🚀 The “Magic Number” of Videos to Grow on YouTube
A creator recently went from 0 → 100K subscribers in 5 months, and the lesson is clear: YouTube isn’t about luck. It’s about focus, consistency, and training the algorithm to know exactly who your channel serves. 🎯 First Goal: 20 Videos Your first milestone should be 20 uploads. Why 20 matters - At 20 uploads, YouTube has enough data to begin recommending your channel confidently. - You’ve ironed out the beginner mistakes in titles, thumbnails, and delivery. - Viewers perceive your channel as established, not experimental. - This is the activation point where momentum begins. But don’t stop there. The real compounding happens around 50 uploads. That’s the transformation point, where your skills and the algorithm’s trust start working together. 🎯 Hyper-Focused Audience Targeting YouTube is an algorithm-training game. Each upload teaches the system who your videos are for. When your content is scattered—one video on fitness, another on recipes, another on finance—the algorithm gets confused and your reach suffers. The fix is focus. Pick one audience, one pain point, and solve it relentlessly. Think of every video as a vehicle. Different in shape and format, but all driving toward the same destination: your dream viewer’s transformation. Example for busy moms: - “3 Quick Morning Routines to Save Your Sanity” - “Meal Prep in Under 30 Minutes (Kid-Friendly)” - “How to Reclaim 1 Hour a Day With This Simple Hack” Different angles, same promise: saving time for busy moms. ⚡ Confirm the Click in the First 10 Seconds Titles and thumbnails set the promise. The first 10 seconds of your video must confirm it. If you fail to address the information gap right away, viewers feel misled and bounce. That hurts retention and signals to YouTube not to recommend your video. Example: - Title/thumbnail: “3 Hacks to Save 1 Hour a Day as a Mom” - Opening line: “If you’re a mom who feels there’s never enough time in the day, here are three simple hacks you can use immediately to reclaim a full hour.”