I had a target to make $3k😂😂
Well I just did $10k in my first month of monetization☺️🎉
The goal is to make nothing less than this monthly henceforth 🙌🥰
@BigJahv@BrightAfeno@Ruth__umoh
YOUTUBE HATES STORYTELLING NICHES
That’s a big lie
Every time a new YouTuber says:
“I want to start a documentary channel, but I heard YouTube doesn’t like storytelling niches.”
I already know where the problem is.
They have confused bad storytelling with storytelling itself.
YouTube does not hate stories.
YouTube was literally built on human curiosity.
And what creates curiosity better than a good story?
Think about it.
Before there were smartphones, before there was YouTube, before there was television, humans gathered around fires telling stories.
Your great-grandmother told your grandmother stories.
Your grandmother told your parents stories.
Your parents told you stories about their childhood, struggles, victories, mistakes, and experiences.
Those were not just stories.
Those were the way humans passed information from one generation to another.
Storytelling is one of the oldest forms of communication on earth.
And it is not disappearing anytime soon.
Look around you.
The biggest brands in the world use storytelling.
When Apple Inc. talks about its beginnings, it does not just say “we sold computers.”
It tells the story of two people starting a company in a garage, challenging the status quo, and trying to change how people interact with technology.
That story sells.
When companies launch products, they don’t just give you specifications.
They tell you a story.
“Here was the problem. Here was the struggle. Here was the breakthrough.”
Why?
Because humans connect with stories, not just information.
Journalism is storytelling.
A journalist does not simply say:
“On Tuesday, something happened.”
They explain:
Who was involved?
What led to it?
What changed?
Why does it matter?
That is a story.
Investigations and documentaries are storytelling.
Channels like Netflix have built massive audiences around documentaries because people want to understand real human experiences.
Creators like Johnny Harris built audiences by taking complex topics and turning them into compelling stories.
MrBeast, one of the biggest creators on YouTube, understands this too.
His videos are not just “I gave people money.”
They are structured like stories:
There is a challenge.
There is tension.
There is a problem.
There is a journey.
There is a conclusion.
That is storytelling.
So why do some storytelling channels fail?
Because they tell boring stories.
The problem is not the niche.
The problem is the execution.
A documentary with no emotion will fail.
A fictional story with no conflict will fail.
A biography with no interesting angle will fail.
But a well-told story?
It can keep people watching for hours.
Your own life is a story.
Every successful person has a story.
Every company has a story.
Every invention has a story.
Every historical event has a story.
Everything around you has a story behind it.
So if someone tells you:
“YouTube hates storytelling niches like documentaries, history channels, crime stories, or fictional storytelling.”
Look them in the eyes and remember this:
YouTube does not hate stories.
YouTube rewards stories that make people curious enough to click and interested enough to keep watching.
The platform does not care whether you are telling a story about a billionaire, a forgotten historical event, a business failure, or a fictional character.
It cares about one thing:
Can you make people care?
Because as long as humans exist…
Stories will always win.
How you make the videos is the koko.
@divinelockedin Well, people's aim isn't to grow fast but to earn well. What's the point of earning peanuts off your hard work when you could have just taken it one step at a time and earn more for it. Anyways it all depends on who your target audience are. US will always be it for me.