YouTube Coaching vs Online Courses: Which Actually Grows Your Channel?

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YouTube Coaching vs Online Courses: Which Actually Grows Your Channel?

YouTube Coaching vs Online Courses: Which Actually Grows Your Channel?

You have decided to invest in growing your YouTube channel. You have been putting out videos, trying to follow the advice of various YouTube gurus, and the results are… underwhelming. So you start searching for help, and you quickly land on two options: buy a YouTube course or hire a YouTube coach. Every creator serious about growth faces this exact decision, and it is one that could genuinely determine whether your channel takes off or stays stuck in the same frustrating rut.

As a YouTube Certified Expert with 20+ years of content creation experience and 6 Silver Play Buttons, I have seen both sides of this debate — extensively. I have watched creators spend hundreds of pounds on courses that gathered digital dust. I have also worked with creators one-on-one and watched their channels transform within weeks. During my time on the vidIQ Creator Success team, I interacted with thousands of creators who were trying every approach imaginable to accelerate their growth, and the patterns were unmistakable.

I want to be honest with you in this article. I offer 1-on-1 YouTube consulting and coaching, so I clearly have a perspective here. But I am also going to tell you the truth: courses have their place, particularly for absolute beginners. The question is whether your money and time are best invested in a pre-recorded, one-size-fits-all course — or in personalised expert guidance that is built around your channel, your analytics, and your goals. Let me break down the youtube coaching vs courses debate with the honesty it deserves.

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What Are YouTube Online Courses?

YouTube online courses are pre-recorded, self-paced educational programmes that teach creators the principles, strategies, and techniques of growing a YouTube channel. They are typically delivered through platforms like Udemy, Skillshare, Teachable, or the creator’s own website. You pay a one-time fee (or subscribe), get access to a library of video lessons, and work through the material at your own pace. Some courses include downloadable resources, templates, and community forums.

Courses range from free introductory content on YouTube itself — including the official YouTube Creator Academy — to premium programmes costing anywhere from £50 to £2,000+. The quality varies enormously. Some are taught by genuine experts with successful channels; others are created by marketers who have never actually grown a channel themselves but are very good at selling the dream.

What Is YouTube Coaching?

YouTube coaching is personalised, one-on-one guidance from an experienced YouTube professional who analyses your specific channel, reviews your data, and builds a tailored growth strategy designed around your unique goals, niche, audience, and resources. Unlike courses, coaching involves a direct relationship between you and your coach — they look at your analytics, watch your videos, study your competitors, and provide recommendations that are specific to your situation.

A qualified YouTube coach — particularly one with credentials such as a YouTube Certification — brings not just knowledge but applied expertise. They have seen hundreds of channels across dozens of niches, they know what the data means, and they can spot the specific issues holding your channel back in minutes rather than the months it might take you to figure it out on your own. To understand what a consultant actually does during this process, see my breakdown of what a YouTube consultant does and the services they offer.

Online Courses: The Full Pros and Cons

Let me give courses a fair assessment. I believe in being honest about both options, because the right choice depends on where you are in your journey and what you can invest.

Pros of YouTube Online Courses

  • Lower cost: Most courses cost between £50-£500 — significantly less than coaching. For creators on a tight budget, this makes them accessible.
  • Self-paced learning: You can watch lessons whenever suits your schedule, rewatch sections you struggle with, and progress at your own speed.
  • Structured curriculum: Good courses provide a logical, step-by-step progression from fundamentals to more advanced topics.
  • Broad coverage: Courses often cover a wide range of topics in one package — SEO, thumbnails, content strategy, monetisation — giving beginners a comprehensive overview.
  • Lifetime access (sometimes): Many courses offer permanent access, so you can revisit the material months or years later.

Cons of YouTube Online Courses

  • Generic advice: Courses teach the same strategies to everyone, regardless of niche, channel size, audience, or goals. What works for a gaming channel rarely applies to a business channel.
  • No personalisation: The course cannot look at YOUR analytics, YOUR thumbnails, or YOUR content and tell you what is specifically wrong and how to fix it.
  • Outdated quickly: YouTube changes its algorithm, features, and best practices constantly. A course recorded 12 months ago may already contain outdated advice that could actively harm your channel.
  • No accountability: You are on your own. There is nobody checking whether you actually implemented the lessons, nobody following up on your progress, and nobody pushing you when motivation drops.
  • Cannot ask questions about your channel: If you are stuck on a specific problem — why your CTR dropped, why a particular video underperformed, why your audience retention cliff is at the 3-minute mark — a pre-recorded course cannot help.
  • Low completion rates: Research consistently shows that only 5-15% of people who buy online courses actually finish them. The rest pay, watch a few videos, and never implement a thing.
  • Information overload: Many courses dump hours upon hours of content on you, leaving you overwhelmed and unsure which actions will move the needle most for your specific channel.

1-on-1 YouTube Coaching: The Full Pros and Cons

Now let me give coaching the same honest treatment. There are clear advantages, but there are also legitimate considerations to weigh up.

Pros of YouTube Coaching

  • 100% personalised: Every recommendation is based on your specific channel, your data, your niche, and your goals. No generic advice — only strategies designed for your situation.
  • Expert eyes on your data: A qualified coach can look at your YouTube analytics and instantly identify opportunities and problems that would take you months to spot yourself. They know which metrics actually matter and what the numbers are telling you.
  • Accountability: You have someone holding you to your commitments, checking in on your progress, and ensuring you actually implement the strategy — not just consume more information.
  • Adapts in real time: When YouTube rolls out a new feature, changes the algorithm, or your analytics shift unexpectedly, your coach adjusts the strategy accordingly. No waiting for a course to be updated.
  • Specific answers to your questions: You can ask about YOUR thumbnails, YOUR titles, YOUR content strategy. You get precise, actionable feedback — not theoretical principles.
  • Faster results: Because coaching eliminates the guesswork and trial-and-error that courses leave you with, most creators see measurable improvements within weeks rather than months.
  • Pattern recognition: An experienced coach has worked with hundreds of channels and can recognise what is working and what is not, drawing on experience that no course can replicate.

Cons of YouTube Coaching

  • Higher investment: Quality coaching costs more upfront than a course. Sessions with a certified expert can range from several hundred to several thousand pounds, depending on the depth of engagement.
  • Limited session time: Unlike a course where you can consume content endlessly, coaching sessions are typically 60-90 minutes. You need to be prepared and focused to maximise the value.
  • Quality varies massively: Not all coaches are equal. The industry is unregulated, which means anyone can call themselves a YouTube coach — making it crucial to know how to choose the right YouTube coach and avoid the red flags.
  • Requires your active participation: Coaching only works if you show up prepared, implement the recommendations, and do the work between sessions. It is not a passive experience.
  • Scheduling: You need to coordinate schedules with your coach, which requires more logistical effort than simply pressing play on a course video.

The Key Differentiator: Theory vs Application

Here is the fundamental difference that most creators miss when weighing up youtube coaching vs courses:

Courses teach theory. Coaching applies it to YOUR channel.

A course might teach you that thumbnails with faces get higher click-through rates. That is useful theory. But a coach will look at your specific thumbnails, compare them against your competitors in your niche, analyse your CTR data across all your videos, and tell you exactly what to change about your thumbnails to improve your results. The gap between those two things is enormous.

In my consulting work, I see this pattern constantly. Creators come to me having completed multiple courses. They know the theory. They can recite the principles of YouTube SEO, they understand retention curves, they know they should be doing keyword research. But their channel is still not growing because knowing what to do in general is not the same as knowing what to do specifically. They have consumed information — what they actually need is diagnosis and application.

It is similar to the difference between reading a medical textbook and visiting a doctor. The textbook gives you knowledge; the doctor examines you, interprets your symptoms, and prescribes a treatment plan specific to your condition. When it comes to your channel’s health, you want the doctor. If you want to understand exactly what that diagnostic process looks like, I have written about it in detail: how to get expert eyes on your YouTube channel in 2026.

YouTube Coaching vs Online Courses: Detailed Comparison Table

To make the differences crystal clear, here is a side-by-side comparison of the two approaches across every factor that matters:

Factor Online Courses 1-on-1 Coaching
Cost £50-£500 (one-time) £500-£2,800+ (per engagement)
Personalisation None — same content for everyone 100% tailored to your channel
Advice Type General theory and principles Specific strategy for your data
Accountability None — self-motivated only Coach tracks your progress
Flexibility Watch anytime, anywhere Scheduled sessions
Relevance Over Time Outdated within 6-12 months Always current — adapts in real time
Question Handling Community forums (if any) Direct, immediate expert answers
Analytics Review Teaches you what metrics mean Expert interprets YOUR data
Speed of Results Months of trial and error Measurable gains in 4-8 weeks
Completion Rate 5-15% finish the course High — you are invested and accountable
Niche Relevance Broad, may not apply to your niche Specific to your niche and audience
ROI Potential Low to moderate High — targeted changes yield faster, bigger results
Best For Absolute beginners learning basics Creators serious about growth

When Online Courses Make Sense

I am not going to dismiss courses entirely. There are specific situations where they are a reasonable choice:

  • You are an absolute beginner: If you have never uploaded a video and do not know how YouTube Studio works, a well-made introductory course can give you the foundation to get started. At this stage, you do not need personalised strategy — you need to understand the platform.
  • Your budget is extremely limited: If you genuinely cannot invest in coaching right now, a £50-£100 course is better than doing nothing — provided you actually complete it and implement the lessons.
  • You want to learn a specific technical skill: If you need to learn video editing, lighting techniques, or how to use a particular software tool, a focused technical course can be genuinely valuable.
  • You are a self-starter with strong discipline: If you are the rare person who finishes every course, takes detailed notes, and systematically implements each lesson, you can extract meaningful value from a good course.

The important caveat: even in these situations, I would recommend supplementing courses with free resources like the YouTube Creator Academy and a powerful analytics tool like vidIQ to help you apply what you learn with real data.

When Coaching Is the Clear Winner

For the majority of creators — particularly those who have been at it for a while and are not seeing the growth they want — coaching is the significantly better investment. Here is when coaching decisively wins:

  • Your channel has plateaued: You have been publishing regularly, you have watched every free tutorial, and growth has stalled. You do not need more theory — you need someone to diagnose the specific issues holding you back.
  • You are running a business channel: When YouTube is a business tool and your channel directly impacts your revenue, the stakes are too high for generic course advice. You need a strategy that aligns with your business goals, not general “how to grow” tips.
  • You have already taken courses: If you have consumed the knowledge but are not getting results, the problem is not lack of information — it is lack of personalised application. A coach bridges that gap.
  • You are investing significant time: If you are spending 10, 20, or 30+ hours per week on YouTube content, having a coach ensure you are spending those hours on the right things is worth far more than a course that might send you in the wrong direction.
  • You want accountability: If you are honest with yourself about the fact that you buy courses but do not finish them, a coach solves that problem entirely. You have a scheduled session, someone checking your progress, and a reason to follow through.
  • You are confused by conflicting advice: Every YouTube guru says something different. A coach cuts through the noise and tells you what specifically applies to your channel — and more importantly, what does not.

Key Takeaway: Courses are for learning the basics. Coaching is for applying those basics — and the advanced strategies beyond them — to your specific channel. If you already know the theory and your channel is not growing, more courses will not fix the problem. Personalised coaching will.

The Real Cost Comparison (It’s Not What You Think)

One of the biggest objections to coaching is the price. And on the surface, it seems like a straightforward comparison: a course costs £100, coaching costs £800+. Course wins. But that is not how investment decisions work.

Here is how I encourage my clients to think about it. The true cost of a course is not the purchase price — it is the purchase price plus the months of trial-and-error applying generic advice to your specific situation. When you factor in the time spent implementing strategies that were never designed for your channel, the opportunity cost of not growing during those months, and the frustration of watching your channel stay flat despite doing everything the course told you to do — the real cost is far higher than the sticker price.

Compare that to coaching, where a single session can identify the three or four changes that will make the biggest difference to your channel immediately. In my consulting work, I regularly see creators implement one piece of personalised feedback and see more growth in a month than they achieved in the preceding six months of following course advice. For a detailed look at the actual numbers behind coaching ROI, see my breakdown of whether YouTube coaching is worth the investment, with real ROI data.

For a full breakdown of how much a YouTube consultant costs in the UK in 2026, I have a dedicated guide that covers every pricing tier and what you should expect to pay.

The “Course Graveyard” Problem

Let me share something I see repeatedly in my consulting sessions. Creators come to me and, when I ask what they have tried before, they list three, four, sometimes five or more online courses they have purchased. When I ask how many they completed, the answer is almost always one — or none. When I ask what they implemented, the answer is usually even less.

This is the course graveyard — the growing pile of purchased-but-unfinished courses sitting in your account. At £100-£300 each, creators who buy five courses have already spent £500-£1,500 on material they never used. That same budget, invested in a single focused coaching engagement, would have delivered personalised, actionable strategy with someone holding them accountable for implementation. The “cheap” option often ends up being the most expensive one.

What About Group Coaching Programmes?

Some creators look at group coaching as a middle ground — more affordable than 1-on-1 coaching, more interactive than a course. Group programmes can work in certain situations, particularly when the group is small (8-12 people), the coach gives individual attention during sessions, and the participants are at a similar stage in their journey.

However, the personalisation inevitably suffers compared to genuine 1-on-1 coaching. In a group session, the coach has to split their attention, and the advice tends to drift towards the general rather than the specific. I have seen group programmes deliver good results for motivation and community, but they rarely match the transformative impact of a coach spending an hour looking exclusively at your channel, your data, and your competitive landscape.

The Ideal Approach: Course Foundation + Coaching for Growth

If I am being completely honest — and that is the entire point of this article — the most effective approach for most creators is a combination, deployed in the right order:

  1. Start with free resources and basic courses: Use the YouTube Creator Academy, free YouTube tutorials from established creators, and potentially one well-reviewed introductory course to learn the absolute fundamentals. Get comfortable with YouTube Studio, understand the basics of SEO, and learn the mechanics of publishing.
  2. Invest in a YouTube analytics tool: Get vidIQ set up on your channel from day one. Having data — keyword opportunities, competitor analysis, performance tracking — gives both you and any future coach the information needed to make smart decisions.
  3. Publish your first 20-30 videos: Get some content out there. Build a baseline of data. This gives a coach something meaningful to analyse when you are ready for that step.
  4. Invest in 1-on-1 coaching: Once you have the basics down and a body of content to evaluate, this is where coaching delivers its maximum value. A coach can look at your data, spot patterns, identify your strongest content pillars, and build a strategy that accelerates your growth far beyond what generic course advice ever could.

This progression ensures you do not waste coaching budget on things you could have learnt for free, and it provides the coach with the data they need to give you genuinely valuable, specific advice. It is the approach I recommend to every creator who asks me about the youtube coaching vs courses decision.

Why Tools Like vidIQ Complement Both Approaches

Regardless of whether you choose courses, coaching, or a combination, one thing remains constant: you need data. YouTube growth is not a guessing game — it is a data-driven process. And the most effective tool I have found for providing that data is vidIQ.

When I was on the vidIQ Creator Success team, I saw firsthand how access to the right data transforms a creator’s ability to make smart strategic decisions. vidIQ helps you research keywords before you create content, analyse what your competitors are doing, track your performance across every video, and optimise your metadata for maximum search visibility. These capabilities are valuable whether you are following a course curriculum, working with a coach, or both.

In fact, one of the first things I ask creators to do in my coaching sessions is to walk me through their vidIQ dashboard. It gives me an instant snapshot of their keyword strategy, their competitive positioning, and their content performance — and it accelerates the coaching process significantly because we are working from real data rather than assumptions. For a deep dive into how vidIQ fits into a broader growth strategy, check out my vidIQ review from a former team member.

Red Flags in YouTube Courses (What to Avoid)

If you do decide to invest in a course, protect yourself from the many low-quality options flooding the market. Watch out for these warning signs:

  • The instructor has no visible YouTube success: If the person selling you a YouTube growth course does not have a successful channel themselves, that is a major red flag. Ask for proof — subscriber counts, view counts, longevity on the platform.
  • No update date listed: YouTube changes too quickly for undated courses. If you cannot verify when the content was last updated, assume it is outdated.
  • Guaranteed results: No legitimate YouTube educator guarantees subscriber counts or view numbers. Anyone promising “10K subscribers in 30 days” is selling snake oil.
  • Heavily focused on selling rather than teaching: If the course sales page is longer than the actual course content, or if the course itself constantly upsells you into higher-priced products, you are buying marketing, not education.
  • No refund policy: Reputable course creators stand behind their content with a reasonable refund window. No refund policy suggests they know people will be disappointed.

Warning: The YouTube education space is filled with people who make more money selling courses about YouTube than they ever made on YouTube. Always verify credentials. A YouTube Certified Expert has demonstrated knowledge verified by YouTube itself — most course sellers cannot claim the same.

What to Expect From Quality YouTube Coaching

If you decide coaching is the right investment — and for serious creators, I believe it almost always is — here is what a quality coaching engagement should include:

  1. Pre-session channel audit: Before your coaching session, the coach should review your channel — your videos, analytics, thumbnails, metadata, and competitive landscape. You should not be paying for them to discover your channel in real time.
  2. Data-driven analysis: The session should be grounded in your actual numbers — watch time, CTR, retention curves, traffic sources, subscriber conversion. Opinions are cheap; data is valuable.
  3. Specific, actionable recommendations: You should leave with a clear list of things to do, not vague encouragement. “Improve your thumbnails” is useless. “Add text overlay to your thumbnails in 40pt bold font because your current text is unreadable at small sizes” is coaching.
  4. Priority-ranked action items: A good coach tells you what to do first, second, and third — ranking changes by their likely impact on your growth.
  5. Follow-up or written summary: Whether it is a follow-up email, a written report, or a recording of the session, you should have something to refer back to when implementing the recommendations.

My own coaching packages are designed around exactly this structure. From the £595 Written Channel Report to the £799 Live Consultation to the comprehensive £2,795 Coaching Intensive, every engagement starts with data, focuses on your specific situation, and delivers a clear, actionable growth plan. You can explore the full details on my services and packages page.

Real-World Scenarios: Course vs Coaching

To make this even more concrete, let me walk through some typical creator situations and which approach makes the most sense:

Scenario 1: The Brand New Creator

Situation: You have never uploaded a video. You do not know how YouTube Studio works. You are not sure what niche to choose.

Recommendation: Start with free resources (YouTube Creator Academy, established creator tutorials). Set up vidIQ. Optionally purchase one beginner-level course. Publish 15-20 videos. Then consider coaching once you have data to work with.

Scenario 2: The Plateaued Creator

Situation: You have 500-5,000 subscribers. You have been posting for 6-12 months. Growth has stalled. You have tried following advice from YouTube and courses but nothing seems to shift the needle.

Recommendation: Coaching — without question. You have already done the learning. What you need is someone who can look at your specific data, identify the bottleneck, and tell you exactly what to change. This is where coaching delivers its highest ROI.

Scenario 3: The Business Owner

Situation: You run a business and want to use YouTube as a lead generation tool. Your time is limited, the stakes are high, and you need to get it right without months of experimentation.

Recommendation: Coaching, starting immediately. A generic course cannot teach you how to align YouTube content with your specific business model, sales funnel, and customer profile. You need an expert who understands both YouTube and business strategy.

Scenario 4: The Course Collector

Situation: You have bought three or more courses. You have consumed a lot of information. But you are overwhelmed, confused by conflicting advice, and your channel is not growing.

Recommendation: Stop buying courses immediately and invest in coaching. You do not have an information problem — you have an application problem. A coach will cut through the clutter, focus you on the three or four things that actually matter for your channel, and give you a clear path forward.

Why I Offer Coaching Instead of Courses

People sometimes ask me why I do not sell a course. It would be easier — record it once, sell it forever. But after 20+ years on YouTube, 6 Silver Play Buttons, and hundreds of channel consultations, I know that the thing that actually moves the needle for creators is personalised guidance, not more information.

Every channel I work with is different. A tech review channel has completely different challenges from a cooking channel. A business trying to generate leads has different priorities from a creator trying to build ad revenue. A channel with 200 subscribers needs a different strategy from one with 20,000. Packaging all of that into a single course would mean giving everyone the same advice — and after seeing how poorly generic advice serves individual creators, I am not willing to do that.

My coaching is built on the principle that your channel is unique, your data tells a specific story, and your growth strategy should be designed for you and nobody else. That is not something a course can deliver, no matter how well it is produced.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are YouTube courses worth it?

YouTube courses can be worth it for absolute beginners who need a structured introduction to the platform — how to set up a channel, basic SEO, and understanding YouTube Studio. However, most courses teach generic strategies that may not apply to your niche or channel. They also become outdated quickly as YouTube updates its algorithm. For creators who already know the basics, 1-on-1 coaching typically delivers far better results per pound spent.

How much does YouTube coaching cost?

YouTube coaching costs vary depending on the coach’s credentials and experience. Budget coaches charge £50-£150 per session, mid-range coaches charge £200-£500, and certified experts with proven track records charge £500-£1,000+ per session. My own packages range from £595 for a comprehensive written audit to £2,795 for an intensive coaching programme. The cost should be weighed against the return — channels that receive expert coaching typically see 2-5x growth within 6 months.

What is better for beginners — a course or coaching?

For complete beginners with zero YouTube experience, a well-structured course or free resources like the YouTube Creator Academy can provide a useful foundation at a lower price. However, even beginners benefit from coaching because a coach can help you avoid costly early mistakes — choosing the wrong niche, developing bad habits, or wasting months on ineffective strategies. If budget allows, the ideal path for beginners is: free resources for the basics, then coaching for personalised strategy.

Can a YouTube course replace a coach?

No. A course teaches general theory and techniques, but it cannot analyse your specific channel data, identify your unique growth opportunities, or adapt when YouTube changes its algorithm. Courses deliver knowledge; coaching delivers applied, personalised strategy. For serious growth, coaching is significantly more effective because every recommendation is based on your channel’s actual performance.

How do I know if I need a YouTube coach?

You likely need a coach if your channel has plateaued despite consistent publishing, if you are getting views but not converting them into business results, if you feel overwhelmed by conflicting advice, or if you are investing significant time and money into YouTube without clear returns. A coach cuts through the noise and provides a clear, personalised roadmap built on your actual data.

What should I look for in a YouTube coach?

Look for verifiable credentials such as YouTube Certification, a proven track record of growing their own channels, experience across multiple niches, and willingness to show real client results. Red flags include guaranteed subscriber counts, coaches who have never built a successful channel, and anyone unwilling to offer a free initial consultation. For a comprehensive guide, read my article on how to choose the right YouTube coach and 10 red flags to avoid.

Are free YouTube tutorials enough to grow my channel?

Free tutorials teach the basics, but they have significant limitations: the advice is generic and often contradictory, you cannot verify whether it applies to your niche, and free content tends to be surface-level. Most importantly, free tutorials cannot look at your analytics or tell you what is specifically holding your channel back. They are a starting point — not a growth strategy.

How long does YouTube coaching take to show results?

Most creators see measurable improvements within 4-8 weeks of implementing coaching recommendations. Significant growth — doubling subscribers, breaking through plateaus, substantially increasing watch time — typically takes 3-6 months of consistent execution. The timeline depends on how quickly you implement changes, publishing frequency, and niche competitiveness. Channels I have coached typically see 2-5x growth within 6 months.

Is it worth paying for a course when free content exists?

Paid courses offer more structured and comprehensive content than free tutorials, saving you time piecing information together. However, their value drops if the course is outdated, generic, or taught by someone without genuine YouTube success. Before buying any course, check the update date, verify the instructor’s channel, and consider whether the same budget might deliver more value through personalised coaching.

What tools complement YouTube coaching or courses?

A YouTube analytics and SEO tool like vidIQ is essential regardless of which learning approach you choose. vidIQ helps you research keywords, track performance, analyse competitors, and optimise metadata — providing the data foundation that makes any approach more effective. A coach can interpret your vidIQ data and build strategy around it, whilst a course can teach you how to use analytics tools in general. The combination of expert guidance plus powerful analytics tools produces the strongest results.

The Verdict: Which Actually Grows Your Channel?

After 20+ years creating content, earning 6 Silver Play Buttons, working on the vidIQ team with thousands of creators, and now running my own consulting practice where I work with channels of every size and niche — my verdict on youtube coaching vs courses is clear:

Courses give you information. Coaching gives you transformation. For serious YouTube growth, personalised coaching from a qualified expert is the highest-ROI investment a creator can make.

Courses have their place — particularly for absolute beginners learning the fundamentals. I will never dismiss a creator for starting with a course, because structured learning has value at the foundation-building stage. But if you have moved past the basics, if your channel has data to work with, and if you are serious about growth — coaching is where the real results happen.

The choice comes down to this: do you want to learn generic principles and hope they apply to your channel? Or do you want an expert who has seen hundreds of channels, who can look at your data, and who can tell you exactly what to change to unlock your growth? The difference between those two things is the difference between consuming education and achieving results.

If you are ready to stop guessing and start growing with a personalised strategy, I offer a free discovery call where we can discuss your channel, your goals, and whether coaching is the right fit for you. And if you want to supercharge your data-driven approach regardless of which path you choose, get started with vidIQ — the analytics tool I recommend to every creator I work with.

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About Alan Spicer

Alan Spicer is a YouTube Certified Expert and 20+ year content creator with 6 Silver Play Buttons. A former vidIQ team member and certified YouTube consultant, Alan has helped hundreds of creators and businesses grow their channels through expert audits, coaching, and data-driven strategy. Learn more about Alan’s services or book a free discovery call.


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By Alan Spicer - YouTube Certified Expert

UK Based - YouTube Certified Expert Alan Spicer is a YouTube and Social Media consultant with over 2 Decades of knowledge within web design, community building, content creation and YouTube channel building.

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