I show busy and underpaid Pokémon YouTubers what's possible with the written word. I'll help you transform your casual viewers into a monetized audience.
Switch 2 is here.
Pokémon Scarlet and Violet run (mostly) at 60fps.
And Legends: Z-A comes out in October.
That means the Pokémon YouTube community will likely see a second wind as people rush to make new content in higher quality.
What are you going to do to stand out?
Under the Silph Scope today: Zapdos, the Electric Pokémon. ⚡
Zapdos lurks in the abandoned Power Plant off Cerulean Cape. It's said that Zapdos appears from clouds to drop enormous lightning bolts.
But is Zapdos worth catching in RBY? Poll below 👇
Under the Silph Scope today: Articuno, the Freeze Pokémon.
Found deep underground in the icy caverns of the Seafoam Islands, this Ice-type legendary bird appears before doomed travelers lost in icy mountains.
But is Articuno actually worth catching in RBY?
Under the Silph Scope today: Articuno, the Freeze Pokémon.
Found deep underground in the icy caverns of the Seafoam Islands, this Ice-type legendary bird appears before doomed travelers lost in icy mountains.
But is Articuno actually worth catching in RBY?
If you're a Pokémon YouTube content creator who is serious about wanting to grow, I want to talk to you.
But act quickly; I can only take on 4 clients in June, and I can't sign more until July.
Send me a DM to get in touch.✉️
Most Pokétubers are terrible at social media.
They treat their profiles like personal accounts rather than business accounts.
That's the bottleneck: treating YouTube and other social media platforms like anything other than a business.
You won't grow that way.👇
"But I just want to make videos."
Yeah, I get it. You don't want to do all this marketing shit. No one does.
That's why people like me exist--so you can focus on what you love.
Let me do the marketing stuff you hate so you can keep making videos and having fun.👇
I get it; you don't want to deal with any of this stuff.
That's not why you're a PokéTuber. You want to make videos, not parse through a bunch of complicated marketing bullshit.
But if you want to grow, you have to have some kind of strategy.
If all you want to do with your Pokémon YouTube channel is have fun making content, that's great.
But if you're out to do it for a living, you need to find a way to monetize.
And that involves thinking about your channel like a business.
Some questions to consider: 👇
Questions:
- What value do I offer my viewers?
- Am I trying to educate, entertain, or both?
- Who is my ideal audience, and what am I doing to bring them to my channel?
- Where does my ideal subscriber spend time online?
- Am I doing all I can to reach my ideal subscribers?
I'll never forget the first time I heard about EV training.
My cousin, who spent a lot of time on @SerebiiNet, told me about a "new" method for making super strong Mons.
He KO'd a bunch of Gastly, then showed me his Gengar's level-up. +23 to its Special Attack.
Fuckin' legend.
A good Pokémon YouTube video should do at least one of two things:
1. Educate
2. Entertain
Pokémon videos sit at an interesting crossroads where they can do both (depending on the type of content). And if you can educate AND entertain...
You'll be unstoppable.
Remember, YouTube is only a rented audience.
And you're at the mercy of the algorithm.
Give yourself more chances to succeed by working with a ghostwriter.
By working with me.
If you're interested, send me a DM. ✉️
Let's dream big about what's possible for your channel. 📈
Pokémon YouTube channels have three major needs when they're just starting out:
1. Time
2. Traffic
3. Money
4. Consistency
How do these factors impact early channel growth? And more importantly, how does ghostwriting solve some of them?
Let's take a look. 👇
I will save you time.
Time you might spend moving in the wrong direction.
Time you would spend attracting the wrong audience.
Time you don't have to spend creating social media content.
Imagine dedicating all that time saved to video creation.