You need three assets and you need them done in 90 minutes, not 90 days.

Profile picture (avatar)

800 x 800 pixels, square format, recognisable at thumbnail size. If you’re a personal brand, use a clean head-and-shoulders shot — ideally a screenshot from your videos so it matches what people see when they watch. If you’re a brand, use a clean logo on a solid background.

Banner image

2,560 x 1,440 pixels, with the “safe area” (the bit that displays on mobile) at 1,546 x 423 pixels in the centre. Use Canva — their YouTube banner templates are already at the right dimensions. Your banner should answer one question fast: “What do I get if I subscribe?”

Video watermark

A 150 x 150 px PNG with a transparent background. This is the little subscribe button that appears in the corner of every video. Use your logo or a stylised initial. It’s small but it converts — turn it on, set it to display for the whole video.

While you’re in YouTube Studio → Customisation, also fill out:

  • About section — lead with your value proposition in the first sentence. Most viewers never click “read more.”
  • Featured links — your website, your booking page, your Instagram. Up to five show on your channel page.
  • Channel keywords (Settings → Channel → Basic info). 5–10 keywords describing your niche. Not shown to viewers but they signal to YouTube what your channel is about.
  • Channel trailer — a 30–60 second pitch for non-subscribers. You can record this once you have 3–5 videos up.

If you want my templates and the exact dimensions cheat-sheet, I’ve listed my favourites in 5 free branding tools every YouTube vlogger should know.

Step 6: Get the Right Equipment to Start (Cheap to Pro)

Here’s the order I’d buy gear in, having done this on every budget level. The rule: audio first, then lighting, then camera. Viewers tolerate average video. They will not tolerate bad audio.

I’ve done a full 30/25/25/20 budget allocation breakdown if you want to plan a multi-purchase build. The short version is below.

Tier 1: The £0–£100 starter kit

This is what I tell beginners to use until they’ve uploaded 10 videos. If you can’t make 10 videos with the kit below, no upgrade will save you.

  • Camera: your phone. Modern iPhones and Pixels shoot 4K. Use the rear camera, not the selfie cam.
  • Microphone: a budget lavalier like the BOYA BY-M1 lav mic (around £15–£20). Plugs straight into your phone or laptop. Night-and-day audio improvement.
  • Tripod: a Joby GorillaPod for phones or a cheap aluminium tripod with a phone clamp.
  • Lighting: a window during the day. Sit facing it. That’s your softbox.
  • Editing software: DaVinci Resolve (free, professional-grade) or CapCut (free, easier learning curve).

Tier 2: The £100–£400 serious-beginner kit

Once you’ve uploaded 10 videos and you’re committed, this is where to spend.

  • USB microphone: the Samson Q2U is the best £60 you’ll spend on a channel. It’s USB and XLR, so it grows with you. If you want a more polished broadcast sound, the Shure MV7 is the step up — I compare them properly in Shure SM7B vs MV7+.
  • Lighting: a basic key light. Ring light if you’re sitting still and facing the camera, softbox if you want more flattering light. I’ve broken down the three options in ring light vs softbox vs LED panel, plus my picks under £100.
  • Camera: a webcam like the Logitech C922 for tutorials, or keep using your phone with a tripod and external mic.

Tier 3: The £400–£1,200 committed-creator kit

Don’t buy this until you’ve been uploading for at least 6 months. Spending here before that point is procrastination dressed up as preparation.

For niche-specific gear (tech reviews, beauty, gaming, vlogging, podcast), I’ve built dedicated kit lists at the Creator Equipment Guide 2026 hub.

Affiliate disclosure: the Amazon links above use my affiliate tag. If you buy through them I earn a small commission at no cost to you. I only link to gear I’ve used or recommended to clients.

Step 7: Plan Your First 10 Videos Before You Upload Anything

This is the step nobody talks about and it’s the one that separates channels that grow from channels that quit at video 3.

Plan 10 videos before you upload your first. Not 30. Not 50. Ten is the magic number. Why?

  • It’s enough to test if you actually enjoy this.
  • It’s enough for the algorithm to start understanding who your audience is.
  • It’s short enough that you won’t burn out planning instead of shooting.
  • By video 10 you’ll have data — which videos got watched, which titles got clicked, which thumbnails worked — and you’ll plan the next 10 a hundred times better.

For each of those 10 videos, write down:

  1. The exact search query or feed scenario the video is for. Example: “What’s the best beginner mic for YouTube under £50?”
  2. The working title (you’ll refine it before upload).
  3. The promise the thumbnail and title together make.
  4. The one thing the viewer must walk away knowing.

Use proper keyword research. Don’t guess. My YouTube keyword research guide walks you through the tools and the workflow. The two I lean on are vidIQ (I’m a former insider — here’s my honest 2026 review) and TubeBuddy. Both have free tiers that are enough to start.

The video-mix formula I give clients

Out of every 10 videos, aim for roughly:

  • 6 foundation videos — evergreen search-intent videos that answer questions in your niche.
  • 3 browse-feed videos — bingeable, opinion-led, or trend-led pieces that get pushed in the home feed.
  • 1 community video — a Q&A, behind-the-scenes, milestone celebration, or response to your audience.

This mix gives you the best chance of being discovered and building a relationship.

Step 8: Record, Edit, and Optimise Your First Video

You’ve got your gear, your niche, and your list. Time to make something.

Recording

For your first video, focus on three things:

  • The first 15 seconds. If you don’t hook the viewer in 15 seconds, you’ve lost them. State the value, tease the payoff, and get into the content. Don’t open with “Hey guys, welcome back to the channel.” You don’t have a channel yet — nobody’s coming back.
  • Energy. Speak louder, faster, and smile more than feels natural. The camera flattens you. What feels like overacting in the room reads as normal on screen.
  • Audio level. Watch your input levels — you want peaks around -6dB, not clipping. Listen back to the first 30 seconds before you commit to recording the whole video. There’s nothing more depressing than a perfect take with a fuzzy mic.

If you want a script, write one. If you can’t script well yet, write a bullet outline and rehearse aloud once. My YouTube script writing guide shows you the structure I teach clients.

Editing

Cut hard. Tighten every pause. If you wouldn’t miss it, cut it. Add b-roll, text overlays, and zooms to keep visual interest every 4–6 seconds. My guide to editing YouTube videos for free covers DaVinci Resolve and CapCut workflows that don’t cost a penny.

The optimisation checklist before you hit Publish

This is where most beginners flush their video. Don’t skip a single step.

  • Title. Front-load your keyword. Front-load the value. Keep it under 60 characters so it doesn’t truncate. My 2026 title framework has the templates I use for clients.
  • Thumbnail. Big, clear subject. Three or fewer focal points. Readable at postage-stamp size. My 2026 thumbnail guide covers the 5 elements of high-CTR thumbnails and the colour psychology behind them.
  • Description. First 150 characters matter for search and for the preview snippet. Write a 2–3 paragraph description with your keyword in the first sentence, plus timestamps and links. Full walkthrough: how to write a YouTube description that ranks.
  • Tags. Yes, still — but mostly as a topical signal and a defence against misspellings of your title. Here’s the full breakdown of where tags fit in 2026.
  • Category. Pick the closest match — it helps YouTube cluster your audience.
  • End screen. Always add one. Cards to one related video and a subscribe button.
  • Pinned comment. Write it before you publish. Ask a question. Get the conversation started.
  • Chapters. Add timestamps in the description for any video over 5 minutes. They boost average view duration and they win you key-moments rankings in search.

The full SEO checklist I use for every upload is at the Ultimate YouTube SEO Checklist 2026.

Step 9: Upload, Schedule, and Promote Your First Video

You don’t have to upload your first video at midnight in a panic. Schedule it.

Pick an upload window when your target audience is online. For UK creators with a UK audience, that’s typically Saturday and Sunday between 9am and 11am, or weekdays around 5–7pm. I’ve dug into the data in the best time to upload YouTube videos in the UK. Whatever window you pick, stick to it — consistency tells the algorithm your channel is reliable.

Promotion in week one matters more than people realise. The first 24–48 hours of velocity tell YouTube whether to keep pushing the video. Things to do on launch day:

  • Share to your other socials — LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Threads, Instagram Stories, Reddit (only in subreddits where self-promo is allowed).
  • Send the link to 10 friends who’ll genuinely watch — not skim — the whole video.
  • Cut a 30–60 second Short from the best moment of the video and upload it pointing to the long-form. Here’s the Shorts-to-long-form strategy in detail.
  • Reply to every single comment in the first 48 hours. Every one.

What not to do: don’t buy views. Don’t spam your link in unrelated Discord servers. Don’t join “sub for sub” groups. All three poison your watch-time data and damage your channel for months.

Step 10: Build Consistency and Engage Your Community

The first 10 videos are about learning. Videos 10 to 50 are about consistency.

You don’t have to upload daily. You have to upload predictably. One video a week, every week, for 12 months beats five videos in week one and silence for the next six months. Pick a cadence you can actually hold — weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly — and protect it like a paid client deadline.

Most quit-rates I see cluster at video 7, video 20, and video 50. They’re the points where the dopamine fades and the reality of how slow growth feels sets in. I’ve written about the psychology in why YouTubers quit — read it before you start, not after.

While you’re uploading, build the community on the side:

  • Reply to comments for the first 24 hours of every video.
  • Use the Community tab once you hit eligibility (500 subscribers in 2026).
  • Pin a question on every video to seed conversation.
  • Open a Discord or a subreddit once you have a couple of hundred subscribers and people are asking for one.

Your First 30 Days: What to Track and What to Ignore

The first 30 days after you launch will mess with your head if you let them. You will check your subscriber count 40 times a day. You will refresh the analytics dashboard at 2am. You will watch a video about a 17-year-old who got 1 million subscribers in 90 days and you will wonder what’s wrong with you. Don’t.

Here’s exactly what to look at and exactly what to ignore in the first month.

Pay attention to these three numbers

  1. Click-through rate (CTR) on your title and thumbnail. For a brand-new channel with no audience, anything over 3% is a positive signal that your packaging is working. Under 2% means your thumbnail or your title (or both) needs work — not the video.
  2. Average view duration as a percentage. Are people watching 30% of the video? 50%? 70%? Anything above 50% on a new channel is excellent. Below 30% and you’re losing them in the intro — rewatch your first 30 seconds and cut anything that isn’t the hook.
  3. Where viewers drop off. Click into a video’s analytics and look at the retention graph. Spot the cliff — the moment a chunk of viewers leave — and ask yourself what was happening right then. That’s your edit feedback for next time.

Ignore these in the first 30 days

  • Total subscriber count. It’s a vanity number. A new channel with 80 subscribers who genuinely care beats a channel with 8,000 who don’t.
  • Total views in absolute terms. Views without retention mean nothing. The algorithm doesn’t reward views, it rewards what happens during the view.
  • Comparing your channel to anyone else’s. You don’t know their starting point, their budget, their connections, their luck, or their content cadence. Compare your video 4 to your video 1.
  • Day-over-day numbers. YouTube growth is non-linear. A video can do nothing for two weeks and then explode in week three. Look at weekly trends, not daily ones.

What to do every week in month one

  • Publish your scheduled video on time. Non-negotiable. If you can’t hit your own cadence in month one, you won’t hit it in month seven either.
  • Reply to every comment within 24 hours. This is the lowest-cost, highest-impact thing you can do as a new creator. Comments build relationship and they boost the video’s engagement signal.
  • Watch your last video back with the sound off and the speed at 1.5x. You’ll spot the dead spots, the weak transitions, and the visuals that aren’t carrying their weight.
  • Post one Short. Even if it’s just a 30-second cut from the long-form. You’re building the habit and getting a feel for the format.

Most new creators give up at video 7, which is somewhere in the middle of month two. The ones who push through to video 20 are usually the ones who do month one without melting down at the slow numbers. Your job in the first 30 days is not to go viral. It’s to stay calm and keep uploading.

How to Grow Your YouTube Channel After Your First 10 Videos

Once you’ve got 10 videos up, the playbook changes. You’re no longer learning — you’re scaling. Three things to focus on:

1. Pull your analytics every Sunday

Open YouTube Studio → Analytics every weekend. You’re looking for three numbers:

  • Click-through rate (CTR). A healthy new channel sits at 4–6%. Above 8% on a video means your title and thumbnail are punching above their weight — do more of that. Here’s what a good YouTube CTR actually looks like.
  • Average view duration / retention. If you’re holding 50%+ of viewers to the end, the algorithm rewards you. Anything under 30% means you’re losing them in the intro — tighten it. Full retention playbook here.
  • Impressions trend. Impressions rising = the algorithm is testing you. Impressions falling = your video has stalled.

The full breakdown of every metric is in YouTube Analytics Explained, plus the 5 reports that actually drive decisions.

2. Use Shorts as a discovery on-ramp

Shorts in 2026 are no longer a side hustle — they’re a separate discovery engine. Channels that pair long-form with a steady Shorts cadence grow noticeably faster. The trick is to use Shorts to bring viewers to your long-form, not as a destination in themselves. The complete Shorts growth playbook is here, and how to use Shorts to grow your long-form channel is the strategic angle.

3. Understand the algorithm, don’t chase it

The algorithm rewards viewer satisfaction, not views. That means: high CTR, strong retention, good session time (viewers who watch you and stay on YouTube afterwards), and positive feedback signals (likes, shares, returning viewers). Plain-English breakdown: how the YouTube algorithm works in 2026.

If you want one strategy document for the next 12 months, my YouTube growth strategy guide is the playbook I use with paying clients.

How to Monetise Your YouTube Channel (2026 Rules)

The YouTube Partner Program (YPP) opened up significantly in 2024–2025. Here’s where the bar sits in 2026:

YPP Tier 1 (entry level — no ad revenue yet)

  • 500 subscribers
  • 3 public uploads in the last 90 days
  • 3,000 watch hours OR 3 million Shorts views in the last 90 days

What you get: channel memberships, Super Chat, Super Thanks, Super Stickers, and YouTube Shopping.

YPP Tier 2 (full monetisation — ad revenue on)

  • 1,000 subscribers
  • 4,000 watch hours OR 10 million Shorts views in the last 12 months

What you get: ad revenue on long-form, ad revenue on Shorts, and the full creator monetisation suite.

Beyond YPP, the other income streams I see clients build (often earlier than ad revenue) are sponsorships, affiliate marketing, digital products, coaching, and merch. I’ve broken down the realistic numbers in how many subscribers do you need to make money on YouTube and the wider how to make money on YouTube in the UK.

If sponsorships are your aim, start prepping your pitch before you hit 1,000 subscribers — I cover the cold-pitch process in how to find social media sponsors fast, and the realistic thresholds in how many followers do you need for sponsors.

The 10 Mistakes I See New YouTubers Make Every Single Week

  1. Going broad to “reach more people.” The algorithm penalises unfocused channels. Pick one lane.
  2. Spending £900 on gear before video one. Audio first. Phone is fine. Buy the camera at video 30, not video 1.
  3. Copying the format of a 5-million-subscriber channel. Their style works because they already have an audience. Yours won’t until you do.
  4. Inconsistent upload cadence. Three videos in week one, then nothing for two months. The algorithm forgets you.
  5. Weak thumbnails. A thumbnail is the entire game on the home feed. Treat it as 70% of your effort, not an afterthought.
  6. Long, vague intros. “Hey guys what’s up welcome back to the channel today we’re going to be talking about…” You just lost half your audience. Get to the point in 10 seconds.
  7. No call to action. Ask for the subscribe. Ask for the comment. Ask for the share. Viewers won’t do it on their own.
  8. Refusing to look at analytics. Your channel is telling you exactly what’s working — if you bother to look.
  9. Comparing your week-2 channel to a 10-year-old channel. Useless. Compare yourself to your own last 5 videos.
  10. Quitting before video 20. Almost nobody’s channel pops before video 20. Yours won’t be the exception. Read this before you give up.

I’ve catalogued 10 specific equipment mistakes that cost beginners subscribers, if you want the gear-side version.

How Long Will It Take to Grow Your YouTube Channel?

The honest answer, based on the data: the average new YouTube channel takes around 15–18 months to reach 1,000 subscribers. Channels that publish Shorts consistently grow about 40% faster. Channels with a tight niche grow noticeably faster than broad ones.

Most channels see almost nothing in months 1–3 while YouTube collects data on who watches you. Months 4–9 is where momentum usually starts. Most monetisable channels hit the YPP Tier 2 thresholds somewhere between month 6 and month 24.

The single biggest predictor isn’t talent. It’s how many videos you publish. The creators who get to monetisation publish, on average, 50–100 videos. The ones who quit publish 11.

The pattern is so reliable I’ve built dozens of channel audits around it. If you want me to look at yours specifically — what to fix, what to drop, where the next 1,000 subs are likely to come from — that’s exactly what a Channel Audit is for.

Tools and Resources I Actually Use

I get asked “what tools should I use?” on almost every consulting call. Here’s the short list of what I use day-to-day with clients:

  • vidIQ — keyword research, competitor tracking, AI title generation, daily ideas. I worked there. My full take is in my 2026 vidIQ review and the ultimate guide to vidIQ.
  • TubeBuddy — thumbnail A/B testing, bulk processing, SEO score.
  • DaVinci Resolve — free, broadcast-grade editing.
  • Canva — thumbnails, banners, end screens. Free tier is plenty.
  • Notion or Trello — video pipeline. Mine has columns for Idea, Scripted, Filmed, Edited, Scheduled, Published.
  • 1Password / Bitwarden — channel security. Don’t skip this. Channel takeovers are the most preventable disaster on YouTube and they happen weekly.

The fuller stack lives at the best YouTube growth tools for small channels and the best YouTube SEO tools 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to start a YouTube channel?

Setting up the channel itself is free. To launch realistically you can spend anywhere from £0 (phone + window light + free editing software) to around £200 for a Tier 1 starter kit. Don’t spend more than that until you’ve uploaded 10 videos and proved to yourself you’ll stick at it.

Do I need fancy equipment to start a YouTube channel?

No. Audio matters far more than camera. A £20 lavalier microphone, your phone’s rear camera, and natural light from a window will outperform a £1,500 camera with bad audio every time. Upgrade gear in this order: microphone, lighting, then camera.

How old do I have to be to start a YouTube channel?

You need to be 13 to have a Google account on your own. Between 13 and 17 you can run a channel with parental consent. You need to be 18 to monetise via YPP — younger creators can monetise through a parent or guardian’s linked AdSense account.

How many subscribers do I need to start making money?

You can apply for YPP Tier 1 at 500 subscribers (plus 3,000 watch hours or 3 million Shorts views in 90 days). Ad revenue switches on at YPP Tier 2: 1,000 subscribers plus 4,000 watch hours or 10 million Shorts views in 12 months. You can earn from sponsorships and affiliate links well before either of those.

Can I start a YouTube channel without showing my face?

Yes — faceless channels are one of the fastest-growing formats. Voiceover with stock footage, tutorial screen recordings, AI-narrated explainers, gameplay, animation, and silent “ASMR-style” channels all work. Here’s the full breakdown.

How often should I upload to grow a new YouTube channel?

Once a week is the sweet spot for most beginners. Consistency matters more than frequency — one video a week every week for a year beats three videos in week one and nothing afterwards. If you can add a Shorts cadence on top (3–5 per week), you’ll grow noticeably faster.

Is it too late to start a YouTube channel in 2026?

No. The algorithm now rewards niche relevance and viewer satisfaction over channel age. New channels under 10,000 subscribers are growing faster than they were three years ago, especially in underserved niches. The best time to start was five years ago. The second-best time is today.

How long does it take to grow a YouTube channel?

Average to 1,000 subscribers: 15–18 months. Channels with Shorts: roughly 40% faster. Channels with a sharply defined niche: faster again. Most monetised channels reach YPP Tier 2 between month 6 and month 24. Quit-points cluster at video 7, video 20, and video 50 — if you make it past video 50, you’re past the hardest part.

Should I focus on long-form videos or YouTube Shorts?

Both, but use them for different jobs. Long-form builds depth, watch time, and your relationship with the audience. Shorts are a discovery engine that introduces new viewers to your channel. The fastest-growing new channels in 2026 pair both.

Can I have more than one YouTube channel on the same Google account?

Yes. You can run multiple channels under a single Google account using Brand Accounts. Useful if you want to test a second niche without splitting your sign-in, or if you want collaborators to have access without sharing your personal Gmail.

Do YouTube tags still matter in 2026?

Less than they used to, but yes. Tags are no longer a major ranking signal, but they help YouTube cluster your content topically and they catch misspellings of your title. Spend two minutes on them. Not twenty. Full breakdown here.

What’s the best niche to start a YouTube channel in?

The best niche is the one you can stick with for 50 videos without getting bored, that has a real audience searching for it, and that you can speak about with some genuine knowledge or curiosity. CPM matters less than retention. A niche you love that earns £2 CPM beats a high-CPM niche you abandon.

Final Thoughts: The One Thing That Matters Most

If you take one thing from this guide, take this: the only channels that fail are the ones that stop uploading. Every other problem — bad audio, weak thumbnails, fuzzy niche, low CTR — is fixable with feedback and iteration. Quitting is the one that isn’t.

You don’t need permission to start. You don’t need expensive gear. You don’t need a personality transplant. You need a niche, a list of 10 videos, and the discipline to upload them.

If you want help building that plan — or you want a Certified Expert to look at the channel you’ve started and tell you exactly what’s holding it back — that’s what I do. I’ve been on YouTube for 20+ years, I’m YouTube Certified, and six of my clients have hit Silver Play Button (100K subscribers).

Book a free 1:1 discovery call here and I’ll walk through your channel idea (or your current channel) with you, no obligation.

And if you want weekly tactical YouTube tips for free, subscribe to my YouTube channel — I publish new walkthroughs every week.

Now go and create that channel. The next 10 videos are waiting.


Alan Spicer is a UK-based YouTube Certified Expert with over 20 years on the platform, more than 500 channel audits delivered, and six client channels at Silver Play Button level. Learn more about Alan’s background or explore the full services and packages.

Categories
TIPS & TRICKS YOUTUBE

What time is YouTube most active?

As with most social media platforms, the best time to post on YouTube depends on your audience and the type of content you’re posting.

However, research suggests that the most active times on YouTube are weekday afternoons and evenings, between 2 PM and 4 PM Eastern Time, with the peak being around 5 PM to 6 PM Eastern Time.

Why is it important to know when YouTube is most active? Knowing the best time to post on YouTube can help you reach a larger audience and get more views and engagement on your content. If you post at a time when your audience is most active, your video is more likely to show up in their feeds and search results.

This can help you get more views, likes, comments, and shares, which can in turn help you grow your channel and increase your reach.

How to boost views on YouTube

In addition to posting at the right time, there are several other strategies you can use to boost views on your YouTube videos:

Optimize your title and description

Use keywords and phrases that your target audience is likely to search for in your video title and description. This will help your video show up in search results for those keywords, which can help you get more views.

Use eye-catching thumbnails

Your video thumbnail is the first thing people see when browsing through YouTube, so it’s important to make it eye-catching and engaging. Use high-quality images, bold text, and bright colours to capture people’s attention and entice them to click on your video.

Promote your video on social media

Share your video on your social media channels and encourage your followers to watch and share it. This can help you reach a wider audience and drive more views and engagement on your video.

How to localize content to get more engagement: Localization is the process of adapting your content to suit the preferences and needs of a specific geographical region or language. Here are a few strategies you can use to localize your content and get more engagement:

Use subtitles or captions

Adding subtitles or captions to your videos can help you reach a wider audience and make your content more accessible to people who speak different languages.

Use local keywords and phrases

Research the keywords and phrases that are popular in the region or language you’re targeting, and use them in your video titles, descriptions, and tags.

Incorporate local trends and culture

Make your content more relatable and engaging by incorporating local trends, culture, and references into your videos. This can help you connect with your audience on a deeper level and build a stronger relationship with them.

How Much is YouTube TV? A Comprehensive Guide to Pricing and Features

YouTube Statistics

Statistics Value
Number of YouTube users Over 2 billion monthly active users
Number of YouTube daily views Over 1 billion hours of videos watched daily
Percentage of YouTube users 81% of 15-25 year-olds in the US
Average mobile YouTube session 40 minutes
Number of YouTube channels Over 50 million channels

YouTube Engagement Statistics

Statistics Value
Average time spent on YouTube per user Around 40 minutes per session
Percentage of YouTube traffic from mobile devices Over 70%
Average percentage of likes on YouTube videos 8-12% of total views
Average percentage of comments on YouTube videos 0.5-2% of total views
Percentage of YouTube users who subscribe to a channel after watching a video 70%

Video Localization Statistics

Statistics Value
Percentage of internet users who prefer to consume content in their native language 72%
Percentage increase in video engagement after adding subtitles or captions Up to 15%
Percentage of YouTube views that come from non-English-speaking countries Over 60%
Number of languages YouTube supports for automatic captions Over 10
Percentage increase in video reach when optimizing for local keywords and phrases Varies based on region and language

What is the best time to post on YouTube?

The best time to post on YouTube depends on your audience and the type of content you’re posting. However, research suggests that the most active times on YouTube are weekday afternoons and evenings, between 2 PM and 4 PM Eastern Time, with the peak being around 5 PM to 6 PM Eastern Time.

These are the times when most people are likely to be online and actively browsing YouTube.

Why is it important to post at the right time?

Posting at the right time can help you reach a larger audience and get more views and engagement on your content. If you post when your audience is most active, your video is more likely to show up in their feeds and search results.

This can help you get more views, likes, comments, and shares, which can in turn help you grow your channel and increase your reach.

Can posting at the wrong time hurt your video’s performance?

Posting at the wrong time can make it harder for your video to get noticed and can lead to lower engagement and views. If you post when your audience is less active, your video is less likely to show up in their feeds and search results, which can limit its visibility and reach.

What are some other strategies for boosting views and engagement on YouTube?

In addition to posting at the right time, there are several other strategies you can use to boost views and engagement on your videos.

These include:

  • Using targeted keywords and phrases in your video titles, descriptions, and tags to make it easier for people to find your video in search results.
  • Creating engaging thumbnails that capture people’s attention and entice them to click on your video.
  • Promoting your video on social media and other channels to reach a wider audience and encourage people to watch and share it.
  • Collaborating with other creators in your niche to expand your reach and build your audience.
  • Engaging with your audience by responding to comments and encouraging feedback.

How can you localize your content to get more engagement?

Localizing your content means adapting it to suit the preferences and needs of a specific geographical region or language.

Some strategies for localizing your content and getting more engagement include using subtitles or captions to make your videos more accessible to people who speak different languages, incorporating local trends and culture into your videos to make them more relatable and engaging, and using local keywords and phrases to optimize your content for search results in specific regions or languages.

In summary, posting at the right time, optimizing your content, and localizing your content can all help you get more views and engagement on your YouTube videos. By understanding your audience, researching keywords and trends, and using these strategies effectively, you can take your YouTube channel to the next level and reach a wider audience.

Categories
LISTS YOUTUBE YOUTUBE TUTORIALS

100 Unique YouTube Channel Ideas

Having a unique and interesting YouTube channel idea is important because it helps you stand out from the millions of other channels on the platform. A unique theme or focus for your channel can help attract and retain viewers, as it gives them a reason to watch your content rather than someone else’s. It also helps you establish your brand and identity on the platform, and allows you to build a loyal audience of followers who are interested in the specific content you create.

Additionally, having a unique channel idea can make it easier to come up with content ideas, as it gives you a specific theme or focus to work with. It can also make it easier to monetize your channel, as you can create content and products that are tailored to your specific audience and theme.

Overall, having a unique and well-defined channel idea can help you create content that resonates with viewers, build a strong and loyal audience, and establish your brand on the platform.

Here are 100 unique YouTube channel ideas to get you inspired…

  • A cooking channel featuring healthy and easy recipes
  • A DIY home improvement channel with tutorials and projects
  • A fashion channel with style tips and outfit ideas
  • A travel channel showcasing different destinations and cultures
  • A beauty channel with makeup tutorials and skincare tips
  • A comedy channel with sketches and stand-up comedy
  • A sports channel with analysis and highlights
  • A gaming channel with video game reviews and Let’s Plays
  • A health and wellness channel with exercise routines and nutrition advice
  • An educational channel with lessons on various subjects
  • A gardening channel with tips and tricks for growing plants
  • A music channel with music performances and interviews
  • A personal finance channel with money management advice
  • A science and technology channel with discussions on current events and innovations
  • A food and drink channel with restaurant reviews and recipes
  • A car enthusiast channel with vehicle reviews and modifications
  • A parenting and family channel with advice and activities for families
  • A fitness channel with workout routines and fitness challenges
  • A home and garden channel with home decor and landscaping ideas

  • A business and entrepreneurship channel with tips and strategies for starting and running a business
  • A history channel with documentaries and lectures on historical events and figures
  • An art channel with tutorials and interviews with artists
  • A literature and book club channel with book reviews and discussions
  • A parenting and family channel with tips and advice for raising children
  • A beauty and fashion channel with makeup tutorials and style tips
  • A cooking and food channel with recipes and restaurant reviews
  • A travel and adventure channel with destination guides and travel vlogs
  • A health and wellness channel with exercise routines and nutrition advice
  • A sports and fitness channel with workout routines and sports analysis
  • A personal development and self-care channel with tips and strategies for personal growth
  • A home and garden channel with DIY home improvement projects and landscaping ideas
  • A business and entrepreneurship channel with tips and strategies for starting and running a business
  • A science and technology channel with discussions on current events and innovations
  • A gaming channel with video game reviews and Let’s Plays
  • A music and entertainment channel with concerts and celebrity interviews
  • An educational channel with lessons on various subjects
  • A pet and animal channel with tips and advice for caring for pets
  • A fashion and beauty channel with style tips and makeup tutorials
  • A travel and adventure channel with destination guides and travel vlogs
  • A personal finance and money management channel with tips and strategies for managing finances.
  • A DIY and craft channel with tutorials and projects
  • A cooking and recipe channel with healthy and easy recipes
  • A gardening and landscaping channel with tips and tricks for growing plants
  • A health and wellness channel with exercise routines and nutrition advice
  • A beauty and skincare channel with tutorials and product recommendations
  • A comedy and entertainment channel with sketches and stand-up comedy
  • A sports and fitness channel with workout routines and sports analysis
  • A gaming and technology channel with video game reviews and tech reviews
  • A personal development and self-care channel with tips and strategies for personal growth
  • A home and garden channel with DIY home improvement projects and landscaping ideas
  • A business and entrepreneurship channel with tips and strategies for starting and running a business
  • A science and technology channel with discussions on current events and innovations
  • A music and entertainment channel with concerts and celebrity interviews
  • An educational channel with lessons on various subjects
  • A pet and animal channel with tips and advice for caring for pets
  • A fashion and beauty channel with style tips and makeup tutorials
  • A travel and adventure channel with destination guides and travel vlogs
  • A personal finance and money management channel with tips and strategies for managing finances
  • A cooking and food channel with restaurant reviews and recipes
  • A DIY and home improvement channel with tutorials and projects.
  • A health and wellness channel with exercises routines and nutrition advice
  • A beauty and skincare channel with tutorials and product recommendations
  • A comedy and entertainment channel with sketches and stand-up comedy
  • A sports and fitness channel with workout routines and sports analysis
  • A gaming and technology channel with video game reviews and tech reviews
  • A personal development and self-care channel with tips and strategies for personal growth
  • A home and garden channel with DIY home improvement projects and landscaping ideas
  • A business and entrepreneurship channel with tips and strategies for starting and running a business
  • A science and technology channel with discussions on current events and innovations
  • A music and entertainment channel with concerts and celebrity interviews
  • An educational channel with lessons on various subjects
  • A pet and animal channel with tips and advice for caring for pets
  • A fashion and beauty channel with style tips and makeup tutorials
  • A travel and adventure channel with destination guides and travel vlogs
  • A personal finance and money management channel with tips and strategies for managing finances
  • A cooking and food channel with restaurant reviews and recipes
  • A DIY and home improvement channel with tutorials and projects
  • A gardening and landscaping channel with tips and tricks for growing plants
  • A health and wellness channel with exercises routines and nutrition advice
  • A beauty and skincare channel with tutorials and product recommendations.
  • A comedy and entertainment channel with sketches and stand-up comedy
  • A sports and fitness channel with workout routines and sports analysis

  • A gaming and technology channel with video game reviews and tech reviews
  • A personal development and self-care channel with tips and strategies for personal growth
  • A home and garden channel with DIY home improvement projects and landscaping ideas
  • A business and entrepreneurship channel with tips and strategies for starting and running a business
  • A science and technology channel with discussions on current events and innovations
  • A music and entertainment channel with concerts and celebrity interviews
  • An educational channel with lessons on various subjects
  • A pet and animal channel with tips and advice for caring for pets
  • A fashion and beauty channel with style tips and makeup tutorials
  • A travel and adventure channel with destination guides and travel vlogs
  • A personal finance and money management channel with tips and strategies for managing finances
  • A cooking and food channel with restaurant reviews and recipes
  • A DIY and home improvement channel with tutorials and projects
  • A gardening and landscaping channel with tips and tricks for growing plants
  • A health and wellness channel with exercises routines and nutrition advice
  • A beauty and skincare channel with tutorials and product recommendations
  • A sports and outdoor adventure channel with tips and advice for various outdoor activities
  • A personal growth and self-improvement channel with tips and strategies for personal development.
Categories
LISTS YOUTUBE

10 YouTube Channel Ideas for Introverts

Even to this day, when you think of a YouTuber the first thing that springs to mind is often someone in front of the camera, talking directly to that camera as though they were having a heart-to-heart conversation with someone in the room.

It’s not exactly an image that would be appealing to many introverts.

That being said, being a YouTuber is appealing for many reasons, so while the aforementioned introverts might not want to climb in front of a camera and bare their soul for the world, there are still plenty of types of channel out there that are a little more palatable.

What is an Introvert? Am I One?

The definition of introvert is one of those things that often gets boiled down to one or two simple traits, when there is actually quite a broad spectrum of introverted behaviour.

The most obvious trait of an introvert is a lack of interest in external stimulation. This is often mistaken for a lack of interest in going out, which is not technically the same thing.

Introverts are less interested in stimulation outside their own thoughts, not their own house. It’s true, however, that the two often come hand in hand.

Shyness is another common introvert trait, as well as a preference for solitude. In other words, an introvert YouTuber isn’t likely to be interested in hitting the crowded streets with a camera for prank or reaction videos, or being “on the ground” at a large convention.

10 YouTube Channel Ideas for Introverts 1

10 YouTube Channel Ideas for Introverts

Before we dive into the actual ideas, it’s worth pointing out that, regardless of your own personality traits, the list of channel ideas that is right for you is whatever you are comfortable with.

If something on this list doesn’t appeal to you, that’s fine; everybody is different. Similarly, if you feel comfortable with something that would typically be off of an introverts table, you shouldn’t avoid it because some blog post or YouTube video told you it’s not suitable for introverts.

1. Screen Recorded Tutorial Videos

Given the practically endless selection of software out there in a practically endless variety of niches, there will always be a use for screen recorded tutorial videos.

In these types of videos, you never need to be on screen (some choose to but that’s entirely optional), and some screen recorded tutorial videos don’t even have speaking content, instead relying on text to do the work.

The important thing about a video like this is that it shows the viewer what they want to know in as clear a way as possible.

It could be how to make an image look like an old photograph in Adobe Photoshop, how to make a model of a car in Blender, how to do your accounting in Freshbooks, or any number of other options.

2. Animated Videos

For those of you with a flair for animation, animated videos are a great way to get your YouTube on without going against your introverted tendencies. Animation can cover a lot of ground when talking about YouTube channels.

For example, you could be making a whole animated show (though that’s a lot of work), or you could be making videos that typically wouldn’t be on an introverts’ radar while using animation as a buffer between yourself and the viewer.

One idea for this kind of video is the VTuber approach, in which the YouTuber is represented by a virtual avatar.

3. Gameplay Videos

Gameplay videos are, of course, immensely popular. Something that is shown perfectly by the fact that Twitch is often considered to be number two in the user-generated video platform space, and that is a service entirely geared towards gaming.

Gaming videos can be made in a variety of ways, including having your face in the video, just your voice, or even pure gameplay with no commentary or obvious presence from the YouTuber at all.

If you decide to go down this route, it helps to have a clear niche. For example, AlphaBetaGamer is a very popular channel whose videos feature pure gameplay—no commentary—but all the games are up and coming indie titles.

4. Compilation Videos

Compilation videos are a little tricky in the right-to-use department—something that warrants entire posts and videos of its own, but assuming you can get the necessary permission for the clips you use, compilation videos can be anything from “top 10” videos to a collection of funny animal videos.

You can inject commentary into the video if you feel comfortable with that, but many videos of this style get by without. In some cases, the title of the video establishes the premise and the video itself is just a roll of successive videos.

5. Time-lapse Videos

Time-lapse videos can serve a few different purposes. T

hey could just be showing a lengthy process in a short time, such as constructing something or travelling, but they can also be used for atmospheric and ambient videos.

An example of the latter might be finding a spot in nature with a clear view of the night sky and taking a time-lapse of the stars wheeling overhead. Put some royalty-free music on your footage, and you have a nice relaxing video.

This would be ideal for people who like to go solo-camping, as they could also make content of some of the more mundane aspects of camping, such as setting up a fire. And there’s been plenty of “3 hours of crackling campfire” videos popping up in recent years.

6. Product Review Videos

Much like the software mentioned in the screen recording idea, there is never a shortage of products to review.

Granted, it’s a little tricker to make a product review video without featuring at least your voice, but not impossible. You could use a computer generated voice or onscreen text, once again the key point is that you are giving your viewers the information they need about the product.

This method has the added bonus that you can sign up to an affiliate program like Amazon Affiliates and potentially earn some commission from people buying the products you review.

7. Pet Videos

If you have a particularly entertaining pet—or you have a lot of pets—you could make a channel out of them. If there’s one thing we’ve learned over the years, it’s that the Internet can’t get enough of amusing animal videos.

One approach that seems to be popular for single-pet owners is a vlog-type channel, only the vlog belongs to the pet.

If you have enough going on in your home to get plenty of entertaining footage, you could even do the compilation style we mentioned above but using exclusively your own pets!

8. Whiteboard Videos

There’s something for everything on YouTube, including people who want to get to grips with the more technical aspects of life.

If you have a penchant for something like mathematics, physics, language, or really anything that benefits from a visual aid when being taught, you could set yourself up with a white board, point a camera at it, and get teaching.

You don’t need to be in shot for this style of video (though your hand will be) but you might have to talk to make it work. That being said, as long as your viewers get the information they need, it’s all good.

10 YouTube Channel Ideas for Introverts 2

9. ASMR Videos

ASMR has a bit of a reputation for attractive women rubbing their face on the microphone, but the truth is there are plenty of successful ASMR YouTubers who don’t fit that description, and some who aren’t even on camera at all.

If you have a decent microphone and feel the benefits of ASMR, you could set yourself up as a faceless ASMR YouTuber who focuses on sounds made by your hands and objects, rather than your voice.

10. Hand Videos

This idea is something of a general purpose one, since it can be applied to many of the other ideas we have given you.

The two most obvious ones being the above ASMR videos idea, and the product review idea.

Hand videos are videos where the focus of the video is something small (such as a mobile phone) and your hands are in frame to manipulate the item for the purposes of the video.

This could also be used for crafting videos and tutorials on how to use certain tools.

Final Thoughts

Of course, this list is not definitive; if you are comfortable doing something we didn’t cover, don’t let the fact that it’s not on this page stop you.

The enormous audience that YouTube represents means there is a viewer for practically any kind of content, no matter how niche or out of the ordinary. If you want to grow as YouTuber, you will probably find you need to push yourself outside your comfort zone eventually, but there is no reason you can’t get started well within it.

Starting off making content you are completely comfortable with will reduce the risk of you getting burnt out before you really get started, and makes any potential audience you pick up far more suited to your style of video.

Top 5 Tools To Get You Started on YouTube

Very quickly before you go here are 5 amazing tools I have used every day to grow my YouTube channel from 0 to 30K subscribers in the last 12 months that I could not live without.

1. VidIQ helps boost my views and get found in search

I almost exclusively switched to VidIQ from a rival in 2020.

Within 12 months I tripled the size of my channel and very quickly learnt the power of thumbnails, click through rate and proper search optimization. Best of all, they are FREE!

2. Adobe Creative Suite helps me craft amazing looking thumbnails and eye-catching videos

I have been making youtube videos on and off since 2013.

When I first started I threw things together in Window Movie Maker, cringed at how it looked but thought “that’s the best I can do so it’ll have to do”.

Big mistake!

I soon realized the move time you put into your editing and the more engaging your thumbnails are the more views you will get and the more people will trust you enough to subscribe.

That is why I took the plunge and invested in my editing and design process with Adobe Creative Suite. They offer a WIDE range of tools to help make amazing videos, simple to use tools for overlays, graphics, one click tools to fix your audio and the very powerful Photoshop graphics program to make eye-catching thumbnails.

Best of all you can get a free trial for 30 days on their website, a discount if you are a student and if you are a regular human being it starts from as little as £9 per month if you want to commit to a plan.

3. Rev.com helps people read my videos

You can’t always listen to a video.

Maybe you’re on a bus, a train or sat in a living room with a 5 year old singing baby shark on loop… for HOURS. Or, you are trying to make as little noise as possible while your new born is FINALLY sleeping.

This is where Rev can help you or your audience consume your content on the go, in silence or in a language not native to the video.

Rev.com can help you translate your videos, transcribe your videos, add subtitles and even convert those subtitles into other languages – all from just $1.50 per minute.

A GREAT way to find an audience and keep them hooked no matter where they are watching your content.

4. PlaceIT can help you STAND OUT on YouTube

I SUCK at making anything flashy or arty.

I have every intention in the world to make something that looks cool but im about as artistic as a dropped ice-cream cone on the web windy day.

That is why I could not live on YouTube without someone like PlaceIT. They offer custom YouTube Banners, Avatars, YouTube Video Intros and YouTube End Screen Templates that are easy to edit with simple click, upload wizard to help you make amazing professional graphics in minutes.

Best of all, some of their templates are FREE! or you can pay a small fee if you want to go for their slightly more premium designs (pst – I always used the free ones).

5. StoryBlocks helps me add amazing video b-roll cutaways

I mainly make tutorials and talking head videos.

And in this modern world this can be a little boring if you don’t see something funky every once in a while.

I try with overlays, jump cuts and being funny but my secret weapon is b-roll overlay content.

I can talk about skydiving, food, money, kids, cats – ANYTHING I WANT – with a quick search on the StoryBlocks website I can find a great looking clip to overlay on my videos, keeping them entertained and watching for longer.

They have a wide library of videos, graphics, images and even a video maker tool and it wont break the bank with plans starting from as little as £8.25 ($9) per month.

Categories
HOW TO MAKE MONEY ONLINE MARKETING SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE YOUTUBE TUTORIALS

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

How would you monetize your Facebook page without adverts?

 

Now, if you hit a certain threshold on Facebook, you can start integrating brand deals with your Facebook page, but not everyone’s jumped through those hoops just yet, and you can make money without Facebook’s help.

 

[embedyt]https://youtu.be/qM9SeS_-F64[/embedyt]

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

1) Use relevant affiliate links

 

I’m a YouTube creator that talks about YouTube. So maybe I post up a post about what camera I’m using and I link through to that product on Amazon. If I’m really smart and I’m hunting out a specific brand, maybe I can talk to that brand before hand, to get a better deal, and then push it out there.

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

For example, maybe I’m talking about how you can subtitle your videos, and then I want to promote it on Facebook saying, go and use rev.com.That way you can subtitle all of your videos with captions that are in English or French or German or any language that you wish.

 

You simply click on the link in the description, or https://alanspicer.com/rev.

 

That’s a relevant affiliate marketing link, and you can do that in your descriptions on Facebook,

 

2) Add digital products

 

Now I have a digital product that I hardly promote, and it’s 75 thumbnails for YouTube. If you’re not quite sure on how to start, how a thumbnail should look, just click this link, it goes through my digital products.

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

That’s a product that hopefully helps you and is relevant to my audience. I’m not going to sell baby monitors to people that want to learn how to do YouTube.

 

So if you have a digital product, let’s say an ebook on how to knit because you do knitting, or a recipe book because you’re a cooking channel, that’s a good place to promote it on your specific Facebook page.

 

I also push out my services like a channel audit and coaching call consultation, but you can also be sending your products, or pots and pans set, some cute little crochet things.

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

By the way, if you’d like that, this is the link to “Oh Sew Cute.”

 

3) Consider a newsletter

 

This is your way of harvesting people from your page, and then collecting them into — I really hate this word — but a funnel.

 

If they’re engaged enough to actively choose to be on a newsletter with you to hear more from you, to see more videos from you, or see your blogs from you, then they’re more likely to be more engaged than any random human to possibly listen to your advice on buying a product or a service.

 

I know you said it to me as your slow cooker of leads. As you collect more and more people in there and you hone the art of talking to them and building up a relationship, they’re more likely to convert in the long run because you’ve kept them warm for eight, nine hours smelling sexy minted lamb hot pot.

 

Anyway, back on point…

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

4) Selling advertised posts

 

Maybe you have a huge audience. Maybe you have 20, 30, 50, or a million followers on your page. This is your chance to flip the script. People will want to advertise in front of your audience.

 

So, charge them for it.

 

5) Starts an associated podcast

 

I’ve got the “Start Creating Podcast” at http://startcreatingpodcast.com/, where I talk about my experiences as a YouTuber, and growing and marketing and branding.

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

It gives me a little bit more leeway, I can talk about more things, less heavily edited. In the long run, you can invite people in to talk about your specific niche, interview people, and associated podcasts gives you a chance to place adverts against that podcast, also affiliate links in the description.

 

As you grow a podcast audience, it can also become fairly passive once the contents is out there, it will remain out there forever. And when was the last time you started a podcast, and then went back and binged watched everything else that was already on that podcast playlist.

 

Just try to make them evergreen rather than “This week on July the 30th, 2020,” whatever.

 

If you think of the longevity of the content and you answer and solve a problem with each podcast, people are more likely to go back and finish them. A good example of this is Gary Vaynerchuk or Tube Talk from vidIQ.

 

6) Raising money for a charity

 

You don’t have to monetize your Facebook page to make you money. You can also monetize your Facebook page to make charities, money.

 

You might have an audience that’s quite tuned in with you and your feelings and your sentiments, your political leaning, or your empathy towards specific topics.

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

Right now we’re in the middle of an unprecedented worldwide situation. So, if you wanted to raise money for that illness, that’s causing a lot of problems around the world, nothing’s stopping you throwing up a charity post that people can donate.

 

Or you reflect on something in four or five years time, maybe someone near and dear to you dies of some horrible disease, or struggles with a mental illness, depression, anxiety.

 

There’s nothing wrong with you raising money for a charity.

 

Final Words

 

How To Monetize A Facebook Page without Ads

 

Now, if you want help on monetizing your Facebook group, there’s a video here. And if you need help on monetizing your Facebook page through Facebook, there’s a video here.

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HOW TO GET MORE VIEWS ON YOUTUBE TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE YOUTUBE TUTORIALS

YouTube Sub 4 Sub [The Truth]

Is it okay to ask for sub 4 sub?

 

I highly advise against this and this isn’t the stereotypical thing. I’m going to twist it in a different angle, right? Because everybody knows that it’s annoying, right?

 

[embedyt]https://youtu.be/5ZE07H0-YfQ[/embedyt]

YouTube Sub 4 Sub [The Truth]

 

You may be growing your numbers. You may do fantastically well. Your name may be Tom or Tim or Ten, and if you know who that is recently and who can, he’s gone.

 

But sub for sub hurts you. It inflates your number. It makes you feel egotistically brilliant. Wait, but what it actually does is it means more time you publish that video, that sub or that person who’s not watching your videos doesn’t engage with your content.

 

YouTube Sub 4 Sub [The Truth]

 

And YouTube goes, “Oh, okay. He just got 20 new subscribers. None of them watched, maybe their content is not good enough. Maybe we weren’t right.”

 

You put out a video and it’s not engaged with. You don’t get that comment or that like, or any form of shares, so they are zombies, they are hopeless.

 

And if you choose to push out your content to a random percentage of your subscriber base, and you’ve inflated that subscriber base with a hundred really fantastic people at a million really crappy zombies, and 10% of that will go to mostly zombies that do nothing.

 

That’s a fantastic video, but nobody cares, so then YouTube’s going to go, “We don’t care either.”

 

YouTube Sub 4 Sub [The Truth]

 

It’s all in your heads, what you should focus on is the 10 or 20 that really focus and really care about you, than the 50 that aren’t real.

 

It’s a metric for vanity, only.

 

Final Words

Alan Spicer - YouTube Certified Expert

 

Now, if you want to see the full interview, click on this video here, remember to subscribe for regular tips and tutorials, and I’ll see you soon.

 

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HOW TO GET MORE VIEWS ON YOUTUBE LISTS TIPS & TRICKS YOUTUBE YOUTUBE TUTORIALS

10 Ways to Promote Your Youtube Channel for FREE

If you’ve decided to go down a vlogging route and have started creating and publishing Youtube videos, then you need to make sure you promote your YouTube channel so your videos don’t flop.

It’s really easy to publish your content but without promotion how are people going to find your videos and see your content?

I’ve put together 10 brilliant ways to promote your Youtube channel and increase your views, a few simple changes to your normal Youtube tasks could see a big traffic change.

10 Ways to Promote Your Youtube Channel for FREE

[1] Make sure your titles are engaging

Just like any other form of social media or blogging you want people to click into your content, the only way to do this is make sure people are drawn into your content and want to click.

Make sure you use persuasive writing, ensure its clear what your viewers will get out of the video, and most importantly solve a problem for your viewer.

Look at your current titles and decide would you click on it? Do you know what the video would be about?

You need to make the viewer curious about what is going to happen or help solve their problem – I made a video about how to make clickable titles every time!

[2] Concentrate on SEO

Youtube is ultimately videos and vlogs, but the average user will use YouTube like a search engine, normally to solve a problem or find a video detailing something they are struggling with.

YouTube SEO

This means its crucial you concentrate on your SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) to make sure your videos show high in your results.

Titles and descriptions should have keywords you want to rank for, make sure you define your categories and tags because this helps Youtube categorise your video and help show it to a relevant audience.

71% of my traffic on my YouTube channel is from search that I won because I used TubeBuddy and VidIQ to optimize my titles, descriptions and tags.

[3] Promote yourself

If you’ve got a number of videos, the ideal action is for your watchers to watch all of the content.

Make sure you reference your older videos in new ones, leave links in the description and then if your watchers are interested its easy for them to find your older link and click through

[4] Share across platforms

Most social media platforms have a native video uploader, upload a snippet of your video with links to the full Youtube video.

This way wherever your audience are they have a very clear direction of how to access your Youtube videos.

It may be that they don’t usually use Youtube to find content but if it lands on their facebook feed they’re more likely to click through – clicking through from external websites shows Youtube that your content is valuable and is more likely to increase your ranking

If you need help with sharing your videos and building your brand – check out my resources page, packed with great tools I use personally to help grow my brand and get noticed on YouTube.

[5] Subscribe Buttons

You can subscribe to Youtube videos by clicking in the description, but a lot of viewers won’t read the description or even click through to subscribe.

You need to make it abundantly clear WHY they should subscribe to your channel and make sure you add a nice big subscribe button within your video.

It’s really simple to do so take a look at how to add a subscribe button into your videos

[6] Add Thumbnails to your videos

Hopefully by this point you’ve got a video, a short catchy title and a description full of the keywords you want to rank for.

Hopefully, all of this means your videos are ranking higher in searches. But wait there is one more thing you absolutely NEED to do to make people click your video.

Our brains are hardwired to react to visuals so make sure with every video you upload a custom thumbnail image which is bright and details what your video will do.

While YouTube will auto create a thumbnail, by creating a custom one you can make sure your viewers can see instantly what your video will be about.

How To Add A Thumbnail To YouTube Videos On Mobile (iPhone And Android) 3

Use the right YouTube thumbnail size

If you’re going to spend the time to create a professional looking thumbnail, start with the proper sizing and dimensions.

Per YouTube’s guidelines, your thumbnail image should be 1280 x 720 pixels, with a minimum width of 640 pixels. An aspect ratio of 16:9 is ideal as it’s used most often in YouTube players and previews.

Be honest & accurate in your thumbnails

If you click bait users to viewing your videos by misleading them with thumbnails and headlines, this will hurt your brand and reputation.

Not only that, but YouTube will stop showing your videos in search results if your bounce rates are too high.

The thumbnail is meant to give context, so providing an image that does not depict what is in the video will harm you rather than benefit you. Find the most important point or part of your video and create your thumbnail around that.

[7] A complete profile

Many people skip straight to creating content but don’t skip out on your profile it’s a really important aspect to making sure your viewers return.

Maintain a consistency across your other social media channels / website and most importantly have very visible contact details.

If your channel is going well then companies may want to contact you for sponsorship deals, your watchers may want to send you an email

10 Ways to Promote Your Youtube Channel for FREE 1

Why have Multiple Social Media Accounts?

Having a social media presence is key things for companies in this day and age.

Especially with the different types of social media accounts out. Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc. is key to get the word out about your company, brand, youtube channel or blog to your chosen target audience.

Social media has been a growing trend for businesses over the last few years, and for good reason. Before you begin dabbling with multiple social media sites, a strategy needs to be put in place that includes:

  • Consistency: Instead of posting when you have time, post something at the same times every day so your audience knows when to expect it.
  • Quality content: Don’t just post content to post it. Have something meaningful to say that your viewers will want to read.
  • Engagement: Interact with your audience through social media, whether it’s by answering questions they post or by asking questions yourself.
  • Images: Don’t just post links and text. People love pictures and infographics. Visuals are processed 60,000 times faster in the brain than text. Businesses that have used infographics have grown in traffic 12% more than those that don’t.

 

[8] Caption your videos

In this day and age the internet needs to be accessible to everyone, that includes people with impairments, it’s so easy to make your videos accessible and add subtitles / closed captions to your Youtube videos.

This will increase your reach to people without accessibility issues too, so many people watch videos with their phones on mute you’d be amazed how many are skipped over if they don’t have subtitles it’s a really untapped market you need to address.

Why Accessibility Matters

It’s time to set a universal standard for accessibility. How many people have visited your channel and left without complaining because of its inaccessibility?

Invest in video captions to reach that sizeable audience. Captions are essential to ensuring that your videos are accessible to the wider public.

The Impact of Captions on Your YouTube Channel

How do the statistics of videos with captions compare to video content without subtitles?

When it comes to watch time, subtitled videos increase view time by more than 12% and are watched an average 91% to completion. In comparison, videos without subtitles are only watched 66% to completion. When subtitles are included, 80% more people watch videos to completion.

[9] High Quality Content

Let’s be fair, you can create rich SEO descriptions, fill out all your profile, have active subscribe buttons etc. etc. but if your content is weak then people won’t return, they probably won’t even watch the entirety of your current video.

Just like any other form of blogging / vlogging or social media content will always be king. Make sure the videos you are creating are what your ideal audience would be looking for, that the video ultimately answers a problem, that you’re clear and engaging and most importantly that you are yourself.

Anyone can create a factual video what makes your videos unique is you. So inject some personality and let your viewers really get to know the person behind the camera

This goes for how to package your content as well. A great video with a bad thumbnail can destroy all your hard work. Make sure you know what a good thumbnail needs to look like – check out this deep dive blog into thumbnail size, styles, designs and best practices.

10 Ways to Promote Your Youtube Channel for FREE 2

[10] Answer your fan mail

Hopefully if your videos are doing well you will start getting comments on your videos – answer them! Respond to your fans and engage with your community.

These are your viewers and subscribers, by making them know you ‘see’ them they’re more likely to return to your new content. Plus engage enough and you will get ideas for new Youtube videos, questions they need answering – its basically free market research very specifically from your audience.

So there you have it, 10 ways you can improve your current Youtube promotion with just a few simple changes.

What’s a Youtube skill you’d like to learn?

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SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE

HOW TO PROMOTE YOUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL – HOW TO BECOME A YOUTUBER (EP 05)

HOW TO PROMOTE YOUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL and VIDEOS — HOW TO BECOME A YOUTUBER (EP 05) // YouTube Promotion, or advertising your channel and video to help it grow i very important. There are a few things you need to consider when thinking of how to grow your channel — including your niche, branding and your audience demographic.

HOW TO BECOME A YOUTUBER SERIES PLAYLIST — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WHIkhNXEdWQ&list=PL09mwoOn57VSuTnztdl8MLEawAEgE3rx_

#HowToBecomeAYouTuber #Promotion #YouTubeTips #YouTubeTutorials #Tutorials #YouTube #FAQs #YouTuberProblems #StartCreating #HowTo #AlanSpicer #Education #Learning #Help

MERCH — T-SHIRTS, MUGS, PILLOWS ETC — http://www.AlanSpicer.com/shop

► SUBSCRIBE FOR REGULAR YOUTUBE TIPS & TRICKS — https://goo.gl/oeZvZr ◄

SUGGESTED PLAYLISTS
=============================
▶️ Top YouTube Hacks — https://goo.gl/uB89Ap
✅ How To Get More Subscribers — https://goo.gl/7MVKPp
▶️ How To Optimise and Tag Your Videos — https://goo.gl/Tg9rd2
✅ How To Get More Views — https://goo.gl/AELTtm
▶️ IGTV Instagram TV Tutorial — https://goo.gl/Vi7pNc
✅ 10 YouTuber Secrets to Success — https://goo.gl/jWdcQd
▶️ How To Live Stream on YouTube — https://goo.gl/ToVrFJ

IMPORTANT LINKS
=============================
✅ FREE YOUTUBE TIPS eBOOK/PDF — https://goo.gl/E1LC43
▶️ SUGGESTED EQUIPMENT — http://amzn.to/2sBAs2Q
✅ TUBEBUDDY — http://www.alanspicer.com/tubebuddy
🔴 LOOKING FOR 1on1 COACHING? — https://goo.gl/ibQuk9

YOUTUBE TIPS & YOUTUBER SUPPORT GROUP — https://www.facebook.com/groups/1887378077953745/

MY YOUTUBE SET UP
=============================
▶️ LIGHTING & BACK DROPS — https://amzn.to/2Hzr3N5
✅ DAYLIGHT WHITE 5500K BULBS — https://amzn.to/2r1F0fO
▶️ 64GB MEMORY CARD — https://amzn.to/2I0YucB
✅ LOGITECH C920 1080P WEBCAM — https://amzn.to/2HyfvKi
▶️ RING LIGHT — https://amzn.to/2r61lsS
✅ BUDGET CAMERA — CANON 1300D — https://amzn.to/2r0YuBV
▶️ DREAM CAMERA — NIKON D3300 — https://amzn.to/2HZ9hnv
🔴 SUGGESTED EQUIPMENT — http://amzn.to/2sBAs2Q

NEED HELP GET IN TOUCH — Alan@HD1WebDesign.com

We can grow together, We can learn together… Start Creating!

► THANKS FOR WATCHING PLEASE REMEMBER TO LIKE, COMMENT, SHARE AND SUBSCRIBE — https://goo.gl/oeZvZr ◄

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TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE

My YouTube Story – Why I Started YouTube

My YouTube Story — Why I Started YouTube // From MrHairyBrit to Alan Spicer — YouTube Tricks and Tips — I have been on YouTube 5 years as of July 3rd. When i first started YouTube under the alias of Mr Hairy Brit, I wanted to learn what YouTube was to help my web design clients. Within a few short months I was loving the HairyBrit alias and making movie reviews, vlogs and rants to make myself laugh. YouTube was a tool and a medicinal aid to help me self medicate my depression while teaching myself a new skill.

After 4 years I wanted to help people learn and grow on YouTube. So in July 2017 I started Alan Spicer — YouTube Tricks and Tips to help fellow smaller youtubers enjoy the platform in the way I have.

Why did you start making videos on YouTube?

#YouTubeTips #YouTubeTutorials #Tutorials #YouTube #FAQs #YouTuberProblems #StartCreating #HowTo

YOUTUBE TIPS & YOUTUBER SUPPORT GROUP — https://www.facebook.com/groups/1887378077953745/

► SUBSCRIBE FOR REGULAR YOUTUBE TIPS & TRICKS — https://goo.gl/oeZvZr ◄

SUGGESTED PLAYLISTS
=============================
▶️ Top YouTube Hacks — https://goo.gl/uB89Ap
✅ How To Get More Subscribers — https://goo.gl/7MVKPp
▶️ How To Optimise and Tag Your Videos — https://goo.gl/Tg9rd2
✅ How To Get More Views — https://goo.gl/AELTtm

IMPORTANT LINKS
=============================
✅ FREE YOUTUBE TIPS eBOOK/PDF — https://goo.gl/E1LC43
▶️ SUGGESTED EQUIPMENT — http://amzn.to/2sBAs2Q
✅ TUBEBUDDY — http://www.alanspicer.com/tubebuddy
🔴 LOOKING FOR 1on1 COACHING? — https://goo.gl/ibQuk9

MY YOUTUBE SET UP
=============================
▶️ LIGHTING & BACK DROPS — https://amzn.to/2Hzr3N5
✅ DAYLIGHT WHITE 5500K BULBS — https://amzn.to/2r1F0fO
▶️ 64GB MEMORY CARD — https://amzn.to/2I0YucB
✅ LOGITECH C920 1080P WEBCAM — https://amzn.to/2HyfvKi
▶️ RING LIGHT — https://amzn.to/2r61lsS
✅ BUDGET CAMERA — CANON 1300D — https://amzn.to/2r0YuBV
▶️ DREAM CAMERA — NIKON D3300 — https://amzn.to/2HZ9hnv
🔴 SUGGESTED EQUIPMENT — http://amzn.to/2sBAs2Q

NEED HELP GET IN TOUCH — Alan@HD1WebDesign.com

We can grow together, We can learn together… Start Creating!

► THANKS FOR WATCHING PLEASE REMEMBER TO LIKE, COMMENT, SHARE AND SUBSCRIBE — https://goo.gl/oeZvZr ◄

Note — Some of my links will be affiliate marketing links. These links do not affect the price of the products or services referred to but may offer commissions that are used to help me to fund the free YouTube video tutorials on this channel — thank you for your support.

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SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE

How To Launch A YouTube Channel – Cultaholic WhatCulture Example

 

Cultaholic is the new channel from former staff at WhatCulture, WhatCulture Wrestling. They performed a master class in how to launch a YouTube Channel recently when they left WhatCulture and relaunched their personal brand as Cultaholics Ventures new YouTube Channel – Adam Blampied, Adam Pacitti, King Ross, Jack The Jobber and Sam Driver all promoted this change brilliantly so I felt we should look into the WhatCulture to Cultaholic move and see how they did it so well.

► SUBSCRIBE FOR REGULAR YOUTUBE TIPS & TRICKS – https://goo.gl/oeZvZr ◄

✅ FREE YOUTUBE TIPS eBOOK/PDF – https://goo.gl/E1LC43

▶️ Suggested YouTube Equipment – http://amzn.to/2sBAs2Q
▶️ Rank Better & More Views with TubeBuddy – https://goo.gl/PS2RMn
? Want to go Pro? Need my help? Try YouTube Coaching! – https://goo.gl/ibQuk9

 

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SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE

5 Unknown YouTube Tips And Tricks

Secret Unknown YouTube Tips & Features

YouTube for most people is the the aggregator of fail compilations, the disseminator of cat related humour and a beacon for everything viral. Killing time on YouTube is the most productive way to be unproductive, but there’s so much more to it than salacious thumbnails and unrelated debates about political theory in the comments section, there is also hidden unknown youtube tips and tricks

Aside from a few easter eggs to please medium-core trekkies and Star Wars fans, there are some genuinely useful hacks that can enhance your YouTube viewing experience ten-fold. I mean, if you’re prepared to sign away three hours of your life by watching late-nineties wrestling videos, then you should do it in style, right?

Ever heard of YouTube Leanback? Or how about turning any video into a GIF? No? Then there’s so much more to show you. Here’s a run-down of my top five YouTube hacks:

1. Make any YouTube Video into a GIF

You can turn any video into a GIF by simply adding “gif” just after the “www.” in the URL. For example “www.gifyoutube.com/watchx

Once you type that in, you’ll be taken to a simple gif making tool page that lets you cut out a section of the video and export it.

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Select the point at which you want to start the gif and then select how long it lasts, and you’re done. You’ve made a gif in a matter of minutes.

2.  YouTube Disco Your YouTube Videos

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You already knew that you can use YouTube to stream music, but did you know it can be a DJ too? YouTube Disco automatically puts together a playlist of songs from your prefered genre or artist.

Go to www.youtube.com/disco and enter any artist, song, or genre and YouTube will populate a playlist of the most watched/popular videos from your search.

You can also set it to play the current top hits and it will tell what videos are most popular at the moment.

3. Slow Motion YouTube Videos

There are a couple of ways to slow down a YouTube video, with the simplest way being to hold down the spacebar during a video. This cause the video to rapidly play and pause, which creates a budget slow motion effect.

If, however, you want some more advanced controls, head to www.youtubeslow.com and enter your video’s URL into the specified field. You can then either speed up, slow down, play on repeat or set a loop.

unknown youtube tips, hidden youtube features, youtube tricks, youtube tips, hidden features youtube, unknown youtube tools, youtube toolsWesley Snipe’s “always bet on black” moment in Passenger 57 in slow motion.

4. YouTube Leanback – YouTube and Chill

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YouTube Leanback is the friendlier version of YouTube on the big screen. If you’ve ever tried to watch videos on the normal desktop version of YouTube on your TV, you’ll know it’s a pain. Entering characters into the search field with your TV is just not practical, and you need to get right up close to the screen to see what’s going on.

This is where YouTube Leanback comes in. It’s a simplified YouTube UI that only requires use of the arrow keys to control. Also, if you have a smart TV, you can connect your phone or tablet to control what’s on the screen – and you don’t even have to be on the same Wi-Fi connection to do it.

Anyone in the room, providing they’ve gone through the verification process, can connect to the YouTube page and chuck videos into the communal playlist.

All you need to do is go to www.youtube.com/leanback and begin flicking through the availble sub sections of videos. To pair up your phone or tablet, go to www.youtube.com/pair on your mobile device and follow the instructions.

5. Google Video Quality Report

Buffering. Endless, rage inducing, buffering. But whose fault is it? Well, it’s your throttling, lacklustre ISP, according to Google.

Google’s YouTube Video Quality Report was launched earlier this year to help consumers understand why their videos take so long to load and can’t be streamed in the best quality. Some childlike illustrations show you how video makes its way to your screen, but don’t let the welcoming graphics fool you. This is video report is a shaming exercise, designed to embarrass ISPs for providing little bandwidth.

The report, which isn’t available everywhere, will tell you how good your connection is in the area and which ISPs are offering the most YouTube friendly internet speeds. This is done via a verification system, which labels each ISP as either ‘HD verified’ or not.

Check it out here (as I said, it may not be available in your area) and see if your connection can sustain 20 minutes of 1080p footage.

https://www.google.co.uk/get/videoqualityreport/

Want more help? Need more hands on assistance? Get in touch we do YouTube Coaching >>

Other Useful Unknown YouTube Tips Blog Posts

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SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS YOUTUBE

5 Tips For New YouTubers – YouTube For Beginners

Tips For New YouTubers Just Getting Started

YouTube has 1+ billion users. While not all are content creators, it’s safe to say that several million are uploading consistently, with thousands of new creators joining every day – Here are 5 Tips For New YouTubers to help them get started.

If you’re just starting out as a video creator, your first few videos will be buried among the millions of videos uploaded each week. So how can you increase your chances of being discovered amid the massive haystack that is YouTube?

DOWNLOAD YOUR FREE YOUTUBE TRICKS AND TIPS EBOOK >>

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1. Brand yourself early on

Say two people follow you on Twitter. One has the default ‘egg’ as their profile picture; one has a well-designed image. Which are you more inclined to check out and follow back?

One of the most important first steps you can complete as a new YouTuber is your branding. Attractive channel art can drastically increase the chances that a viewer will check out your other videos and subscribe.

2. Create a regular schedule

Just like popular TV shows, releasing your YouTube videos on a schedule can ensure that they get in front of the maximum amount of viewers. To start, aim to release one video per week, and be sure to tell your subscribers when to expect new content!

  • Mention your schedule at the end of each video
  • Include your schedule as part of your channel art
  • Remind fans on social media

3. Strive for originality

Creating truly original content will be your biggest advantage when starting out—and no one can do that but you. At this very moment, there are more than 60 million Minecraft videos on YouTube. So if you’re set on creating gaming videos, for instance, spend time thinking about how you can make them stand out from the very large crowd!

Here are some more tips for new youtubers in our blogs!

4. Be patient about income

Everyone likes extra money. But when you first start out as a creator, it should be strictly to have fun and grow your audience. Most creators who are making a living from their content have spent years building up their channel and are seeing more than a million video views per month. So try to be patient and focus on creating amazing content, and it’s more likely that the money will eventually come.

5. Be yourself

It may be tempting to model your content after another successful creator verbatim. But that strategy can sometimes come off as fake—and audiences can tell. Whether you’re quiet, loud, or awkward, be yourself! No matter what type of personality you have, there will be people out there who will enjoy your content.

Finally, there’ll be plenty of time to refine. As you grow on YouTube, your style will grow as well. Listen to feedback from your viewers, and most of all, have fun. Good luck with your videos!

Want more help? Need more hands on assistance? Get in touch we do YouTube Coaching >>

Other Useful YouTube Blog Posts

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SOCIAL MEDIA TIPS & TRICKS VIDEO YOUTUBE

11 YouTube Mistakes & YouTube Tips from YouTubers

YouTube Mistakes and YouTube Tips from YouTubers

Just like there are a things you can do to increase the likelihood of success in YouTube (including YouTube SEO Tactics), But, there are also many youtube mistakes which are commonly overlooked and avoiding these mistakes can help increase your chances for success within YouTube.

Need some help with your YouTube Channel? Talk to us about YouTube Coaching! >>

Terabrite on Vlogging (Personal Vlog Channels – YouTube Mistakes)

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1) Have a main channel where you do something like music, skits, comedy, or something.
2) Make your vlogging channel unique, so as to stand out from all the other bloggers.
3) Try humor or something else to keep your viewers interest.

The Fine Brothers (How to Annoy Established YouTubers – YouTube Mistakes)

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4) Don’t steal or just copy other people’s tags, descriptions, or titles for your video.
Many new YouTubers will copy the metadata from a successful video verbatim in the hopes that they will rank similarly, as often times with the hope that the original YouTuber will take notice and be honored that you found their work to be well optimized.  In reality, you will end up annoying these people that you look up to, and they may never want to talk to you as a result.  Not a good approach for attempting to become connected to a YouTube influencer.

Mystery Guitar Man (Collaborate)

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5) Don’t just keep putting up videos on your channel over and over when nothing’s happening.
You may have 100 views, 200 views, 300 views, or even 4,000 views, but what you really need to be doing is developing one skill.  Then collaborate with people who have more subscribers, but less skill.  For example if you’re a really good 3D artist and go to someone with 10,000 subscribers and say let them know it.  Tell them you can do something 3D for them.  Maybe they do composing.  You can suggest that if you do a 3D for them, they can mention you in their video.  Just doing an amazing video and putting it up on your channel will probably not bring you the success you want.  Collaborating with the community is a good way to start.

Street Light – Be Unique and Focus on Originality

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6) Don’t try to be someone else.
Originality is important, but being yourself and don’t just follow a trend.  If you do, it just adds you to the crowd.  If you are the needle in a haystack, it’s difficult to stand out.  You should focus on originality and create something that will make you stand out.

E3M Music – Take advantage of CTA Features

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7) In the description box, don’t forget to have hyperlinks.
Some people have their YouTube accounts set up, but they don’t have their Facebook or Twitter linked in the description box.  It is important to have a hyperlink, which is a link they can easily click, because people want to click it and go right to the page.  They really don’t have the time to just copy, paste and put it in the browsers.

Mark Malkoff

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8) Don’t make everything long – YouTube Mistakes
It is best to keep things short.

9) Don’t forget to have a Subscribe button at the end.
You want people to subscribe to you.

10) Don’t do something just because you think it might get views.
Do content that you care about.  Do something that really interests you, and make sure you find your voice.  Don’t be one of those people who just show up once in a while.  Have a long-term plan and don’t say, “If it doesn’t happen within a couple of months, I’m not going to do this.”  Show up consistently and work on your craft.  Think long-term and focus.

11) Don’t forget to watch other stuff.
Watch stuff that you love.  A lot of people on YouTube, when they’re starting out, don’t watch other stuff.  Watch your peers.  Watch the people that inspire you.  And I just think if you find your voice and you’re authentic and you keep stuff relatively short, you can do some good work and you hopefully will succeed.

Success on YouTube is not going to happen your first week and it’s not going to happen without creating unique content that you’re passionate about, and that is distributed in a strategic way.  It’s going to take some time, but these tips will hopefully help make success easier for you.

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