Hello and welcome to the YouTube Success podcast.
Speaker:My name is Matt Hughes, King of Video.
Speaker:This episode is all about planning.
Speaker:I'm so excited to talk about planning for a number of reasons, but I'm just going to
Speaker:let you know that it's a planning episode.
Speaker:I am going to talk about five ways in which you can plan your YouTube videos.
Speaker:It's kind of planning and research, I would say, but the other thing
Speaker:to notice is that, or other thing to note is that we have a Planning
Speaker:Workshop that happens inside of the academy, My King of Video Academy.
Speaker:The link is in the description of this episode to show notes.
Speaker:It's kingofvideoacademy.com, and if you go there and you register for a free account,
Speaker:you can sign up for this workshop.
Speaker:Workshop is 90 minutes.
Speaker:It's a planning workshop.
Speaker:It's a really great workshop, and I talk about these five ways you can plan
Speaker:your youtube videos, but I also give you loads of other good advice as well.
Speaker:So head over to kingofvideoacademy.com, grab yourself a free account and
Speaker:sign up for a workshop with a free community account, it will
Speaker:send you the next workshop when it happens And with planning, I want
Speaker:you to know that like with anything that's worth having, you need to be
Speaker:strategic with your planning, right?
Speaker:You need to be strategic with the channel that you've got and that means
Speaker:that you don't just film something like a live stream on Facebook and
Speaker:then add YouTube as a destination and then assume that YouTube is going to
Speaker:figure out that that live stream makes you a YouTuber now, and that you've
Speaker:got some content or work on YouTube.
Speaker:It doesn't quite work like that.
Speaker:I know a lot of people, they think, well, you know, I'm doing a live stream anyway.
Speaker:I'll just add it as a destination but really, if we're being strategic,
Speaker:we're thinking about YouTube first.
Speaker:What content are we going to have that's going to work on YouTube.
Speaker:And by doing the planning research, we're going to find out the exact
Speaker:content that we should create.
Speaker:We're going to find out the right title that we should use.
Speaker:And we're going to figure out just the small nuances when it
Speaker:comes to creating the content that we know people are looking for.
Speaker:And that's really what planning and research is all about on YouTube.
Speaker:It's about understanding your niche and your audience and creating
Speaker:content that you know they've got some kind of search intent for.
Speaker:Because you've got to remember that YouTube is a search engine.
Speaker:It's not somewhere that people just go and browse.
Speaker:They do do that, by the way.
Speaker:They do browse.
Speaker:Some people love YouTube and they'll sit and look for stuff to watch, of course.
Speaker:But the primary function is that it's a search engine.
Speaker:People are looking for something.
Speaker:They have something called a search intent.
Speaker:Now, before we talk about these five places, I will say that there's this
Speaker:phrase, this golden phrase, in the YouTube world that most professional
Speaker:YouTubers will say and understand and it is that YouTube is trying to
Speaker:show the right piece of content to the right person at the right time.
Speaker:I wish I created this phrase.
Speaker:I didn't, I heard this phrase first from Tim Schmoyer.
Speaker:It was at a VidSummit, I think, in LA in 2018.
Speaker:And when I heard this, it really made loads of sense to me.
Speaker:And actually, a lot of people talk about algorithms and that kind of thing.
Speaker:But if you focus on this golden phrase, that YouTube is trying to show the right
Speaker:piece of content to the right person at the right time, then it kind of takes
Speaker:away this idea that there's an algorithm.
Speaker:That is what the algorithm is doing fundamentally.
Speaker:Of course it has other things, like it understands what your habits are in
Speaker:terms of what videos you watch and how long you're prepared to stay on certain
Speaker:types of videos, all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:But just use that golden phrase as that's what the intent of the algorithm is.
Speaker:So let's talk about these five places that you can do some research.
Speaker:And I'll talk about them briefly in the workshop, as I mentioned.
Speaker:Of course in the workshop I go into a little bit more detail with these
Speaker:particular areas, but I'm going to give it you as best as I can in audio form, and of
Speaker:course on YouTube, you can see me talking about this, but I'll try to give it to
Speaker:you as best as I can without demoing it.
Speaker:It's hard to talk about it without demoing it, but let's
Speaker:just talk about it for a second.
Speaker:So the first thing I get people to do when they're planning their content for their
Speaker:channel, is I ask them to think of the first 10 to 20 questions that come to mind
Speaker:when somebody new, a potential client or a new client comes into your world, into
Speaker:your ecosystem, your business ecosystem.
Speaker:What are the 10 to 20 questions they ask you all the time?
Speaker:And you can brainstorm these ideas, put them on a piece of
Speaker:paper or a note taking app.
Speaker:I use Notion, for example, for coming up with ideas and storing ideas.
Speaker:And then once you've got those 10 to 20 ideas, the brainstormed ideas, you
Speaker:can then start doing some research and the best place to do this is on Google.
Speaker:Now if you use Chrome like I do and you go and search for some of these
Speaker:topics, there's a great plugin, Chrome extension called Keywords Everywhere.
Speaker:What keywords Everywhere does is when you search for stuff, it shows
Speaker:you the search volume for that.
Speaker:So for example, if I put the search phrase, how to get your first
Speaker:1000 subscribers on YouTube, it would show me that that search
Speaker:phrase has 2,400 searches a month.
Speaker:Keywords everywhere shows me that inside of the feed.
Speaker:As I said, it's hard to show you this without actually
Speaker:showing you what it looks like.
Speaker:But the reason why this is important because it's not only does it show you
Speaker:the search volume so you can start to compare different phrases, different
Speaker:types of words, different ways to phrase that particular title and you
Speaker:can see that changing one word takes it from a 2400 search volume per month
Speaker:to an 80 search volume per month.
Speaker:And of course, the one that's searched most often is probably
Speaker:the one you want to go after.
Speaker:Not entirely always true.
Speaker:A guy I know called Justin Brown from Primal Video.
Speaker:He goes after some of the lower search phrases as well.
Speaker:And his idea is that if the search volume is quite low, not many people
Speaker:will be going for it And so if he shows up they're more likely to watch
Speaker:his videos, and then see some of his more popular ones as well, which will
Speaker:then boost him up in the algorithm.
Speaker:So I like Justin's approach is that is the first person I saw taking this
Speaker:approach of not just going for the most searched phrases, but also going for
Speaker:some of the lower search phrases as well.
Speaker:But Keywords Everywhere gives you that so that's great.
Speaker:I think it's a great little Chrome extension.
Speaker:What also happens is in your browser, as you're searching for stuff, you'll
Speaker:see related phrases on the right hand side as you sort of scroll down.
Speaker:This is really great.
Speaker:So if you think about those 10 to 20 phrases those 10 to 20
Speaker:questions that you've been asked.
Speaker:All of a sudden you start to get some other ideas as well.
Speaker:And in that example, I gave you how to get your first 1,000 subscribers.
Speaker:I noticed when I was searching for that, it would say things like how
Speaker:to get your first 1000 subscribers in a day or in a week or fast.
Speaker:So even though the topic and the content of those questions are probably the same
Speaker:I could create three different videos, hit those three different audiences
Speaker:and just tweak the videos a little bit.
Speaker:You know, some people say to me, Oh, when I come to YouTube, the problem
Speaker:I have is I feel like I'm saying the same thing over and over again.
Speaker:Well, this allows you to say the same thing over and over again, but just
Speaker:aim at a slightly different audience, a slightly different group of people that
Speaker:are searching for those different phrases.
Speaker:And it means that you don't have to feel like you're
Speaker:repeating yourself all the time.
Speaker:If I had 10 to 20 topics, and I looked at the research from Google and
Speaker:saw that there was a few variations of that topic, I might find two,
Speaker:three variations per topic, right?
Speaker:So that gives me 60 versions of those videos to create.
Speaker:And of course, everyone will be different.
Speaker:Each time you film, it will be different.
Speaker:If you publish one, let's say there's three variations of that, how to
Speaker:get to 1,000 subscribers topic, I might publish one in January.
Speaker:I might publish another one in September.
Speaker:and another one the following year.
Speaker:If I'm doing one video per week, which is the standard strategy, the
Speaker:basic strategy for YouTube, then having those 60 videos is over a
Speaker:year's worth of content, but it's all stuck in those first 20 questions.
Speaker:And of course you can do advanced versions of those all sorts as
Speaker:well, but let's stay on topic.
Speaker:So Google research is the way to do it.
Speaker:Use that Chrome extension Keywords Everywhere.
Speaker:It costs about $1, about $2, something like 150, something
Speaker:like that, per month to get these results in Keywords Everywhere.
Speaker:So it's worth the investment, I think.
Speaker:So the second place then is YouTube research.
Speaker:So now you've taken a look at the phrases in Google.
Speaker:Yes, it will give you some results, but now you can head over to YouTube
Speaker:and there's a couple of things I want you to think about when you
Speaker:go to YouTube to do this research.
Speaker:Firstly is look at the title.
Speaker:So if I do that same phrase, how to get your first 1000 subscribers on YouTube.
Speaker:I'm just not going to say that again, just assume that that's
Speaker:the phrase I'm talking about.
Speaker:So if I search for that particular phrase, then what happens is the
Speaker:results that I get don't necessarily have that phrase in the title.
Speaker:This is a great indication that the titles are not the only way
Speaker:in which YouTube understands who you are and your search intent.
Speaker:It knows that you might be looking for the first 'how to
Speaker:get your first 1,000 subscribers.
Speaker:But based on what other people have watched, it says that actually the video
Speaker:that you want to watch is 'how to get a thousand subscribers fast' or 'how to
Speaker:get thousand subscribers in seven days'.
Speaker:So it starts to show you some results that are different.
Speaker:Again, you can use those titles to create different types of videos
Speaker:I want you to look at YouTube and be curious about the results.
Speaker:I want you to look at things like the thumbnails, which
Speaker:thumbnails jump out at you.
Speaker:When we're doing this planning research, we start to think about what we actually
Speaker:click because click-through rate is one of the metrics that YouTube uses.
Speaker:It's so important.
Speaker:And so take a look at the thumbnail.
Speaker:Look at the ones that you like.
Speaker:Look at the different times.
Speaker:When I did this particular search for that phrase, I found
Speaker:things like before and afters.
Speaker:So there was one where there was a graphic of a person in the middle and then it
Speaker:would have zero days, and then it would have seven days and the zero was kind
Speaker:of like black and dingy and the seven days was like green with confetti on it.
Speaker:So it was showing you that there's a before and after.
Speaker:These are great thumbnails.
Speaker:If you can do before and afters in your channel and use thumbnails
Speaker:in that way, they're going to capture people's attention.
Speaker:They can see straight away from the thumbnail without any text on it, even
Speaker:though it might say Day 0, Day 1, Day 7, whatever, with very little text, I should
Speaker:say, you get kind of get an idea of what the video is going to show you, whilst
Speaker:we're talking to that, a lot of the kind of key amount of words, something that
Speaker:people ask me all the time is how many words should I have in my thumbnail.
Speaker:3 to 5 is kind of the generally accepted amount of words that you should have.
Speaker:So if you've only got a few words to use, then use the really key words that
Speaker:you're going to have in those thumbnails.
Speaker:You definitely shouldn't have the title of the video in your thumbnail.
Speaker:And the title of the video is, think about it as two different
Speaker:opportunities to reach the audience.
Speaker:One is the title that clearly demonstrates what's in the video.
Speaker:The other is a thumbnail, which elicits some kind of curiosity,
Speaker:but also gives a good indication of what's might be in the video, right?
Speaker:That's the key, eliciting the curiosity bit, because you don't want to give
Speaker:it just clearly what's there unless like that, you know, Day 0, Day 7 one,
Speaker:shows what's actually going to happen.
Speaker:There's still some curiosity about how it happened.
Speaker:I suppose that's the point there.
Speaker:But think about it all the time.
Speaker:And when I talk about curiosity, I'm saying to people in my academy,
Speaker:my membership, like being a curious creator is so important.
Speaker:Oh, I love the word curious creator.
Speaker:Curious creator.
Speaker:Immediately after this, after this episode, I'm going to
Speaker:go and buy that domain name.
Speaker:Because I'm a, I love a domain name, right?
Speaker:Who doesn't love a domain name?
Speaker:Let me know in the comments if you've got a million domain names.
Speaker:Curious creator, I love that.
Speaker:So be a curious creator because we want to kind of understand a little bit more about
Speaker:this as we're doing our planning research.
Speaker:This is really us getting deep into the research phase with this.
Speaker:So that's YouTube.
Speaker:Last thing I'll say about the YouTube research is that I want you to look
Speaker:at the, you'll see a whole bunch of results where there's like millions of
Speaker:subscribers and hundreds of thousands of views every now and again, you'll
Speaker:see a YouTuber that's got a small number of subscribers and views like
Speaker:use that as inspiration because a lot of the time, we're looking at this stuff
Speaker:and we think, well how can we compete against all these people in the Top 10?
Speaker:But you'll see that youtube still gives us smaller creators a chance in the Top 10.
Speaker:It says if you're creating content consistently, and if you're publishing
Speaker:new content, well, with all this old content, maybe your new fresher
Speaker:content, even though you've got less subscribers, less views, could be
Speaker:something that people are looking for.
Speaker:Maybe they want that new relevant content.
Speaker:So use that as inspiration, aspiration of you being a YouTuber
Speaker:and getting your content out there.
Speaker:So we've done three so far.
Speaker:Brainstorming, Google Research, YouTube Research.
Speaker:The next one I want to talk about is Answer the Public.
Speaker:So, again, let me know in the comments if you've heard of Answer the Public.
Speaker:I know it's quite a popular one now.
Speaker:It's not so good anymore, I would say.
Speaker:But if you're from Neil Patel's team, you're going to hate me for saying it.
Speaker:But since Neil Patel bought it, all they want to do is monetise it.
Speaker:They try to make you purchase a subscription to it all the time.
Speaker:So it used to be really good.
Speaker:It gives you loads of results, but it doesn't give you as many anymore,
Speaker:unless you purchase a subscription.
Speaker:But maybe worth purchasing the subscription, even if it's for a month
Speaker:to go and do your research, to give you loads of ideas and what answer the
Speaker:public is, you can put in a phrase.
Speaker:So let's say for me, I might just put 1000 subscribers.
Speaker:So I kind of shortened the phrase that I did before, not the long tail
Speaker:phrase that we talked about earlier.
Speaker:So I put 1000 subscribers.
Speaker:And then it gives me all the prepositions.
Speaker:So how to get 1000 subscribers.
Speaker:When will I get 1000 subscribers?
Speaker:And all the who's, you know, who, what, when, where, why that's the point,
Speaker:who, what, when, where, why it gives you all of those prepositions and it
Speaker:gives you all the different types of search phrases that people use with
Speaker:those who, what, when, where, why, okay.
Speaker:And it gives you in this nice little wheel and you can take a look at the
Speaker:wheel or you can get it in a table format and you can export the table.
Speaker:So you don't even have to know what the phrase is.
Speaker:It will give you all of those ideas.
Speaker:I would say that Keywords Everywhere gives you a similar sort of result set, right?
Speaker:So you could do this with Keywords Everywhere.
Speaker:I just think Answer The Public positions it in a better way, even though
Speaker:that's now a paid product as well.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So that's number four, Answer The Public.
Speaker:And the last one that I think is super important, very valuable
Speaker:and people still don't know about it and still not using it enough.
Speaker:And that is of course ChatGPT, using AI.
Speaker:So again, let me know in the comments if you've used ChatGPT for this.
Speaker:So the way I use ChatGPT for ideas is I'll say, I am a YouTube mentor and video
Speaker:expert and I teach businesses how to launch and grow their YouTube channels.
Speaker:Please give me 10 video ideas that I can use to create, to
Speaker:attract my ideal clients, right?
Speaker:Some kind of prompt like that.
Speaker:When you type in a phrase into ChatGPT, it's called a prompt.
Speaker:So you put in some kind of prompt like that.
Speaker:It will give you 10 ideas and then you could say things like act as a YouTube
Speaker:and SEO expert or act as a copywriter or act as my ideal client or you can tell
Speaker:it to act like a certain type of person in order to give you the results as well.
Speaker:So that's really useful.
Speaker:You can also do great things like I can say, I need a YouTube planner to
Speaker:plan my videos and it will give you a nice little Excel planner that you can
Speaker:use to keep note of all your videos.
Speaker:I really like that.
Speaker:It's been very useful for us in the past.
Speaker:So, I just want to summarise those things, those five areas.
Speaker:Like I said, we do this in a 90 minute workshop, so much more detail.
Speaker:I give you loads more YouTube tips and stuff, but I just want
Speaker:to talk about those five things.
Speaker:So the first one is using your own expertise, your own expert
Speaker:status to understand the 10 to 20 ideas that people come up with.
Speaker:The second one is going into Google.
Speaker:One thing I didn't mention is if you do a search phrase, so 'how to get your first
Speaker:1,000 subscribers', if I remove the how to get and put 1,000 subscribers and then I
Speaker:put an underscore before the word 1,000, you know the 1,000 in numbers, it will
Speaker:give me all the prepositions as well, and it'll give me a bunch of different ideas
Speaker:So that's another little tip for you.
Speaker:See, there's loads more.
Speaker:They all come to me randomly
Speaker:brainstorming, Google Research, YouTube research.
Speaker:So in YouTube research, we're gonna be more curious.
Speaker:We're gonna get some more ideas from there.
Speaker:We've got Answer The Public as research, and then we've got ChatGPT as research.
Speaker:And when you do all of those things and put all those things together, you
Speaker:could quite easily find a year's worth of content just by doing that research
Speaker:in those different places, right?
Speaker:If you do this.
Speaker:And it helps you get to the next step, please go and leave me a comment.
Speaker:Please, if you're listening to this in audio format, go and leave me a review.
Speaker:A positive review, please, on the platforms.
Speaker:I'm going to send this video to anybody that asks me about planning from
Speaker:now on because I think the advice in here is great and I hope you agree.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Thanks so much for watching.
Speaker:Thanks so much for listening.
Speaker:Don't forget to follow me, go and subscribe to my YouTube channel and
Speaker:I'll see you next or you will hear me in the next podcast episode.
Speaker:My name's Matt Hughes, King of Video.
Speaker:See you then.