Scratch to 1k in a Month - Day One

Should I continue to document my journey? Would you read this?

  • Yes

    Votes: 13 92.9%
  • No

    Votes: 1 7.1%

  • Total voters
    14

Brigadier Glyte

Active Member
Introduction:
Wondering what this project is about? A year ago, I grew a Minecraft channel to a thousand subs in only a few months. This time I've set myself an even more ambitious goal. A thousand subs in a month, starting from the day my first video is uploaded. I hope that in documenting my journey, I can help and motivate other small Youtubers to grow with my experience. Whether I succeed or not is irrelevent. All that matters is doing Youtube right to prove that growing a gaming channel is not impossible.

Day One - Branding & Recording my First Video
Creators new to the Youtube platform have this awful tendency of immediately turning ouut what they can with the resources available to them. In this age of competition, it is to all intents and purposes impossible to grow a traditional gaming channel. Finding a niche, and being better than the competition is important. Ultimately, your viewers need a reason to watch you over other channels doing the same thing. Doing whatever's hip can cause growth initially, but it is hard to compete with mega-channels such as Pewdiepie, Jacksepticeye or Markiplier who will be doing the same thing. In almost every case, they will have better production value, better personality factor, and superior equipment. Ultimately, they are not popular for no reason.

As I brainstormed ideas to do with my favourite titles, I kept this in mind. Eventually, I settled on Blizzard's new title Overwatch, of which I have been an avid player. I did some quick searching. All the big boys had moved on, and Overwatch had fallen into a niche. Something overwhelming I noticed however was the number of small channels all making great content and managing to grow quickly. There was no big-boy soaking up every piece of attention such as in, say, Minecraft or Counter Strike. So, my medium was settled. Next was naming the channel, and coming up with branding. I'm a big fan of the branding for Minecraft channel 'Mumbo Jumbo'. There is nothing reprehensible being inspired, so long as no plagiarism is involved. Using the chrome plugin 'Eye Dropper for Chrome' I grabbed the two colors in his logo for my own. Before I could go any further however, I needed a name. I wanted something that would sound smart without crossing the border into tackiness. Given Overwatch's military basis, I looked on Wikipedia for military titles for one that sounded cool. After some deliberation, I settled on 'Brigadier' as my first word. A nice ring it has, in my opinion, in addition to carrying a certain degree of seniority.

I arrived at Glyte through a method no more complex than spitballing sounds that I liked. There's not a lot to it.

A bit of Gimp mucking later and a third colour, I arrived at my logo using the free Raleway Heavy Google font. I quickly made a channel banner, endcard, and intro card based on this theme of red-pink and white.

So, Brigadier Glyte. That's me.

Next, I needed a niche. No channel can grow without a specific topic that they do better than any other channel. This is rather specific to Overwatch so I won't go into too much detail, but eventually I found there were no well-edited, succinct guides to playing a certain defensive hero called Junkrat. Instead of a bog-standard 'Tips and Tricks' video, I wanted to string this out into a series that viewers could keep coming back for. Give them a reason to subscribe. Thus was born the 'Junkrat Spam Spots' series. Half an hour later, my first video was recorded. With some fancy transitions and audio equalising, I achieved a result I was happy with. Encoded it to .mp4 using Youtube's officially recommended H.264 video codec on moderate settings. I uploaded the video, and got to work.

Title SEO is important. Keyword cramming is important. Good looking thumbnails are important. I used this title for the video in the hope that I'd show up for relevent search terms:

'Best Junkrat Spam Spots - Temple of Anubis Guide (All Skill Levels)'

This title, in addition to being keyword crammed, looks very clickable for someone wanting to learn to play junkrat.

Diddling with thumbnails to make good-looking ones is really something that can only be learnt with experience. Colour, simplicity and readability are your three main points. With this thumbnail, I've accomplished all three:
YdYLSFR.png


I'm really not too fussed about the messy aliasing on the head. It won't be visible when the image is brought down to thumbnail size. Importantly, there is no content that will be covered by the 'Watched' tag in the bottom right or the video length in the top left. It is a common mistake to put text behind these tags, and it really makes the thumbnail look much less appealing. With that, I concluded my evening

Please fill out the poll, so I can guage response to this type of post. Thanks,

~Glyte
 
I'm interested, but not only counting subs as reaching thousand low quality subs in a month is not that hard to accomplish. Show your views and audience retention as well and I'm interested!

PS, nice intro to your journey! :)
 
I'm interested, but not only counting subs as reaching thousand low quality subs in a month is not that hard to accomplish. Show your views and audience retention as well and I'm interested!

PS, nice intro to your journey! :)

^ This.

I could easily get 1000 subs in a few weeks if I wanted but then i'd just have dead subs tbh lmao.

if your audience retention is still high then I will give you some mad props my man
 
are we allowed to offer advice? or is this a one man journey to 1k? your missing something rather important, but i don't want to spoil your challenge
 
firstly let me say i LOVE the idea of this thread. i think it will become so useful to people starting out their journey on youtube, so fair play to you

so. as many on this forum know, i am a SEO junky, you really need to add your keywords to your video description, its really important to link the title, description and tags together to form a triple threat of SEO goodness. pick 2 or 3 of the search terms you want to hit and try to have them in all three sections
 
37 views in 16 hours is pretty sub par. I don't really think you'll reach 1k subs in a month with that subject personally. I think beyond the SEO optimization you need to use Adwords keyword searching to find out what is REALLY popular and will get you to that 1k goal.

You gotta get 33/34 subs a day on average to reach 1k in a month, and within the first 16 hours you have 4 subscribers.

I hope you do reach 1k subs. I'll be watching this thread.
 
37 views in 16 hours is pretty sub par. I don't really think you'll reach 1k subs in a month with that subject personally. I think beyond the SEO optimization you need to use Adwords keyword searching to find out what is REALLY popular and will get you to that 1k goal.

You gotta get 33/34 subs a day on average to reach 1k in a month, and within the first 16 hours you have 4 subscribers.

I hope you do reach 1k subs. I'll be watching this thread.
Subscribers snowball. When you have 500 subs, you'll be gaining far more per day than someone with 10 subscribers.
 
Subscribers snowball. When you have 500 subs, you'll be gaining far more per day than someone with 10 subscribers.
I don't agree with that. I have 1 subscriber per day and I have 600+ atm.

I've seen people who have 500 subscribers and they hit a wall and don't gain any for weeks.
 
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