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The best around. I’ve worked with Tom for around 8 years on different projects & I’ve honestly never worked with a more reliable, efficient & organised channel manager.
Get him signed ✍️
I'm open for work! I am a Youtube Channel Manager and Production Manager!
Got too many people on your team, and you want to focus filming instead of running a team?! Then hire me! That's what I'm there for!
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@NortFX@MelvinSchreyner it's gonna cause a huge dent in the gaming industry when generations of kids won't be able to grow up with consoles. Mobile gaming will be on the up.
The future of cloud gaming is looking more likely
I saw Tom (@Syndicate) tweet recently that he felt disheartened his views are dropping, and that viewers weren’t getting notified about new uploads.
I think this is an important tweet because I see this a lot. From both sides, viewer and creator.
This is not necessarily directed at Tom, but it’s a just a good example to use for this.
When you are a creator, and see an overall dip in views over time, the most likely thing that happened is your audience shifted.
Subscribers develop other interests, watch different types of videos, resulting in YouTube not pulling it in front of your existing subscriber base as much.
If your subscriber watches every video, it’s almost a guarantee that they’ll see your newest upload on their home page.
When a viewer starts engaging a lot more with different types of content, YouTube starts prioritizing whatever topics you watch at that moment in time for your home page, leaving your new videos out more and more.
YouTube wants their viewers to see content that is likely to be watched by them at that point in time. Sadly (for the creator), that means that it might deprioritize content they watched some time ago as the new content types start populating their feeds.
This also works through on subscription notifications. If youtube would notify viewers of every upload the channels that they’ve subscribed to in the past, their phones would ping all day long.
So naturally, YouTube tries to figure out what content will be most likely to push the viewer to open the app to watch.
It’s a game of finding the sweet spot. For both the home page and notifications.
Now for viewers:
If I watch Tom religiously for a year, but then find a new interest like for example fishing, my home page will change. Tom might be shown to me less and less.
This doesn’t necessarily mean that I don’t enjoy Tom’s content anymore, but it does mean that YouTube tries to show me more of my recent interests.
If it wouldn’t evolve with me, it would still show me Call of Duty kill montages.
For vloggers, sadly this is the case in most situations. The content doesn’t change or evolve a lot, meaning that audiences will probably move on over time.
When you are a creator, ask yourself this;
Could it be that my audience moved on? Have I tried to evolve my content in any way, or am still making content that worked for me five years ago?
For viewers missing their old channels in their home feed;
Have you interacted with a lot of different content lately?
If yes, make it a point to help YouTube figure out you still want to watch it by looking those channels up manually and giving the signal to YouTube by watching their videos that way. I guarantee they’ll show up more in the next few sessions