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YT Creative Director Academy

55 members • Free

7 contributions to YT Creative Director Academy
Creative directors, what is the most persistent problem you've come across with clients?
Personally, I've found that many clients know the audience they want to reach, but their packaging is doing everything it can to push that audience away. For instance, I have a real estate client who is in a specific sub-niche and wants to reach a new audience that may eventually become customers, but she's using advanced real estate language in her titles instead of appealing to the mind state someone has that may want to break free from the every day cycle and get into real estate. In other words, if there's 5 videos on her topic and she uses complicated language and the other 4 use simple language that appeals to a beginner or their mind state, 5 times out of 5 they will click on the other videos, regardless of her experience or knowledge compared to the other creators, it doesn't matter, because the viewer wouldn't have even clicked on her video to know.
0 likes • Mar 25
@Ben Bode I love the simplified way you put it, often I try to overexplain to clients and end up talking myself in circles, so it's great to hear you write my concept in such a short hand way, super helpful!
Roast My Intro
Title: If I Had to Build a YouTube for My Business From Scratch in 90 Days, Here’s What I’d Do It Using Ai If I had to start a YouTube channel for my business from scratch, here’s exactly what I’d do—and I’d get it profitable in 90 days or less. Most business owners waste months posting random videos that get no views, no leads, and no revenue. I’m going to show you the AI-powered system I’d use to grow faster, with less effort. Follow this 90-day roadmap, and you’ll have a YouTube channel that attracts leads, builds authority, and grows your business—without wasting time on things that don’t work. I’m going to break this down step by step, so if you’re serious about making YouTube work for your business, let’s get into it.
3 likes • Mar 18
I feel like the first sentence is a little redundant since it feels like we're repeating what the audience already knows from the title. I feel like you could make the beginning stronger by building up your own authority on the subject immediately or by emphasizing the frustration of the viewer, who is most likely clicking on your video because they've either tried everything or they're overwhelmed and don't know where to start. It's not bad though! I would say that's the biggest critique, just meeting the audience where they are at and understanding the mind state of someone that would be clicking on your video.
0 likes • Mar 19
@Bobby Kawecki I'd swap it with something that tells the viewer why the should listen to you, specifically, or an anecdote that connects to the viewer's current experience.
Are Food Channels The First Vertical To "De-Beast"?
Last month Nick Digiovanni launches Nicks Kitchen, a bare-bones back to basics cooking/recipes channel that's highly stylized and way more grounded than his main channel. His audience LOVES it and it's performing super well for him. Come today and Joshua Weissman announces Joshua Weissman Recipes, a bare-bones back to basics cooking/recipes channel that's highly stylized and way more grounded than his main channel. Jury is still out on performance for him. Are food audiences hungry for a return to basics? Or are these channels feeding a separate niche that's been abandoned on YouTube, the cooking tutorial viewers? It'll be interesting to see this trend progress and evolve! Anyone have any guesses on who might be next to launch something like this? Guga Foods? Gordon Ramsay?
0 likes • Mar 19
I feel like there's a lot of niches that either never embraced that style or entirely removed that style from their content. You can definitely see a refreshing shift to lower budget, more personality focused content. For instance, did you see that guy that blew up recently by just recording his shifts at 7/11? He got like 200k sub in a month. There's also a lot of travel and city living niches that focus on clean edits and a calm pace with some simple storytelling. It almost feels like vlogging is making a comeback as well? Like, there's been a major influx of creators in the past few months who do eating challenges for a week that are essentially just vlogs, like Sir Yacht and Killdozer that are calm and personality focused. I do wonder if there's an element of calmness that people are finding comfort in with them. I think everyone feels like the world is a bit crazy right now, so maybe they need something a bit calmer. I would love to check out their analytics and see if their age demographics line up with our most stressed populations, like those in college, or those that are of working age before a major career shift, essentially those people who may feel like they're balancing too much in their lives. It also could be that trends are cyclical, so like fashion, things come back around. They have historically always done this. So maybe this is the same? Maybe we're coming back to a golden age of YouTube and maybe in a few years we'll circle back to the edge lord mid-2010's and soon enough we'll be back to the explosive and over-edited 2020's. We'll have to wait and see. Although it does seem like in general people are preferring a simpler life, they're swapping their smart phones for simple phones, going back to vinyl records, monitoring their screen time, delving into physical media, etc. Maybe people miss the old days or maybe they just yearn for a simpler life. Again, we'll have to see. Although, I think it's, both, a mix of cyclical trends and wanting calmness in at least one area of their lives personally.
Quote of the day
Quote of the day... "YouTube Doesn't Have Secrets." @Nic Stanich
0 likes • Mar 19
True, most of the time it's just getting a different perspective and seeing where you're not understanding your audience and how you present yourself to them.
Algorithm Question
I’ve got a unique problem that Ive been mulling over, and I think this group could help me. I’m doing some advisory work on a small channel. The long and short of it is that the channel is performing terribly. It’s been around for 10 years, it’s almost 200 videos, and only 700 subscribers. I can see a clear path forward on improving the videos, but fear there's an issue with it's many videos that have not resonated with the audience in the past. Here’s my question: Before we start posting new, better videos, I wonder if it's better to just restart fresh with a totally new channel? The more technical YouTube question is this: does the failure of the past videos, and the dissatisfaction of the existing audience, negatively affect the new videos? Will the algorithm ding the new stuff because the old stuff sucked? Asking them to restart their channel from fresh is no small thing. Especially for their pride, but we also want the best for them. What are your thoughts on this? Restart or keep the old channel?
1 like • Mar 19
Really depends on the niche. I have a new client I'm beginning to manage at one of the agencies I work at and she's in a niche within real estate. So not real estate but a very specific sub category. It's a small niche, where she's teaching this topic. She's been at it for 15 years now, hundreds of videos and frankly there's just not enough topic to make a channel around. Really stretching it, there may be a video a month there, BUT I recommended to her that she's starts focusing on ad production with a series of 12 actual videos a year or one a month, so people can see her authority on the subject when they visit her channel. Kind of like Charlie Morgan if you've ever seen his stuff. As a teaching concept it's very valuable to people, but as a YouTube niche, it cannot consistently produce good content, hence putting a focus on customers and not viewers. So, my biggest piece of advice would be to look at their niche. Is it too small, is it TOO niche, we always hear about niching down but that can go too far sometimes, is it viable at all? Sometimes we try to Sudoku a bunch of broken parts together, but it may be easier starting over than fixing every individual part of a channel. Additionally, having a massive amount of failed videos, just from a viewer perspective, looks like the creator doesn't really know what they're doing or they don't have authority to speak on the subject. While it's true that some channels can do 180s it really depends on the niche. Is it gaming? Sure, no one cares about a huge back catalogue, but if it's anything having to do with knowledge, teaching or authority, I would start over or hide all of those failed videos at the very least to maintain strong footing with the audience.
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Joaquin Dircksen
2
13points to level up
@joaquin-dircksen-6187
I'm a producer with over 1.2 billion views. I'm looking to improve my skills.

Active 251d ago
Joined Mar 18, 2025
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