I've been going through this thread and I'm impressed at the depth you go into reviewing, and that you're still maintaining this thread months later. When I first saw it go up I thought you'd either give really contrived feedback or wouldn't be able to keep up with the demand at all. I don't know how you find the time, but if you find an extra couple of minutes, I'd love to throw my hat in the ring haha
Hi Kaleido,
You’ve been exceptionally patient with me and I’m grateful. Things have settled down enough for me to start catching up on channel reviews and I got to yours today. I enjoyed learning a little about cars and getting to know you a bit as well. Here are my thoughts:
When I went to your channel, the first thing I saw was the banner. I really dig the picture, but it wasn’t enough for me to get a sense of what this channel would be about. The thumbnails and titles gave me a better read, but I think it would benefit you to unify the look and feel of your channel especially in terms of the initial impression stuff. The Internet is a fickle place, and people aren’t going to take the time to dig through your material to figure out who or what you are. You’ve got to spell that out from the get-go. In addition to doing this more clearly with the channel art and the “About” section, I think you’d be wise to do the same with your intros on your videos. You usually say who you are and what you’re about to do (which is really good), but some kind of tag line that reminds viewers of the big picture point of the channel would be a useful addition.
After a couple of videos I felt like I was picking up on what you’re going for with the channel, and I like the concept. Explanation videos are often a hit on YouTube and adding a dash of personality and a hint of story telling should only make the videos better yet, right? On paper, yes, but the execution isn’t quite jelling just yet. I dig the idea, the personalities involved, the settings, and instruction, but the balance between those seems a tick off to me and I think that might be why your channel hasn’t grown at a rate that’s commensurate with the amount of work you’ve clearly put in.
Well, no one likes the guy who nit picks and then wanders off, so I’m going to offer some constructive suggestions.
1. Decide what the central point of your channel is. Do you want to show people how to fix specific problems with specific makes and models? Do you want to do a vlog that invites viewers into your projects? Do you want to move toward automotive related humor? Are you doing road trip documentaries? Junk Yard scavenging fun? Any of those things would be fine, but one needs to be decidedly in the driver’s seat.
2. Whichever you choose, I think you need to edit much tighter. Your short stuff is the best of what you’ve got so far, because you’re getting to the point quickly and providing resolution quickly. The longer stuff doesn’t seem to offer more value per se, but just takes longer to get the same amount across. Be ruthless. Once you’ve decided what the central thrust of your video/s is, ditch everything that doesn’t advance the point of greatly endear yourself to your audience.
A mistake that I see just about everyone including me make when they’re still a smaller channel is this: We imitate bigger channels and TV shows that already have a following when we make editorial decisions having to do with us goofing around. The reality is this. Small channels don’t have relational capital with their audience yet, and viewers who are still sizing us up don’t often find great value in seeing us mug and ham it up. There are some hosts who are off-the-charts dynamic and have such huge energy that they might get away with it a bit more, but us normal people have to earn the right to leave lots of our casual/candid stuff in our videos. Value is the key. Your strong suit is knowing stuff about cars and talking about it in interesting and informative ways. You seem cool, but a strictly personality-driven blog doesn’t seem to be what you’re going for. Staying relaxed, fun, engaging, but on-task and tight will help retain viewers and will gradually earn you the ability to bring your audience along with you into longer asides.
3. Which reminds me: Value! Every video must offer value or relatively no one will watch them. Always ask yourself the hard question, “If I didn’t know and like me, and I came across this video, would there be any reason for me to watch it?” If the answer is no, your video probably sucks.
I’ve reviewed some channels that just don’t have much to offer even though the people behind them seem pretty cool. You have an advantage here, because you do have something to offer, and it just happens to be something that people sometimes need to know but are usually intimidated by. You have another advantage over many others in that you’re a good communicator. That means, you have the ability to understandably explain car things to people who might not otherwise get it.
You’re at your absolute best when you’re doing this. You’re in your groove, you come off well, and you offer genuine value to your audience.
I have an older Jeep, and I have a brake job coming up. You’d better believe I’ve noted your videos and that I’ll be back to have you walk me through my project. That’s value.
I weirdly enjoyed the flash flood warning video, and parts of the road trip videos (I didn’t watch it all) but it was just too much of the same stuff. Apart from people who know you and really like you, these kind of things won’t attract or retain viewers because it’s just not interesting to watch a stranger document a trip from the inside of a car.
Clearly these were early efforts and that’s okay. It’s a fun way to show friends what you’ve been up to and to share some flashbacks with future subscribers, but you've come a long way when comparing those to your restoring the mercedes vlog. Long-term, it's higher value content like that which will set you up to succeed.
I hope you’re still with me, because that might have felt like an avalanche of criticism. I offer it in a spirit of encouragement. But there are also things I like about the channel that I haven’t highlighted yet. So let’s talk about that.
1. When you’re working on cars, you film in such a way that I can see what’s going on. I can’t duplicate what you’re doing if I can’t see what you’re talking about, and you always seem to go out of your way to give us a good look.
2. You don’t do the same exact thing every time. The variety is good in that it gives viewers a reason to click on more than one video because your channel doesn’t look at first glance like a if-I’ve-seen-one-I’ve-seen-‘em-all type. I still think the channel needs to be more targeted to really get traction, but I hope that if you take my advice on that, you’ll still keep up the creative variety of settings and activities while targeting a singular theme more closely.
3. You turn some good phrases and communicate well. This will be even more impressive if you’re willing to be more ruthless in cutting the down time and unneeded banter. You’re clearly smart and it’s fun to listen to that smartness even when I don’t totally grasp the subject matter.
4. You’re committed. You’ve got 73 subs after a year and you’re still going strong and soliciting advice on how to get better yet. People who stick with things get better and earn trust. You’re in the process of doing that and subscribers and visitors will note that.
5. The fun comes through. Keep capitalizing on this. Cut the sort-of-fun stuff and retain the very fun stuff so that your videos feel tight, crisp, and fun from beginning to end. You like what you do and when that comes through right along side informative content; you’re hitting your stride.
On the whole I think you have the foundation of something good here. I don’t think you’ve played to your strengths enough in your first year, but I do think that if you seriously play to your strengths in year two, you’ll see much better growth. You’re at your best when talking about content you know well and sharing it with your viewers. You struggle the most when the videos lag out and viewers find themselves waiting around for things to get rolling again. You’ve got good stuff and a lot of value to offer potential subscribers. I’m eager to see how you play it moving forward. I wish you only the best in this and everything else you’re up to.
Take care,
Matt