Is YouTube still the world's most valuable real estate?
Speaker:So if every video can kinda live or die based on merit, how do you
Speaker:actually package yours up to win?
Speaker:And also can a two minute video ad really beat out a 20 minute video.
Speaker:That goes even in more depth.
Speaker:For instance, we're gonna talk about things like, you know, what makes a hook
Speaker:irresistible and what comes after that hook to actually lead someone to become
Speaker:not just another like or a comment, but an actual client for your business.
Speaker:That's what we're breaking down today in this episode with Allic.
Speaker:Heck, he's gonna share his YouTube playbook, but also
Speaker:his conversion playbook.
Speaker:If you actually want to use video to win and to grow your business, let's dive in.
Speaker:Aleric, we're doing this, uh, round two, man.
Speaker:It's been about a year or so.
Speaker:How you, how you doing?
Speaker:I'm excited.
Speaker:This is, this is gonna be great.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I can't believe it's been a year.
Speaker:We were just talking about that.
Speaker:It, it, it time flies.
Speaker:well, I mean, you're, and, and luckily, you know, you're even
Speaker:deeper down the YouTube rabbit hole.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Last episode we went, uh, back into your, you know, the history of how
Speaker:you, you came around on YouTube.
Speaker:I think it's been, well it was 12, uh, you started at 12 years
Speaker:old, I think is what it was.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And doing all the tech reviews and whatnot.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:16 years ago, back in 2009, YouTube was a totally different platform.
Speaker:And, uh, if you remember it back then, you know, it was the star rating system.
Speaker:It's like, rate, rate.
Speaker:My video, five stars.
Speaker:It wasn't given a like, uh, it was all standard definition video.
Speaker:It's, it's crazy to see how far, uh, it's, uh, it's evolved since then.
Speaker:well what?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, that's what I always love.
Speaker:Someone who's been in the game in a specific vertical or, you know, this
Speaker:thing they've gone deep on for so long.
Speaker:You've seen the, the changes over the years and you know what's, what's
Speaker:kind of stayed tried and true, which.
Speaker:You definitely know that and, and you have a lot of great resources on that.
Speaker:We'll talk about some of 'em here, but like, does anything stand out with the
Speaker:mind of like, why YouTube right now?
Speaker:Like why do you think this is still the place for for folks to go to?
Speaker:Yeah, so YouTube is the catalog of video content.
Speaker:Like that's, it's the place where video content lives, where if people are looking
Speaker:for, uh, a tutorial, how to use the latest AI tool, how to grow their business,
Speaker:how to, you know, uh, get in shape.
Speaker:Whatever people are looking up, they're going to watch a video on
Speaker:YouTube and roads lead back to YouTube.
Speaker:So, uh, there's a lot of people are talking about how SEO is,
Speaker:uh, depending on who you talk to, some people are saying it's dying.
Speaker:Others are saying, Hey, it's just shifting.
Speaker:It's shifting to L-L-M-S-E-O.
Speaker:But as you have more and more chatbots, people go into chat, GPT,
Speaker:uh, Google, even having with their own Gemini, whatever people happen to be
Speaker:using, here's what's not going away.
Speaker:Video.
Speaker:Because if you're looking for tutorial.
Speaker:Well chat, GBT isn't gonna, at least right now, and we're not quite there yet.
Speaker:Maybe in the future it could be, you know, a whole different story.
Speaker:But right now it's not gonna just auto generate a video to give you what
Speaker:you want, but it'll generate text.
Speaker:So where people aren't going to webpages as much.
Speaker:They're still going to watch videos on YouTube, and so if you're looking for
Speaker:a tutorial, then really any of these AI models, if you indicate that you wanna
Speaker:watch a video of some kind, it's going to populate most likely a YouTube video.
Speaker:'cause it's all indexed.
Speaker:They've got the transcripts of the video, especially if you're
Speaker:doing on Gemini or you have.
Speaker:Uh, a little recommended like the AI search, uh, bubble at the top.
Speaker:And so what that means is that video is still front and center and arguably some
Speaker:of the most valuable real estate on the internet because as LLMs just start to,
Speaker:you know, transcribe everything or, you know, people talk to AI clones like,
Speaker:uh, like you help people with, right?
Speaker:Um, you know, text is getting more commoditized, whereas video.
Speaker:Still has that power.
Speaker:Now, yes, there are ways to create AI versions of videos, but those
Speaker:are still being hosted on YouTube.
Speaker:And so AI is a tool to amplify those types of videos.
Speaker:But people going to YouTube, uh, is, is still incredibly strong
Speaker:and it's also more based around the merits of each video.
Speaker:So one of the big things people ask is how has YouTube evolved since.
Speaker:You know, years and years ago.
Speaker:Well, in the past it used to be like you were building up
Speaker:your medieval kingdom, right?
Speaker:And if you had a YouTube channel with a ton of subscribers, you were
Speaker:guaranteed to get a lot of views.
Speaker:And the people that had the biggest channels were the ones
Speaker:that captured a lot of the views.
Speaker:And sure, some people liked that style, especially the people that really built
Speaker:up, you know, their channels around that.
Speaker:But YouTube has now shifted to a meritocracy.
Speaker:You could have a channel.
Speaker:It doesn't have a lot of subscribers post a really good piece of content with
Speaker:the right title, the right thumbnail.
Speaker:And because AI is going to actually synthesize even, you know, YouTube's
Speaker:going to, look at all the different pieces of the watch time, the
Speaker:transcript, what's the video about?
Speaker:What's the click through rate?
Speaker:How many people are actually, you know, what's the sentiment towards this video?
Speaker:Um, they're integrating all of that into the algorithm.
Speaker:So now every video you have an opportunity to reach more of your ideal people.
Speaker:So it really is more of a meritocracy.
Speaker:Where, um, you produce a really great piece of content as long as you know
Speaker:how to package it the right way.
Speaker:Now, I'm not saying it's just, oh, put a good piece of content
Speaker:in a bad title, bad thumbnail.
Speaker:'cause people aren't gonna click that.
Speaker:But you have a good piece of content, good thumbnail, good,
Speaker:you know, title, it's all there.
Speaker:It doesn't matter if your channel has a million subscribers or
Speaker:has a hundred subscribers.
Speaker:You actually have much more of an opportunity in today's algorithm to
Speaker:have that video breakthrough, which I think is really exciting for a lot
Speaker:of businesses and a lot of creators and a lot of people that are going
Speaker:out there to start producing content.
Speaker:I think that that's how I wanna lean on even more.
Speaker:And I know with your, with your book coming out here, and I want, I definitely
Speaker:want you to break it down a bit.
Speaker:You know, you're, you're helping people have that, uh, get a lot more
Speaker:of that confidence if they haven't gone out there and actually done
Speaker:video yet, put themselves out there, or if they have, I, I feel like.
Speaker:Uh, I can't say most people.
Speaker:I don't even know what the percentage of business owners, you know, folks that,
Speaker:digital marketers who are on YouTube.
Speaker:'cause I feel like there's probably still a lot who have not touched it.
Speaker:You know, and maybe they're just leaning on, uh, things like, uh, meta ads,
Speaker:which I think you guys do as well.
Speaker:But, you know, there's video and, but I, I guess, yeah.
Speaker:What is a good starting point for someone to think about when they
Speaker:approach YouTube and actually understand, oh, this is the place to be?
Speaker:How do I approach it?
Speaker:Like, where do I start?
Speaker:That's a great question.
Speaker:That's a big thing that we talk about.
Speaker:So, you know, the book that I've got coming out here is Video
Speaker:Authority, the Art and Science of Converting Viewers into Clients.
Speaker:And I created this, you know, very specifically to help people.
Speaker:That are actually looking to grow their business off of YouTube.
Speaker:So this, what this book isn't is, this is not the book on how to go
Speaker:mega viral, build a multi multimillion subscriber channel as a celebrity
Speaker:on YouTube as a big influencer.
Speaker:That's that's not what this book is about.
Speaker:What this book is about is how you can build your business on YouTube, how you
Speaker:can get a lot of great viewership, how you can also run ads, YouTube ads, targeting
Speaker:the right people at the right time.
Speaker:We talked about that.
Speaker:Also how you could repurpose that content, not just for things like YouTube
Speaker:shorts, but also other platforms as well.
Speaker:How you can essentially create an entire video ecosystem to turn those viewers that
Speaker:watch your videos into consistent clients.
Speaker:Because the reality is, likes don't pay the bills.
Speaker:There's a lot of people that have millions of subscriber channels, and I know them.
Speaker:That, you know, they're not doing as well as you think they're doing in terms
Speaker:of the revenue, their actual take home.
Speaker:And what we want to talk about is how you can actually craft videos,
Speaker:whether it's organic and it's published on the channel, uh, or um, ads that
Speaker:are targeting the right people.
Speaker:Uh, or really anywhere in between that are designed to actually convert
Speaker:those viewers into consistent clients.
Speaker:And the, the big thing that we talk about is the key is
Speaker:to be, uh, a video authority.
Speaker:So you don't wanna just have content that entertains or gets people excited.
Speaker:What's the, what's the difference between somebody who's actually gonna be able to
Speaker:turn viewers into clients and somebody that is gonna turn viewers into likes, but
Speaker:you can't really take likes to the bank?
Speaker:Well, the difference is whether or not you're an authority.
Speaker:In something that you're gonna be able to take people off of YouTube to do.
Speaker:Now this is gonna be different, right?
Speaker:So it could be being the, the preeminent authority in AI clones, right?
Speaker:you now create videos and content, but you, you are an authority in something.
Speaker:So they're gonna be excited about actually working with you, which is very different
Speaker:than, let's say somebody that's just going out there and using AI clones
Speaker:and making a funny video about that.
Speaker:They could amass.
Speaker:Maybe even more viewership and not maybe actually they could amass more viewership
Speaker:than you talking about how to build these or how these could be created, but they're
Speaker:not gonna be able to drive and command the actual revenue generation that you
Speaker:can do from your channel or your ads as an authority in how to build AI clones.
Speaker:Same thing with me.
Speaker:With YouTube ads and video marketing, right?
Speaker:It's very different.
Speaker:And I've even seen this because I have two channels.
Speaker:I've got my, uh, app review and, uh, now it's ai, tech channel, uh, app
Speaker:find, it's got 600,000 subscribers.
Speaker:I don't produce the content anymore.
Speaker:I have, uh, somebody, uh, Justin, he's out in Silicon Valley, produces some of
Speaker:those videos on my behalf and you know, it's got over half a million subscribers.
Speaker:And then I have my, uh, YouTube channel, the, our tech channel
Speaker:that's got 80,000 subscribers, 83,000 subscribers, something like that.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:That channel that's me produces far more revenue, far more, and especially even
Speaker:if you don't account the ads, it's still substantially more, but especially if
Speaker:you account the fact that I'm running ads from that channel and the ads generate
Speaker:the vast majority of my business.
Speaker:Then also, of course, there's the organic content, but that channel
Speaker:overall, regardless of how you slice, if you just look at people
Speaker:watching the content or if you look at the content plus ads, that's huge.
Speaker:It's massively, uh, many, many, many fold times more revenue than my bigger,
Speaker:uh, tech channel and AI channel that generates revenue from ad revenue
Speaker:and sponsors and things like that.
Speaker:And the reason for that is I am the authority at something that
Speaker:I can take people off of the platform and turn them into clients.
Speaker:And I've built some of the things I talk about.
Speaker:You know, inside of this book, one of the things that I break down, just kind
Speaker:of, I guess flip through, I was trying to see if I could find one of the areas, but
Speaker:inside the book, I actually break down.
Speaker:Here are some of the funnels that you can use.
Speaker:'cause you're using video at each step, uh, of the process.
Speaker:So you could have YouTube ads or you, or your, your channel, uh,
Speaker:your video channel, your YouTube channel, and that's drawing people in.
Speaker:So they're either gonna see an ad that you're targeting in front of
Speaker:the right people, or they're gonna find one of your videos on YouTube.
Speaker:So now
Speaker:of funnel, more or less like
Speaker:Yeah, top of funnel.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:And by the way, that's a flywheel too.
Speaker:'cause they could see your ad. If they don't take action right
Speaker:away, then you could, you know, get them to watch your channel.
Speaker:And if they're watching your channel, you could retarget them with an ad.
Speaker:So that in of itself creates a loop.
Speaker:But once you get them off platform, so they've seen an ad or your channel
Speaker:or they've gone back and forth between them, now they actually click the link
Speaker:to go and, uh, opt into your funnel.
Speaker:Well, we like to run what we call a video conversion funnel.
Speaker:It's our version.
Speaker:Of a video sales letter or a webinar funnel.
Speaker:But, um, the way that we like to do it is we want it to feel
Speaker:like an extension of YouTube.
Speaker:So let's just use, uh, yourself as an example, right?
Speaker:What you could do is pull people off of, uh, either a YouTube ad or a YouTube
Speaker:channel where they're gonna learn how, uh, or, or, or they're gonna discover
Speaker:the benefit of having an AI clone.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So it's, you know, uh, learn how you can, uh, you know, have an AI
Speaker:clone just like these 300 other, you know, people, all the different
Speaker:people that you've, you've supported.
Speaker:And they put in their name, email, possibly phone number.
Speaker:They click go.
Speaker:Now you take them to a video and this is a, uh, 10 to 20 minute long
Speaker:video, um, that we call, uh, you know, video conversion training.
Speaker:So inside the video conversion funnel, and it feels like a YouTube video.
Speaker:Because it hits all the right notes.
Speaker:It's filmed like a YouTube video.
Speaker:It's got a YouTube video kind of rhythm.
Speaker:But the way that it's actually structured is like a video sales letter or like
Speaker:a webinar, a mini webinar where you're actually, you know, hooking people in.
Speaker:You're telling a story, you're building credibility, you're providing
Speaker:value, but you're talking about the what and the why, not the how.
Speaker:So you're talking about the keys, you know, that they need to learn, right?
Speaker:Some of the classic, uh, you know, marketing things that you can do.
Speaker:And then leading people to then, you know, examples and case studies.
Speaker:And then, alright, let's, uh, let's customize this for you.
Speaker:Let's book a call.
Speaker:Let's see how we can support you.
Speaker:And then, then you could lead that right into a book, a call funnel.
Speaker:Uh, and so all of that is, is structured by having that video.
Speaker:It's video to video,
Speaker:uh, which we found works really well.
Speaker:They're, they're not phone calls anymore.
Speaker:People are hopping on Zoom calls.
Speaker:So that's a video too.
Speaker:So one of the things this book talks about, it's kind of funny.
Speaker:I've got a whole chapter on how to do a video, uh, consultative
Speaker:sales call because it's on video.
Speaker:And the point that I like to make in the, in the book, and obviously there's
Speaker:different funnel pages that maybe don't have a, a video on it, but the
Speaker:vast majority of our business now is actually able to be built on video,
Speaker:especially for expert based businesses.
Speaker:So how you can actually integrate video each step of the way.
Speaker:This is incredible, man.
Speaker:I mean, well, I got, I gotta say, you know, I'm, I'm starting to go
Speaker:through your training, so I gotta give, you know, my hats off to you
Speaker:here for that because, um, yeah, I'm learn, I'm starting to learn this.
Speaker:I'm in the very early stages, but what you just broke down is exactly what I
Speaker:would love to do for my business, and like you said, to support the cloning
Speaker:and all the AI build team stuff that.
Speaker:People heard me talk about on here, but being video focused, I mean, it's,
Speaker:it's a great, I mean, you're, you're hitting on all the, the modes, right?
Speaker:Like you, they could see this stuff in action.
Speaker:They could see you, the person.
Speaker:Um, it's pretty, and I would, you know, when we're talking about
Speaker:cloning, I'm definitely not ever talking about, Hey, let's clone
Speaker:you and put you on YouTube and, and like, take you out of the picture.
Speaker:'cause
Speaker:like, I feel like.
Speaker:Uh, yeah, when I look at it, it's like, no, that actually brings the human
Speaker:tighter to the real human and media we're putting out there to educate, connect,
Speaker:and then like what you're talking about, you're continuing that off platform.
Speaker:Um, that, I guess that's the ecosystem, right?
Speaker:Like that's where my brain goes to is like, ' cause I do know a lot
Speaker:of creators and most of 'em do not have an ecosystem or some business
Speaker:off of the platform of YouTube.
Speaker:So I think that that's a huge takeaway is.
Speaker:Yeah, the likes are great.
Speaker:The awareness is great.
Speaker:You'll get a lot of data on YouTube, but what are you gonna do with it?
Speaker:And it, does it align with the business or the bigger thing that you're building
Speaker:Are are there other eco, like, just to describe more, 'cause it sounds like that
Speaker:that's a funnel, like let's call it for
Speaker:a, a consultant, or are there other ecosystems that you can maybe at
Speaker:a higher level kinda just throw out and lobb out there that people
Speaker:can kind of start thinking about?
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:So that's gonna be more for an expert based business, but you
Speaker:can apply this exact same type of thing to products or software.
Speaker:It's just might be a little bit different how you, how you
Speaker:position it and structure it.
Speaker:But pulling people in from, again, ads or organic.
Speaker:Um, and, and I'll talk about ecosystem in a second.
Speaker:It's kind of two different questions.
Speaker:So how you appeal, uh, or how you can apply this to, um, you know, product
Speaker:businesses is actually demonstrating the product or the software.
Speaker:And you'd be surprised, but if you watch a lot of commercials these
Speaker:days, there's not a lot of actual demonstration of products or services.
Speaker:It's more, you know, selling a feeling, which could be good for branding, but it's
Speaker:not necessarily good for direct response.
Speaker:So if you have a product you actually want to showcase, like
Speaker:what are the benefits of that?
Speaker:And then, you know, taking people off to a sales page where they can
Speaker:actually potentially watch a video when it comes to a software, making sure
Speaker:that a demo is incorporated into that.
Speaker:Maybe they're opting in to see a video demo that then can lead to a demo, that
Speaker:they can book a call, uh, you know, for.
Speaker:So there's definitely a lot of opportunities there when it
Speaker:comes to, uh, other ecosystems.
Speaker:The other ecosystem that we like is content multiplication.
Speaker:So you could take one video.
Speaker:And turn it into dozens of pieces of content.
Speaker:And it's crazy that you could do this now.
Speaker:So you can essentially take a t uh, and, and this is where what I talk about is you
Speaker:can essentially film in, in four hours.
Speaker:You can film an entire month's worth of content where you
Speaker:have weekly YouTube videos.
Speaker:Daily short form content, which by the way, isn't just YouTube, it's YouTube
Speaker:shorts, it's Instagram reels, it's TikTok.
Speaker:LinkedIn now has shorts if you wanna publish it there.
Speaker:Um, you know, and Facebook, uh, also, by the way, Facebook's reels, you
Speaker:know, I put a reel up on Facebook.
Speaker:I get, you know, a thousand plus views.
Speaker:People say, oh, it's not really doing, you know, it might not be
Speaker:as much as YouTube, but hey, those are real people watching that reel.
Speaker:And so anyways, so you have all those, so you could cross promote that, then you
Speaker:could turn it into a weekly newsletter.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:As well as weekly long form, uh, you know, social media posts.
Speaker:You could also do, uh, some other like, kind of, uh, short like tweet
Speaker:style, uh, posts, which you could also do now, you know, with, with threads.
Speaker:And Facebook's also, uh, you, you've probably seen this, they're, they're
Speaker:prioritizing those, you know, uh, image, uh, background images or
Speaker:whatever background color with, with short text, uh, which is kind of funny.
Speaker:Um, and so essentially you can do.
Speaker:Dozens of pieces of content from just one core content.
Speaker:Um, and then you can film that 10 to 15 minute YouTube video in about an hour.
Speaker:So if you want one of those per week, you can film those in half a day.
Speaker:And so you can have an entire content strategy that takes you half a day to
Speaker:film, and it's mostly AI and, uh, you know, a va, uh, or somebody on your
Speaker:team that can go and put all of these different pieces together, right?
Speaker:You could have.
Speaker:A virtual assistant and, uh, empowered by AI and some select tools.
Speaker:And there you go.
Speaker:You can now repurpose all of that content on every platform and have
Speaker:a full content distribution strategy that creates an ecosystem where
Speaker:on organic, you're everywhere.
Speaker:We talked about omnipresent retargeting too, with ads, you want to be everywhere
Speaker:as well, so there's ways to create ads that can be cross-platform on all kinds
Speaker:of different platforms, but you can do that both on organic and with your ads.
Speaker:And that's, I, I'm happy you said that because yeah, the whole omnipresence,
Speaker:this is what, yeah, I've, I've, I've preached this a lot in the past, you
Speaker:know, with podcast you could do it this
Speaker:way too, and that's how it splits into, but I really like what you're saying, like
Speaker:specifically for YouTube, because that's.
Speaker:That's kind of that.
Speaker:I'll just say that's a personal shift I'm making is, you know, I, I have a great
Speaker:system for the podcast and to get this kind of omnipresence split out teams doing
Speaker:it with some tools like, um, Opus Clip and
Speaker:Cast Magic is, uh, are there other tools like, just, just, uh, without going deep,
Speaker:but like, what are some of your favorites?
Speaker:I know these might change, but
Speaker:Yeah, so Opus clip is really great, uh, for grabbing those.
Speaker:And like you said, there's, there's other ones that you can use there too.
Speaker:Uh, but that's our, that's our favorite that we use to, to clip, uh, the content.
Speaker:Um, and then I love Claude for writing content.
Speaker:So one really good playbook that I have is you can do a really good job
Speaker:with Claude to train it on projects.
Speaker:Of past writing styles.
Speaker:So for instance, my, uh, newsletter, my Marketing Minds newsletter, uh, I
Speaker:spent over a year hand, not handwriting, but like type hand typing, you know,
Speaker:uh, my, uh, you know, newsletter with without ai, uh, for over a year.
Speaker:And now I have 50 plus samples.
Speaker:So I take those and I put them into a Claude project.
Speaker:And then now what I can do is every time I publish a YouTube video.
Speaker:I can have my virtual assistant take the YouTube video transcript, upload
Speaker:it into Claude, which is trained on 50 plus examples in a specific project.
Speaker:Here's my newsletter.
Speaker:Alright, here's the transcript of my video and everything that I shared
Speaker:here are all the newsletter examples,
Speaker:using only the information I share here without, you know, adding
Speaker:other bits and hallucinating, right?
Speaker:This is kind of prompted, you know, um, so using only the
Speaker:information I share in this video.
Speaker:Fit this to the format of my newsletter in the tone, voice, and style I use
Speaker:for my Marketing Minds newsletter.
Speaker:Have it write everything out and then, you know, and then that can be
Speaker:preloaded into my newsletter software.
Speaker:And then I go in and I personally review it.
Speaker:'cause that's important to me, uh, just to make sure it's written the right way.
Speaker:And usually I'll change maybe 5% of it.
Speaker:So there are things that I change.
Speaker:It doesn't get everything perfect.
Speaker:And that's what some people, I'm sure, I mean, I know you know this,
Speaker:uh, with AI and everything, uh, but I'll make a couple different changes.
Speaker:And then from there, uh, I've now got a full newsletter ready to go
Speaker:that was based around that video.
Speaker:And then I can link to the video.
Speaker:So now I'm also driving up YouTube views as well.
Speaker:But I also have a newsletter, and then the newsletter gets published.
Speaker:As a blog, so now that's a blog as well.
Speaker:And then I can also take what was written as the newsletter and I can
Speaker:condense it down to Facebook posts.
Speaker:I have, I mean even more like 200 plus Facebook posts that I all wrote myself.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And this is, I think the key is a lot of people with ai.
Speaker:They're going out there and they're, they're just trying to,
Speaker:they're not giving any examples.
Speaker:They're not putting in the time to write it themselves or the content.
Speaker:It's the same thing with like a clone.
Speaker:It's like you wanna create a clone, but you don't have any
Speaker:content out there that exists.
Speaker:It's like, well,
Speaker:you know, what, what do you want a clone to say?
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:It's like, okay.
Speaker:Um, so, but, but once you do have that content, you can take that, like,
Speaker:here's all the past posts that I've done, and then here's this video.
Speaker:And the video is new content.
Speaker:So that's the important thing too.
Speaker:I'm not just rehashing old stuff or taking other people's information.
Speaker:It the video, when I do a video, I just think in videos, right?
Speaker:So I will go and I can just speak, uh, and you know, to the camera.
Speaker:Now, obviously inside the book we talk about how to actually write scripts
Speaker:and how to do that, because I know, I know that everybody's like that.
Speaker:That's fine.
Speaker:Don't, don't be worried.
Speaker:The book talks about how to actually, you know, come up with, uh, infinite ideas.
Speaker:Um, uh, you can actually use AI to help you with that.
Speaker:There's also a manual way to do it.
Speaker:Uh, and then once you have that, how to actually outline
Speaker:it, the structure of a video.
Speaker:Um, just because I've done so many of these, uh, I now
Speaker:I know how to, uh, to do it.
Speaker:I think at one point I, I ran, uh, the total, uh, of the videos
Speaker:and it was, it was over 3000 YouTube videos that I've created.
Speaker:So it's pretty, it's pretty crazy across my two main channels.
Speaker:But, um, but anyways, uh, so looping back, uh, you can then, you know, train it on.
Speaker:Uh, on, okay, what's a, what's a Facebook post, what's a LinkedIn post gonna be?
Speaker:And then you can take that video and turn it into that as well, that transcript.
Speaker:So you can essentially do effortless, uh, you know, content multiplication to be
Speaker:omnipresent across, uh, across different
Speaker:It is incredible, and it all starts with that one YouTube video that, um,
Speaker:I don't know, call it 15 minutes I think is what you said, or something
Speaker:like that where that's the end result.
Speaker:But ideally you're batch recording all of this, which that's, that was
Speaker:the game changer with this podcast.
Speaker:And, you know, um.
Speaker:Now it's kind of changed a little bit.
Speaker:I used to do like three or four episodes in a day, and that's almost
Speaker:like mind numbing for a podcast.
Speaker:But
Speaker:if it's a YouTube video, that's, uh, it's a lot easier if
Speaker:you're planned out in advance.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And have that, have that game plan.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you're, you're able just to kind of film them back to back, right?
Speaker:And, and, and it doesn't, it might not even take you half a, like for
Speaker:me it doesn't take that long anymore.
Speaker:it also depends if you're doing a screen share style video or you're talking
Speaker:to camera, if you know exactly what you're gonna say or you have to kind of
Speaker:do a little bit of research as you're going or, or prep it a little bit more.
Speaker:So then maybe it's not four hours of filming, but you have
Speaker:to spend a little bit more time like coming up with a script.
Speaker:So
Speaker:there's different things with that.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:And, uh, and we also, you know, make it simple each step along the way.
Speaker:So obviously, you know, I broke these everything down inside of the book,
Speaker:but I also have other software tools.
Speaker:So I've got my, you know, AI ad targeting software, the keyword search.com.
Speaker:But I've got my YouTube thumbnail creation software, uh, you
Speaker:know, thumbnail creator.com.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:I have, uh, a YouTube video script writer that can write YouTube video
Speaker:scripts in your voice, video ideas.ai.
Speaker:Now, it's kind of interesting 'cause that software hasn't really taken off as
Speaker:much outside of my core, uh, ecosystem.
Speaker:Um, but it's very, it works well to kind of come up with, all right, it's
Speaker:gonna research trending topics and come up with video ideas that you can
Speaker:do and then, um, and then basically help you write kind of a sample script.
Speaker:Which I love, Harry, you're just dropping all those like, uh, those
Speaker:little tidbit tools that you have because like I, I knew you had some of 'em,
Speaker:but Yeah, like thumbnail creator.com.
Speaker:I just pulled it up.
Speaker:I'm like, oh my God.
Speaker:Like everyone needs this.
Speaker:You know, anybody on D that's like,
Speaker:yeah, I mean, just go there.
Speaker:We will link all those up too.
Speaker:'cause those are great.
Speaker:You set 'em quickly, but we'll pull 'em out.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, I, I appreciate that.
Speaker:I'm sure.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Put, put a link down there and, you know, just saying that to, to
Speaker:mention some of the different tools.
Speaker:Uh, obviously people want to check 'em out.
Speaker:Then, you know, they all have free trials too, so people can go and give
Speaker:it a try and, and see how they like it.
Speaker:Well, that's the key thing is like knowing that these are, you're solving
Speaker:for the bottlenecks that people, you know, the friction points that people
Speaker:are inherently gonna have because.
Speaker:I mean, even me who have been, I've been creating podcast content for
Speaker:a lot of, lot of, lot of years.
Speaker:Uh, the YouTube side has always been kind of like a byproduct.
Speaker:It's on there, but I know the focus has not been there.
Speaker:And, you know, there's, there's, everybody is on the spectrum of, of,
Speaker:you know, how comfortable they are on camera or maybe how much they get hung
Speaker:up with an idea, but don't take action.
Speaker:So like, what's.
Speaker:What are some common bottlenecks and solutions to getting out of our heads,
Speaker:you know, and actually hitting the record button, or even scripting something like
Speaker:what are the common ways that you can, that you see that you just kind of can
Speaker:hopefully bust that bubble for people so we can just get to creating and posting.
Speaker:Well, one of the big ones, and you might not fall into this, but.
Speaker:Uh, some people watching or, or listening definitely, definitely
Speaker:do is, you know, just the, the fear of creating, you know, videos and
Speaker:putting yourself out there on camera.
Speaker:And I know a lot of people say, all right, Alex, this is easy for you to say clearly.
Speaker:Never had a a, that kind of fear.
Speaker:Well, actually that's not necessarily the case.
Speaker:So, you know, seven, eight years ago, um, I had had my YouTube channel already, but
Speaker:it used to be a faceless channel, right?
Speaker:My, my tech channel.
Speaker:You could hear my voice, you could see my hands.
Speaker:I was showing, you know, every new iPhone or whatever.
Speaker:But you couldn't actually see my face.
Speaker:So, um, about eight years ago now, it was time for me to film like
Speaker:one of my first ads for myself with my face as an expert business.
Speaker:And so, you know, in the past, one of the things that I had done is I had
Speaker:gone and, um, you know, uh, worked with EE either you couldn't see my
Speaker:face or I'd worked with other clients.
Speaker:Um, but now I wanted to run my own YouTube ads.
Speaker:So I filmed this video following my methodology, following my
Speaker:process, and I watched it back.
Speaker:And I was, uh, I was nervous.
Speaker:I was like, oh no, I didn't really like the way that I looked.
Speaker:Um, I was actually about 50 pounds heavier than I am today.
Speaker:Uh, 'cause as I was initially starting, you know, this business, you know,
Speaker:I was so focused on that I wasn't, you know, taking care of my health as
Speaker:much and fitness and all that stuff.
Speaker:So I was like 50 pounds heavier, you know?
Speaker:I didn't really like how I looked.
Speaker:I was self-conscious about it.
Speaker:And I remember watching that video and I almost deleted it.
Speaker:Um, and I'm glad that I didn't because that ad. The one that I was so embarrassed
Speaker:about, it ended up being the first ad to make me a million dollars in my business.
Speaker:That one ad
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:ran over half a million views to it, and it, and the lesson
Speaker:I learned is it doesn't matter.
Speaker:You know, what you look like, what you sound like, you know who you
Speaker:are, like what background you have.
Speaker:Like if you're, you know, self-conscious, all that matters is that you're
Speaker:being yourself and you, you're so, you're being authentic, but you're
Speaker:also showing up as an authority.
Speaker:Because if you watch that video, you know, maybe I'm a little
Speaker:self-conscious with how I look, but I am showing up as an authority.
Speaker:I clearly know what I'm talking about and I'm showing up as myself.
Speaker:I'm not pretending to be anybody else, you know, myself at that time.
Speaker:You know, obviously I've grown as a, you know, person since that, but
Speaker:you know, basically.
Speaker:You're showing up as that authentic authority.
Speaker:So one of the things that's actually one of the chapters in the book,
Speaker:it starts off by talking about how to be an authentic authority.
Speaker:You wanna tap into that authenticity of who you are and how you're showing up.
Speaker:You know, when you're creating content, and you also want to be seen as that
Speaker:expert and let your expertise shine.
Speaker:And if you can do that, you're gonna be able to get, uh, the results you're
Speaker:looking for, even if there's certain things that you're self-conscious about.
Speaker:One other technique.
Speaker:Uh, or thi there's actually a few little techniques, uh, that you can use to
Speaker:break a, a fear of being on camera.
Speaker:So one is just realizing that you're on camera all the time.
Speaker:If you hop on Zoom calls, FaceTime calls, you know, uh, all kinds.
Speaker:It's all of those things.
Speaker:You are on camera and you don't, you don't feel any spec, any kind of, oh, you know,
Speaker:uh, nervousness when you're doing that.
Speaker:And that's because.
Speaker:You're going and you're used to it.
Speaker:You're used to being on Zoom, you're used to being on FaceTime.
Speaker:Um, so the second tip is to speak like you're talking to somebody
Speaker:on Zoom or FaceTime, like you're talking to a close friend,
Speaker:and that way your passion can shine through.
Speaker:It's like you're filming the video for them, not anybody else.
Speaker:Don't think about different other people that might be watching.
Speaker:Just think about, you know, as if it was a friend that's gonna be
Speaker:the only person that watches this.
Speaker:And the way you can do that.
Speaker:Is you get to decide.
Speaker:The third piece is you could delete the video.
Speaker:That's true.
Speaker:We
Speaker:You don't have to see it.
Speaker:You have control.
Speaker:And so if you understand those three things, uh, and, and this is
Speaker:something that we teach, you know, our clients, it's also something
Speaker:that I talk about in the book.
Speaker:Um, and I've had people say, you know, thank you for this.
Speaker:Like, even though it sounds like it's simple, sometimes you gotta
Speaker:think about you break it down.
Speaker:When you think about it that way, that you're already on video, you can film
Speaker:it as if you're talking to somebody specific and you're in control as to
Speaker:whether anybody ever sees that video.
Speaker:It depressurizes you filming a video, which means you're gonna film a
Speaker:better video, which means that you don't, you don't need to delete it.
Speaker:Like, you know how I didn't delete mine?
Speaker:And you can go and publish it, or you film a couple versions, right?
Speaker:Again, maybe you do delete that one, but you film another
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:I love it, man.
Speaker:And this is, yeah, I think the, the takeaway, uh, there's a couple things.
Speaker:So I used to.
Speaker:I used to, uh, coach myself through this back in the day when I was
Speaker:starting, and this is like 15 years ago with like flip cams and stuff.
Speaker:Um, I remember, yeah, like, just make the red light my friend.
Speaker:You know, I'm just talking to my buddy and you know,
Speaker:it's not so much red lights and I guess we're on Riverside and I see
Speaker:a red light here, so, you know,
Speaker:but, um, the fact is take the pressure off yourself.
Speaker:Like that's the thing is like, it doesn't have to be pressure.
Speaker:E, especially if you are rooted in your, your own authenticity and you
Speaker:know what, you are the best in the world at whatever your superpower is.
Speaker:Talk from that place.
Speaker:And yeah, sometimes that word, you know, might feel woo woo to some people or
Speaker:like, what does it mean to be authentic?
Speaker:But literally, if you think about it, every aspect of life, if you walk into
Speaker:a room and if you are yourself and you don't care about what other people are
Speaker:really thinking about you, you're good.
Speaker:You're living the good life.
Speaker:So it's.
Speaker:And this almost is like, you know, for anyone who might be hesitant
Speaker:or feel some friction here, it's almost like therapy in a way.
Speaker:Start recording videos and, and watch back.
Speaker:Maybe don't analyze it, but if you're feeling like, yeah, I said
Speaker:some pretty good smart stuff here.
Speaker:Post it, you know, like
Speaker:get it out there.
Speaker:Go share it, get some feedback.
Speaker:Maybe don't listen to all the feedback.
Speaker:Just keep posting, you know.
Speaker:But yeah.
Speaker:And um.
Speaker:I'm thinking of like on the paid ad side.
Speaker:'cause we haven't really talked too much there.
Speaker:And I know
Speaker:it'll, have a whole, you know, the book I know touches on it.
Speaker:You have all the training and awesome YouTube channel.
Speaker:Definitely go follow Allic on YouTube as well and we'll give
Speaker:links to the book and everything.
Speaker:Are there any strategies, um, like in terms of like the
Speaker:batching for instance, all,
Speaker:all that content.
Speaker:Would those, are they the same videos in the ads or is it like a
Speaker:full different kind of approach and there's a whole scripting process?
Speaker:It's a different, it's a different approach and we can
Speaker:touch on it pretty quickly.
Speaker:So really, um, I can actually break down the framework.
Speaker:One time at one point I was challenged to, uh, to break this down in like
Speaker:three minutes and I was able to do
Speaker:it so we can, we can do it.
Speaker:So basically the, exactly the start, the clock, the, so the strategy on the YouTube
Speaker:side, um, is it, there's two pieces.
Speaker:There's the actual ad and then there's the targeting.
Speaker:And the ad is a little different than a YouTube video.
Speaker:Uh, 'cause it's a little bit shorter, it's two to three minutes long,
Speaker:versus a YouTube video might be anywhere from eight to 15 minutes
Speaker:long, or some go a little bit longer.
Speaker:And so with the ad, you want it to be hook, educate, call to action.
Speaker:The hook pulls people in.
Speaker:You provide value, you educate them.
Speaker:You actually give them value.
Speaker:In the ad, we call it a value ad because that's what makes your ad
Speaker:stand out from everybody else's.
Speaker:Most people are, Hey, do you have this problem?
Speaker:Okay, we'll go buy my thing or go book a call or go sign up for my training.
Speaker:But.
Speaker:You know, are you actually providing value?
Speaker:People are on YouTube to get value, so you want to pull them in.
Speaker:You wanna provide value in the ad? Talk a little bit about this high level, right?
Speaker:But talk a little bit about things that they might not know, uh, you know,
Speaker:pieces of information you can give them, whatever that happens to be.
Speaker:And then you have a clear, concise call to action at the end to get
Speaker:them to take action off of the video.
Speaker:So, hook, educate, call to action.
Speaker:Then when it comes to the targeting, um, targeting it all comes down to
Speaker:this, reaching the right person at the right time, at the right message.
Speaker:We've already got the message and the ads, so now we gotta reach the
Speaker:right person at the right time.
Speaker:Now, you can use Google's prebuilt audiences.
Speaker:They have audiences already, people interested in, let's say, you know,
Speaker:business or advertising and marketing, whatever, but you can actually
Speaker:build your own custom audiences.
Speaker:That's the key.
Speaker:We want to get alpha results.
Speaker:We call it the Alpha AI targeting strategy because we're training the ai, Google's
Speaker:AI to reach more of your ideal client.
Speaker:And so, for instance, um, you know, let's say you were going out there and targeting
Speaker:your ads, as you know, which we're gonna be doing soon as we're working with you
Speaker:as, so for people looking to build, uh, AI clones or, or learn about AI clones.
Speaker:So I, instead of relying on Google's existing audiences, which
Speaker:I can tell you they don't have one that's just interest in ai, clone
Speaker:what you can do.
Speaker:Is you can build one.
Speaker:So you could build a u uh, you could build a interest affinity where
Speaker:you can actually put in AI clones.
Speaker:Uh, you had to build an AI clone, AI clone for my business, um, et cetera.
Speaker:So you put all the interest into one.
Speaker:So now it's people that Google knows it's interest, but you actually go
Speaker:a lever deeper and you can do what's called a custom search intent.
Speaker:So you could target people who are searching for specific things, how
Speaker:to build an AI clone, um, uh, what's the best way to build an AI clone.
Speaker:Uh, et cetera.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And so, and again, by the way, if you're wondering how do you
Speaker:come up with these search terms?
Speaker:Well, that's where my software comes into play, the keyword search.com,
Speaker:that finds YouTube keywords and actually syncs directly to Google ads.
Speaker:Um, but you can find all these keywords that people are searching for.
Speaker:Uh, and then you also have URL affinity audiences.
Speaker:This is based on what websites people are going to, so they're already going
Speaker:to sites kind of related to that.
Speaker:Then you could target those people the next time that they're on YouTube.
Speaker:So you now have multiple different ways, and there's a few others, but
Speaker:that's, those are the main ones.
Speaker:Um, and so now you're building those custom audiences to
Speaker:reach the right people.
Speaker:You're trained in the algorithm, so hook, educate, call to action,
Speaker:and then a custom audience.
Speaker:Uh, in the alpha AI targeting, that is the, uh, the formula for YouTube ads.
Speaker:Of course, uh, we break it down and we have more timeless principles
Speaker:in the book, and then the book has resources that go to more, you know,
Speaker:tactical, uh, things as well that come
Speaker:Well, it's, well, let's give people the, and thank you for breaking that down.
Speaker:I think that was under three minutes.
Speaker:I, I wasn't,
Speaker:but it felt about, about right.
Speaker:That was.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:there.
Speaker:Around there.
Speaker:yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I wanna shout out the book, uh, just how folks can get to it.
Speaker:So, uh, video authority book.com.
Speaker:Go, go, go there.
Speaker:I know it's gonna be released depending on when this episode, it might be live.
Speaker:It might not be, but either way, that'll get you there.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Video
Speaker:authority book.com.
Speaker:exactly.
Speaker:Video authority book.com and I, I've been working on this for the last three years.
Speaker:So it's got step by step, um, and you can actually see it's
Speaker:got actual like, action plans.
Speaker:So it's got the visuals and everything too.
Speaker:So it's like, all right, here's your video conversion training.
Speaker:Here's all the different pieces.
Speaker:And then it also, afterwards, after each chapter, it's got the step-by-step
Speaker:guide of what you learned in the chapter to actually take action.
Speaker:Because that's what I like out of a, out of a book.
Speaker:It doesn't just teach you.
Speaker:It also says, alright, here's what you should actually do to,
Speaker:to put this, uh, into action.
Speaker:Here's a little visual of what it'll look
Speaker:I love it and I love it that it, it's set in principles and that's
Speaker:like what we were talking about here.
Speaker:What I try to do with this show is, yeah, let's talk about ai.
Speaker:Some of the cool was being stuff that's coming out, but we know
Speaker:stuff's gonna change, but there are principles that we should be
Speaker:definitely living by and and studying.
Speaker:And I mean, the fact that you've been working on this for three years.
Speaker:And I trust you, and I've seen the material you put out there, you know,
Speaker:in the, in the private members area.
Speaker:I'm like, oh my gosh.
Speaker:Like you've done your homework in, in every which way.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:uh, I appreciate you breaking this down and making it, um,
Speaker:digestible, at least here.
Speaker:And definitely if you're.
Speaker:Any at all interested in YouTube and you should be, of course.
Speaker:That's, that's your man here.
Speaker:All I can go get his book.
Speaker:Um, what's, uh, just to kind wrap it up here, what is, what's the thing that hangs
Speaker:you up now when it comes to like, video?
Speaker:Is there, do you have any like, uh, friction points of your own and
Speaker:second part of that, you know, maybe how, how do you get past there?
Speaker:But also what are you interested in?
Speaker:Like what are you excited about in the coming year or two, let's say in general?
Speaker:That's a good point.
Speaker:I think the biggest friction point for me is time in that I have a lot of
Speaker:things that I'm focused on and doing and I'm speaking all over the country
Speaker:and I'm, you know, also running, uh, my business and I'm also creating my
Speaker:content and I don't have as much time as I once did years ago to create, uh,
Speaker:all the content that I want to create.
Speaker:But AI could potentially help that, uh, be even better.
Speaker:But I, I also think that there's a human element of connecting with people,
Speaker:uh, that's really valuable on video.
Speaker:So with ai, there's AI ad hooks we're finding that works really well,
Speaker:especially at the beginning of a video.
Speaker:So the first eight seconds as an ad, especially on an ad.
Speaker:So not necessarily a regular video, but you know, an ad that can hook
Speaker:people in, and then you draw them into the rest of the video, which might be
Speaker:more of a standard, uh, YouTube video.
Speaker:So we're finding that that works quite well.
Speaker:Uh, or standard YouTube ad, I mean to say.
Speaker:Um, and, uh, and that works quite well at the AI side.
Speaker:Um, and then when it comes to, yeah, handling some of the, the bottleneck
Speaker:stuff, I think I'm actually working right now on a new process for creating, uh,
Speaker:and publishing content more rapidly.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:uh, that's in the works and, uh, we'll, we'll probably be ramping
Speaker:up through the rest of this year, but especially going into next
Speaker:Well that sounds pretty exciting too.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Do,
Speaker:do you see like, just, I guess just to really end on this thing, um, like
Speaker:YouTube and where it's headed, because, you know, we have things like AI video
Speaker:clones now, and you see, you know, uh, social networks starting to make that
Speaker:a lot easier to create those, you know, and, and kind of replace the human.
Speaker:Like, do you have any fears or, or I guess, or opportunities with kind
Speaker:of this new tech maybe integrating into YouTube or do, do you just have
Speaker:any kind of perspectives there in the, in the coming, let's say year,
Speaker:'cause things are rapidly moving.
Speaker:What I would say is I think people are still gonna want to
Speaker:connect directly with people.
Speaker:Um, but I think that AI is just gonna be another tool that you can use to more
Speaker:rapidly create what you want to create.
Speaker:So it's really interesting with ads, what we're seeing is the best performing
Speaker:ads, uh, aren't ads that are just ai.
Speaker:But they're also not just, uh, normal.
Speaker:Um, they're now AI ad hooks.
Speaker:So the first eight seconds, like I was sharing and then followed by a
Speaker:more standard, you know, human ad.
Speaker:And I think that kind of speaks to where we're going is the hybrid model
Speaker:of AI being a piece of it, but not being all of it is gonna be, um, is gonna
Speaker:be valuable when it comes to video.
Speaker:I could see that.
Speaker:'cause people are just, yeah, we'll, we'll just see it everywhere, honestly.
Speaker:And it's, it's kind of hard to distinguish in some cases, for better or for worse.
Speaker:But yeah, I like that.
Speaker:And probably rapid testing of hooks and whatnot can be done once you kind of
Speaker:dial in what you're doing already, but.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:Awesome, man.
Speaker:Well, this is great.
Speaker:I know you're a wealth of information and appreciate you for being
Speaker:so open and coming back again.
Speaker:Go get video authority book.com, that's the new book, and that'll, that'll
Speaker:take you to all the right spots.
Speaker:So Aleric, thank you my man.
Speaker:Appreciate
Speaker:Thanks so much, Joe.
Speaker:I appreciate it.