Kevin Muldoon
Loving YTtalk
ok, i agreeat least I hope to increase my 77 subscribers as well
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haha what a loser. I have 78!!!



yeah for me it depends, If the thumbnail is jsut me sitting there, ill try put in a bit of text or a logo or something
but for stuff like tutorials i try not to so the focus is on what it looks like![]()
Cool. I'll check out your thumbnails to see how you are doing it.
That still doesn't mean they need to worry about thumbnails and other aspects as much as us, as I mentioned earlier they are already established and due to search algorithms, most at the "large" mark are already growing organically, through search ranks (thanks to the fact they're probably getting better watch time), and word of mouth, and social media.
Their journey from 1 Million to 2 Million is not as much as an adventure as a small channels 0 to 1000, you can't compare a large channel and say they're on the same boat as us, we're new, they're the regulars, they don't need to worry about how their thumbnails look as much as us, they can put very little time into their thumbnails and still see the same results and get a decent return.
We will have to agree to disagree on this issue

I do agree with you that large YouTube channels will continue to grow in an organic way that ours will not, but I don't think that means they are not as concerned about thumbnails. A 30% increase for us could mean adding a few dozen or a few hundred subscribers over a month. For them, it could be tens of thousands more every month; which would correspond in a significant increase in revenue.
You are stating that they will still see the same results if they put little time into thumbnails. That suggests that thumbnails do not matter when it comes to click throughs; which is obviously not true.
Yes, large channels can gain traffic and subscribers easier than us, but the principles of whether someone will click on a video or not remains the same. Search for anything on YouTube and you will notice that search results shows the number of views each video has, it doesn't show the number of subscribers. Though obviously the videos from channels with many subscribers inevitably have more views than others.
My point is that when a YouTube user is searching for something, the popularity of a particular channel if irrelevant when you are actually searching for something. It's not until you have actually clicked on the video that you can see how many subscribers the channel has.
It varies. Sometimes it's necessary, others it isn't. Also I guess it kinda depends on what type of videos you do![]()
What types of videos? For example, in the @Tim Schmoyer video, his associate said that you don't need text for vlogs. However, who is to say that text in thumbnails wouldn't convert in vlogging videos too.
I'd really love to see some evidence about this. Does anyone know of any case studies that have been performed? i.e. a top channel who has added or removed text and seen an increase in click throughs (all other things such as description, titles etc remaining equal).
I get the impression that most YouTubers are just going with what they feel is right. Nothing wrong with that at all, though it would be good to see a proper case study that proved or disproved everyone's theories on this issue.
Ironically, if we all started adding text to thumbnails and saw an increase in click throughs, it could became the norm. At that point, you could find that thumbnails without text would start performing better
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Those big Youtubers are too big to fail. They can upload a picture of a turd on their channel and they still get millions of views.
That's the difference between small Youtubers and big Youtubers. The small ones needs the attention of people who are searching for videos. The big ones doesn't need to, if a random viewer stumbles upon that thumbnail, they just think, oh it's PewDiePie
The principle of attracting clicks is the same, regardless of whether you have 10 subscribers or 10 million. Yeah they could upload a turd and get one million views. They could also upload a really good thumbnail and get five million views.
There are YouTube channels that have over one million subscribers and I have never heard of them. If I search for X, Y, or Z, I don't know who these popular YouTubers are when looking at search results. Therefore, their popularity does not influence my decision to click on a particular thumbnail.