Serious discussion with Intense Hydra. Doing youtube for the money vs doing it as a hobby.

what if the person is poor and needs the money?
To be honest, I am far from rich. I have about £5 to my name...ok, yes I have a camera and a computer but I did not buy them, they were given to me as a gift. But this does not mean that I do YouTube to earn money at all...I understand that it would take time and patience to earn money. I do YouTube as a hobby and i would never begin to imagine earning money from it because I have no aspirations to earn money out of YouTube, of course I will if I get the opportunity to but other thann that I think YouTube should be a hobby. Also if I never make money with YouTube I will always be happy that someone enjoyed my video.
 
To be honest, I am far from rich. I have about £5 to my name...ok, yes I have a camera and a computer but I did not buy them, they were given to me as a gift. But this does not mean that I do YouTube to earn money at all...I understand that it would take time and patience to earn money. I do YouTube as a hobby and i would never begin to imagine earning money from it because I have no aspirations to earn money out of YouTube, of course I will if I get the opportunity to but other thann that I think YouTube should be a hobby. Also if I never make money with YouTube I will always be happy that someone enjoyed my video.
that is good then :)
 
To be honest, I am far from rich. I have about £5 to my name...ok, yes I have a camera and a computer but I did not buy them, they were given to me as a gift. But this does not mean that I do YouTube to earn money at all...I understand that it would take time and patience to earn money. I do YouTube as a hobby and i would never begin to imagine earning money from it because I have no aspirations to earn money out of YouTube, of course I will if I get the opportunity to but other thann that I think YouTube should be a hobby. Also if I never make money with YouTube I will always be happy that someone enjoyed my video.

That's good :3
 
preferably doing it for fun, since I have no Idea how youtube works :'D. But hell if I was making money from doing the youtubes, I would go for it while enjoying what I do. Simple in my eyes . c:
 
preferably doing it for fun, since I have no Idea how youtube works :'D. But hell if I was making money from doing the youtubes, I would go for it while enjoying what I do. Simple in my eyes . c:
i think that most people think when you want to make money off of it you don't enjoy it at all
 
We're far from being huge on youtube, but we are making money. When we first started, we made videos purely for fun-ones that we wanted to do. Youtube was sort of a money pit back then. We spent far more money making the videos than we ever made from ads. Now that we've grown large, we do turn a profit on most videos-which allows us to purchase better items for the show. We still interact with all of our fans and try to answer every single question left in the comments in our videos-that's not easy when you're getting 35k-40k views per day. We are also very active with fans on Facebook and Twitter accounts. The money aspect has changed things a little bit. We try to stick to a budget and as equipment gets a lot more expensive when you start using professional stuff, we have to save up for a longer time to buy it. We still do videos that we want to do, but within the constraints of a budget and we won't do a video that will lose money in the long run. Yet there's still always a fan who gets offended when they suggest an idea for a show that will cost us $1000 and will maybe pull in $40 total the first 90 days and we tell them no. There's still things we won't do. If a company sends us products to review, that in no way guarantees a good review. If we hate the product, we are free to say so. If a company offers to pay us good money to review their product and tells us that we can only give a positive review, we'll turn the deal down. It's not worthwhile to compromise our standards for money. The last company that helped us out did so knowing full well that their product would be vomited out in a very big way and they didn't have any issue with it, so there's always opportunities out there if you stick to your standards.
 
We're far from being huge on youtube, but we are making money. When we first started, we made videos purely for fun-ones that we wanted to do. Youtube was sort of a money pit back then. We spent far more money making the videos than we ever made from ads. Now that we've grown large, we do turn a profit on most videos-which allows us to purchase better items for the show. We still interact with all of our fans and try to answer every single question left in the comments in our videos-that's not easy when you're getting 35k-40k views per day. We are also very active with fans on Facebook and Twitter accounts. The money aspect has changed things a little bit. We try to stick to a budget and as equipment gets a lot more expensive when you start using professional stuff, we have to save up for a longer time to buy it. We still do videos that we want to do, but within the constraints of a budget and we won't do a video that will lose money in the long run. Yet there's still always a fan who gets offended when they suggest an idea for a show that will cost us $1000 and will maybe pull in $40 total the first 90 days and we tell them no. There's still things we won't do. If a company sends us products to review, that in no way guarantees a good review. If we hate the product, we are free to say so. If a company offers to pay us good money to review their product and tells us that we can only give a positive review, we'll turn the deal down. It's not worthwhile to compromise our standards for money. The last company that helped us out did so knowing full well that their product would be vomited out in a very big way and they didn't have any issue with it, so there's always opportunities out there if you stick to your standards.
that sounds like a good way to go with things
 
It really depends on the content of the channel I suppose. Some content is more geared toward making profit, like How To videos and Tutorials, but when it comes to actually trying to express Art money should just be a happy bonus and not the prime motivation. Of course if you are really trying to build a brand with your channel and make living while doing what you love just always strive to continuously better yourself and your content and making a living shouldn't be an issue when your audience, who must already enjoy your stuff because they are subscribed, see's that you're putting in an effort to always take things to the next level. It's my belief that if you keep growing, your audience will keep going, thus your profits will keep growing.

-Eric Harrison
 
You know my view on this one Hydra, but figured I'd post it anyways.

Nobody rags on the garage band trying to be the next big thing, sending their music to anyone who will listen to it and doing everything in their power to turn their passion into money. YouTube is no different. Unfortunately there are a prideful bunch who like to claim the high road. Fact of the matter is that the majority of people who upload with any regularity would love to and indeed most hope to make money doing it. Most who say otherwise are lying. :)
 
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