Every gamer knows that it gets boring when you max your stats, have infinite gold, and complete all the quests. So make sure you don't reach your goals, and forsake your happiness, and life, for the journey.
I write them myself, and record my own voice.
My first video got 300k views, but I got hardly any paying users.
My 5th video got 200k views, and I made $$$.
The difference was my CTA.
You HAVE to show off the screens of your app, and include the CTA in a non-obtrusive way.
I get users through YouTube long-form videos.
You might have seen the stick-man channels talking about self-improvement.
My videos are similar.
I make my scenes in Figma, export them as PNGs, and then edit them together in Davinci resolve.
For voice-overs and scripts...
My first month of app revenue - $442.
$335 In-App Purchases
$108 from YouTube
Because TikTok marketing makes me feel stupid, I'm using long-form for marketing.
Got lucky with my first YouTube video, but last 4 haven't done so well.
App is a habit tracker of course ๐
Why making YouTube videos for your business is a great idea:
Teaching a subject is the fastest way to become an expert, and people automatically view you as an expert if you make videos.
You can teach + improve at a skill, and as a by-product build an audience of people who trust you and will buy from you.
You can make videos that rank for months and years to come, freeing yourself from writing + filming content every day yet still getting leads.
You learn and improve how you think and speak, which helps with sales, writing and talking to the ladies.
You don't even have to make high quality videos, or buy equipment, I've got loads of customers for my stuff just with Loom + Figma.
The simplest way to start is making a YouTube short, and the best way to keep going is to set yourself a posting cadence where you can be consistent (e.g. 1 video a week).
When I first tried to use N8n to automate a manual task, and sync my client's ad spend data I thought it would be easy.
I ended up spending 2-3hrs trying to get this simple thing to work, and eventually just gave up.
I felt pretty bad from wasting so much time that I stopped using N8n altogether, and decided that doing the manual tasks would be more productive than the trial and error process.
Now I'm making a course to help people in the same position.
By the end of the course, you'll find it easy to use N8n.
Get early access to the course here (it's being built out daily)
https://t.co/Lh69WNhYtt