I just looked at my stats and as I'm going towards this 1000/4000 number it seams that I'm getting really close with expected watch time but still far away with subscribers count. How was or is it for working for you?
I just looked at my stats and as I'm going towards this 1000/4000 number it seams that I'm getting really close with expected watch time but still far away with subscribers count. How was or is it for working for you?
Clickbait will get you views, but not necessarily view time.
Only clickbait I like is satirical clickbait, although I could be biased as I do this sometimes myself lolYeah, I feel like I'm going to resist "clickbait" titles. Though who knows, maybe if I ever get close to that monetization barrier I'll decide otherwise, lol.
No mate, they are where you add tag words (or in my case sentences) into the metadata, YouTube has a box for them on the upload page.Only clickbait I like is satirical clickbait, although I could be biased as I do this sometimes myself lol
Hippodrones: Just to clarify, are tags the ones where you put like #Beta ect. In the description?
It is still small numbers for me, but I consistently get 100 VPD on an older video I regularly update the tags on. I wish I could do the same with other vids too, but "how to" videos are easier to search to find the new tags that are working well.
This specific video is about mounting options on bikes for 360 cameras. I always keep the tags relevant but I don't tag in the same way most do
eg: say the video I made was called "Insta360 One X, One R & GoPro Max - EPIC Motorcycle Mounting Options"
I would then put that title into the YouTube search box and see what videos come up. I will then cherry pick the best performing of those videos that are also the most relevant to my video and copy the whole of that videos title and paste that as a single tag into mine, and do the same for the other best performing vids I'd cherry picked.
Because I got on the 360 game a little earlier than most it meant that video did well to start with, and got suggested when folk watched those vids or searched for similar. When the video was made, it was just about the Insta360 One X and I titled it such, but then the GoPro Max came out, so I added that into the title and updated the tags as before but with newer videos and then when the Insta360 One R came out, I did the same again. A lot of large motovlog channels were given them to review so when they post their reviews, I update my tags again and YouTube puts my vid in their viewers suggested. With new tags, YouTube also keeps it current so when folk search, they find my video.
If you don't use relevant tags, your vid will take a nose dive quite quickly though so be careful with them.
This specific video is about mounting options on bikes for 360 cameras. I always keep the tags relevant but I don't tag in the same way most do
eg: say the video I made was called "Insta360 One X, One R & GoPro Max - EPIC Motorcycle Mounting Options"
I would then put that title into the YouTube search box and see what videos come up. I will then cherry pick the best performing of those videos that are also the most relevant to my video and copy the whole of that videos title and paste that as a single tag into mine, and do the same for the other best performing vids I'd cherry picked.
Because I got on the 360 game a little earlier than most it meant that video did well to start with, and got suggested when folk watched those vids or searched for similar. When the video was made, it was just about the Insta360 One X and I titled it such, but then the GoPro Max came out, so I added that into the title and updated the tags as before but with newer videos and then when the Insta360 One R came out, I did the same again. A lot of large motovlog channels were given them to review so when they post their reviews, I update my tags again and YouTube puts my vid in their viewers suggested. With new tags, YouTube also keeps it current so when folk search, they find my video.
If you don't use relevant tags, your vid will take a nose dive quite quickly though so be careful with them.
Am not sure you understood what I was saying, my content is my own. We are talking about tags, that YouTube uses to help understand what your video is about, if I make a review of a camera, I want YouTube to know it is the same camera another channel has posted about. It is not using other peoples content, just helps get my video seen by an audience.Isnt there something to be said about trying to make your stuff creative and different rather than cherry picking other content? Or do you mean just expanding upon what they do in your own way?
This is super helpfulAm not sure you understood what I was saying, my content is my own. We are talking about tags, that YouTube uses to help understand what your video is about, if I make a review of a camera, I want YouTube to know it is the same camera another channel has posted about. It is not using other peoples content, just helps get my video seen by an audience.View attachment 4830